Doctors with University of California Health. (Photo: health.universityofcalifornia.edu)
CA Medical Residents Unionize: The Latest Assault on Quality Care and Patient Affordability
One wonders if the next demand will be union-mandated coffee breaks during cardiac arrests
By Megan Barth, June 12, 2026 10:50 am
In what can only be described as peak California absurdity, medical residents—the very doctors-in-training entrusted with learning to save lives under intense pressure—are flocking to unions like the Committee of Interns and Residents (CIR/SEIU), representing over 40,000 resident physicians and fellows.
While supporters paint this as a noble fight for “fairness,” the reality has precedent: unionization of resident physicians correlates directly with higher healthcare costs passed onto patients and taxpayers, while threatening the very quality of care that defines American medicine.
Current UC contract negotiations underscore the pattern. With the existing agreement expiring July 1 after a one-year extension, the union is pushing for wage increases and equalized compensation across UC medical campuses. First-year residents already start at approximately $91,000, with annual raises of roughly $3,000 per month thereafter. UC has already provided a 5% wage increase in 2025 via last summer’s one-year deal, yet talks remain prolonged as the parties attempt to consolidate eight local contracts into a single system-wide agreement.
California, already saddled with sky-high healthcare costs driven by regulation, litigation, and endless union demands, is ground zero for this trend.
Residents at institutions like UC hospitals and Kaiser facilities have pushed for collective bargaining over pay, hours, stipends—and, astoundingly, overtime.
Demanding overtime pay in the context of emergency care and life-saving surgery is an absolute joke, minus the laugh track. Medicine, particularly in trauma bays and operating rooms, does not operate on a factory clock. Hearts don’t stop beating at the end of a shift; gunshot wounds don’t wait for grievance procedures.
One wonders if the next demand will be union-mandated coffee breaks during cardiac arrests.
Healthcare economists and hospital leaders have long warned that layering union mandates onto residency programs—already heavily subsidized by Medicare and state funds—drives up operational expenses that ultimately burden patients and taxpayers.
A 2009 Rand Corporation study, for example, projected that stricter work-hour limits (a frequent union demand) would cost major teaching hospitals millions annually in additional staffing, with those costs flowing through to higher premiums and charges.
Program directors and academic leaders have expressed concern that unionization introduces a third party into educational and clinical decisions, potentially creating bureaucracy that hinders program adaptability and the traditional resident-attending relationship.
Surveys of radiology program directors, for instance, indicate many view resident unions as “problematic,” citing risks to trainee education, program management, and overall flexibility in responding to clinical needs.
Broader analyses of healthcare unionization highlight added risks: fixed staffing ratios and grievance processes can reduce efficiency and adaptability; it becomes harder to address underperforming individuals, potentially placing patients at risk; and higher labor costs from salaries, benefits, and overtime mandates are often passed along to insurance companies and patients.
This editor’s own relative, a world-renowned, multi-patent-owning surgeon who performed on-call emergency trauma surgery in South Central Los Angeles for decades, embodied the old model.
He answered the pager at all hours, operating through the night and holidays on victims of violence and accidents without regard for “overtime” or contractual rest periods.
Over his long career, he witnessed a marked decline in the aptitude and dedication of incoming residents. On more than one occasion, he removed a trainee from the operating room for arriving even one minute late—believing that in surgery, where seconds can separate life from death, such laxity was simply unacceptable.
His uncompromising standards, forged in the unforgiving environment of inner-city trauma centers, drove innovations and saved countless lives precisely because the profession demanded total commitment, not negotiated boundaries.
That ethos built American surgical excellence. Unionizing it risks replacing that with clock-punching mediocrity and bureaucracy.
As the California Globe has repeatedly documented in articles on powerful public sector unions and their deleterious impact on everything from public safety compensation to hospital performance, organized labor prioritizes worker protections and dues collection over efficiency and outcomes.
Prior Globe coverage exposed how SEIU-linked efforts exacerbate hospital inefficiencies, with union rules often leading to rigid staffing models that prioritize clock-watching over patient needs. A California Globe series highlighted Medi-Cal’s drag on quality care, where bureaucratic bloat and mandated costs leave providers squeezed.
Union advocates frame this as essential for “excellence in patient care.” CIR/SEIU boasts of empowering residents to “fight for excellence,” claiming better-rested doctors via overtime rules and manageable schedules mean better care. Resident leaders cite low pay relative to 80-hour weeks and the need for overtime protections.
This isn’t altruism; it’s the creeping corporatization and unionization of medicine, where future physicians trade professional autonomy for collective grievance. As the Globe has reported on bloated bureaucracy and union-backed spending sprees, California taxpayers and patients inevitably pay the price through diminished access and inflated bills.
The notion that highly educated, soon-to-be high-earning physicians in training need SEIU protection strains credulity. Residency has always been rigorous; that rigor forges competent doctors. Diluting it with union work rules, overtime mandates, and grievance processes for emergency coverage risks producing entitled clock-punchers rather than dedicated healers like the thoracic surgeons of yesterday.
With California’s healthcare system already groaning under Newsom-era mandates, Medi-Cal expansion woes, and provider shortages, adding union friction only accelerates the decline. Patients deserve timely, high-quality care—not a system where residents’ demands for overtime in life-or-death situations eclipse their duties.
Megan Barth, whose career has spanned over 20 years in the medical device and biotech industries, is Executive Editor of The California Globe.