Central Valley

Adventist Health lays off dozens in Kings, Kern counties

Layoff notices
Adventist Health has laid off dozens of employees in the Central Valley across several facilities in Kern and Kings counties. Layoffs were effective Friday. 

Adventist Health has laid off dozens of employees in the Central Valley across several facilities in Kern and Kings counties. Layoffs were effective Friday.

In Kern County, 15 positions were affected across four facilities including Adventist Health Bakersfield. In Kings County, 12 positions at Adventist Health Hanford were affected, according to the notification filed with California’s Employment Development Department.

The layoffs in Hanford, Bakersfield, Delano and Tehachapi, were part of statewide layoffs affecting more than 100 employees in 13 counties. Other counties include Lake, Los Angeles, Mendocino, Napa, Placer, San Joaquin, San Luis Obispo, Solano, Tuolumne, Ventura, and Yuba.

The faith-based nonprofit, with facilities in cities and rural areas in the West Coast and Hawaii, is implementing a “restructuring initiative” that involves centralizing and standardizing roles within the Quality, Risk, Infection Prevention, and Accreditation departments, according to a Worker Adjustment and Retraining Notification (WARN) letter dated June 25 from Adventist Health‘s network director of human resources Todd Reese to the EDD.

“To ensure we have strong accountability and deep expertise in these important functions, we have worked thoughtfully to create alignment of positions and centralization of roles,” said Adventist Health in a prepared statement Monday afternoon. “This new structure will advance our mission of compassionate, whole-person care — connecting dedicated local team members with best practices from system-level experts.

The restructuring resulted in the elimination of certain job functions and positions across multiple facilities. While some existing roles were eliminated, new positions were created within the centralized structure, according to the letter.

Reese wrote that affected employees were offered “opportunities to transition into these roles,” with more than 80 employees across the state accepting positions in the new structure.

Affected employees were not represented by a union or collective bargaining representative, according to the letter.

This version added comments from Adventist Health.

This story was originally published July 6, 2026 at 3:06 PM with the headline "Adventist Health lays off dozens in Kings, Kern counties."

María G. Ortiz-Briones
The Fresno Bee
María G. Ortiz-Briones is a reporter and photographer for McClatchy’s Vida en el Valle publication and the Fresno Bee. She covers issues that impact the Latino community in the Central Valley. She is a regular contributor to La Abeja, The Bee’s free weekly newsletter on Latino issues. | María G. Ortiz-Briones es reportera y fotógrafa de la publicación Vida en el Valle de McClatchy y el Fresno Bee. Ella cubre temas que impactan a la comunidad latina en el Valle Central. Es colaboradora habitual de La Abeja, el boletín semanal gratuito de The Bee sobre temas latinos. Support my work with a digital subscription
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