Militant Health Care Union Leader Sal Rosselli Retires
This union is not afraid to strike, and the employers know it. Photos: NUHW
https://labornotes.org/blogs/2024/07/militant-health-care-union-leader-sal-rosselli-retires
July 23, 2024 / Cal Winslow
I get a kick watching Sal Rosselli at Labor Notes, always meeting, talking, on a panel, on the move, working, full of energy, out of the limelight, but known by many, health care workers especially. Sal talking about organizing hospitals, including, I suspect, his dream of a national industrial health care workers union.
Sal has been a regular at Labor Notes, beginning back in the nineties. Then, he was president of SEIU Local 250, the largest health care union in California; more recently he was a founder of the National Union of Healthcare Workers (NUHW).
This past spring, however, Sal was not there as the president of NUHW, the model union; hed just stepped aside after a life as a one of Californias best-known labor leaders. Not retired, he insists, still working full time for the union, doing what Ive always done, he says, working full-time leading our hospital division, among other things
Weve got four major contract campaigns coming up, including with the hospital giants, Kaiser Permanente and Providence. Sophia Mendoza, newly elected, a 20-year veteran of labors civil wars in Southern California, also a regular at Labor Notes, is stepping up.
EARLY YEARS
Sal Rosselli was born and raised in Albany, New York, in the sort of Catholic family that sends sons into the clergy. Not Sal; he did enroll in Niagara University, a Catholic university, but after two years was expelledwhy? For campaigning to get the Reserve Officers Training Corps off the campus. Sal went from there to the Bowery in lower Manhattan where he worked with Dorothy Day, the legendary Catholic journalist and anarchist who edited the Catholic Worker.
FULL story at link above.
https://labornotes.org/store