Proposal to regulate California city's hospitals fails to make ballot

A proposal to establish housekeeping staffing levels based on infection rates and raise the minimum wage at acute care hospitals in Pomona, Calif., will not appear on the November ballot, according to the Daily Bulletin.

The measure did not qualify for the ballot because there were not enough valid signatures on a petition supporting the initiative, Pomona City Clerk Marie Macias told the publication.

The number of valid signatures was determined based on a random sampling. The minimum requirement was 6,456 signatures, and healthcare workers said they submitted 8,845, according to the report. However, Ms. Macias said a  random count of 500 signatures showed that fewer than 95 percent of them were valid, which is the threshold set by the state.

The Service Employees International Union-United Healthcare Workers West backed the initial proposal.

 

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