Community Brief

Save Alameda Health System
Fact Sheet

No Cuts  ·  No Layoffs  ·  No Closures
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🏥 About Alameda Health System
Alameda Health System (AHS) is our county's public safety net healthcare system
AHS has a $1.4 billion budget and about 5,000 employees
AHS consists of 4 hospitals: Highland Hospital (169 beds), Alameda Hospital (66 beds), John George Psychiatric Hospital (80 beds), and San Leandro Hospital (63 beds)
AHS emergency departments have over 100,000 ER visits each year across the 4 hospitals
AHS outpatient clinics have over 400,000 visits each year
Highland Hospital is the East Bay's only Level I Trauma Center — designated to provide trained staff and equipment for the most complex trauma patients
The next closest Level I Trauma Centers are SF General and Santa Clara Valley Medical Center
Highland Hospital is a teaching hospital, providing graduate medical education residency programs to new doctors
Alameda Hospital and Highland Hospital are both Certified Primary Stroke Centers
Most AHS patients live below the federal poverty line
The AHS patient population is 36.9% Hispanic/Latino, 25.1% Black, 13.9% Asian
AHS is already under-staffed, with ER wait times often over 6 hours to get a bed
⚠️ Facts About the Layoffs
HR 1 (Trump's "Big Beautiful Bill") cut billions of dollars to Medicaid (Medi-Cal in CA)
60% of AHS's revenue comes from Medi-Cal
AHS expects to lose $100 million/year by 2030
AHS initially proposed over 200 layoffs in December 2025 — notices originally to be delivered Christmas Eve — delayed to January, effective March, deferred again — currently on hold until June 30
After public outcry and worker organizing, cuts to some departments were rescinded
142 workers have voluntarily resigned or retired since layoffs were first announced
111 layoffs currently planned for June 30
Cuts include complete closure of Intensive Outpatient Behavioral Health Wellness Programs and Health Advocates program
Cuts to plastic surgery would drop 174 cases/year — all complex wounds and exposed bone referrals
Physicians are concerned the hospital could lose its trauma designation if cuts go through
Ad hoc committee of 2 county supervisors (Bas and Miley), SEIU labor reps, and AHS execs meets monthly in private — next (and last) meeting is June 3rd
AHS also planning: eliminating cost-of-living adjustments, increasing healthcare premiums 10%, unpaid furlough days for workers
More layoffs coming — "reorganization" announcement July 20; Beilenson Hearing scheduled August 25
AHS executives issued themselves $7 million in bonuses over the last two years
AHS executives spent $6 million on a 3-year office lease at Jack London Square
🩺 How Cuts Will Affect Patient Care
Closure of Outpatient Behavioral Health programs — ongoing care for people with moderate to severe mental illness
Closure of Health Advocates program — serves 3,300 patients/year helping navigate health-related social services
Cuts to plastic surgery — procedures repairing and reconstructing missing or damaged tissue and skin
Cuts to care management at Highland and Alameda — discharge planning, care transitions, and medical social work
Cuts to housekeeping throughout AHS facilities
Cuts to Highland lab and pharmacy
Cuts to Highland Psychology Clinic
Cuts to the Bridge Clinic — support for patients with substance abuse related complications
Cuts to Highland's Infection Control Department
Cuts to Highland Dental Clinic
Cuts to Eastmont Wellness Clinic and Marina Wellness Clinic
🚨 How Cuts Will Affect the Trauma Center
Highland is the East Bay's only Level I Trauma Center — any serious traumatic accident in the East Bay means ambulance transport to Highland regardless of insurance
70% of Highland's trauma patients are victims of traffic accidents and seniors with fall-related injuries
Highland Emergency Department is already perpetually overcrowded with long wait times
Services being slashed include: lab workers, pharmacy, social workers, care managers, surgery schedulers, sterile processing workers, EVS (housekeeping), and food service workers
All cuts to hospital services mean delayed care, overburdened healthcare workers, and worse outcomes for patients
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