This vote of no confidence was originally authorized by the Los Angeles County Association of Environmental Health Specialists (LACoAEHS) in 2021. LACoAEHS and Teamsters Local 911 have advocated for change in the Environmental Health division since Liza Frias was appointed as director, but time and time again management has refused to implement any change that would benefit employees. Management, emboldened by a bullying HR department, has either flat out refused to justify their decisions, or hand-waved away union objections by stating, “If it’s not in the MOU, then it is management’s right to make the decision.” What Liza, Brenda, and Scott have failed to realize is that “management’s rights” come with a cost, specifically a cost to employee morale.
That cost to morale came to a head on February 8, 2024, when Heather Hughes, an EHS II in the Hollywood District Office, decided to end her life. We may never know the truth about whether she left a note or not, but that is irrelevant, as there are indisputable facts that point to the hostile work environment contributing to her death.
Heather was denied a request for staggered telework, despite our new MOU stating that telework would be offered to employees whose job duties are compatible with telework. She declined to file a grievance because she did not want the stress of being labeled a troublemaker and retaliated against. When she passed away, the boxing gym where she trained religiously posted on Instagram, mourning Heather while at the same time denouncing bullies. A friend of Heather’s from her gym stated in a blog post about her passing that Heather was being bullied at work and hated it there, but couldn’t quit because it was a well-paying job with decent benefits and she was good at it. It is easy to see how Heather could have felt trapped in a toxic work environment, with no other way out.
Heather is not the only one of us impacted by the hostile work environment. If you have ever skipped breakfast due to the knot in your stomach every morning, it is affecting you. If you flinch every time you get an email, wondering what illogical change is management making now, it is affecting you. If you've called out sick because you just couldn't handle the mental strain of work, it is affecting you. Even if it is somehow not affecting you personally, it is undoubtedly affecting your colleagues.
We urge you to sign on to the vote of no confidence below not to get revenge, but to help advocate for change. We must take action to prevent another loss of life and to repair our own mental wellbeing. If we do not come together and advocate for each other, we will continue to suffer under the same hostile, oppressive working conditions that we have for the past four and a half years. Over those years, management has been given plenty of opportunity to change, and they have declined to do so at every turn. Since management refuses to change, it is up to us to change management.