Roughly 2,000 employees of Baltimore-based The Johns Hopkins Hospital rallied Saturday for higher wages and better benefits, according to a report by The Baltimore Sun.
About 1,000 more supporters from neighboring states also joined the Mothers' March and Rally for Justice at Johns Hopkins, according to the report.
The large rally comes a month after employees represented by labor union 1199 SEIU United Healthcare Workers East went on a three-day strike. The union was seeking wage increases for its workers — the median increase for all workers over the union's four-year proposal would be 18 percent. According to the union, nearly 70 percent of the hospital's caregivers make less than $14.92 an hour, which would qualify them for food stamps if they are a single parent.
Johns Hopkins' vice president for human relations told The Baltimore Sun that workers at the hospital are paid a higher starting wage than Maryland's minimum wage and that employees have access to assistance for educational programs.
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