Civil Service Employees Association (CSEA) SUNY Fredonia member and activist Sally Smith holding an autographed photo she had taken with Hillary Rodham Clinton while campaigning for the candidate during the 2000 United States Senate race. The Western Region and statewide Political Action Committee member was one of hundreds of union members involved in recruiting efforts to get out the vote and made a difference in getting friends of working families elected in the 2000 election. The CSEA is New York State's largest union.
50-year Civil Service Employees Association (CSEA) member Concetta Giambra holding Monroe County (New York) Local's 50-year old CSEA charter. Giambra was among the first members to sign the original charter. Giambra's daughter Bernadette, the Monroe County Local president, accepted the local's 50-year CSEA banner at the union's 90th Annual Delegates Meeting in October 2000.
Brian Loop and his wife Erica Wade-Loop of Baldwinsville, New York, registering to vote at the Civil Service Employees Association (CSEA) booth at the New York State Fair in Syracuse, New York. Voter registration is just one focus of the CSEA booth at the fair every year, where CSEA members volunteer by handing out brochures and union materials and answering questions about the union. It's an opportunity for CSEA to be visible to a wide variety of people. The CSEA is New York State's largest union.
A group of unidentified Civil Service Employees Association (CSEA) members hold up anti-privatization signs at the October 1997 CSEA Cohoes Privatization Rally.
A group of unidentified Civil Service Employees Association (CSEA) members sit to listen to a speaker at the October 1997 CSEA Cohoes Privatization Rally.
Civil Service Employees Association (CSEA) Capital Region President Carmen Bagnoli joins with members during an October 1997 demonstration in Cohoes challenging a plan to contract out some of the city's public services.
Unidentified Civil Service Employees Association(CSEA) members march with signs at the October 1997 CSEA Cohoes Privatization Rally. One CSEA member holds a sign on his back stating, "How sweet it is, Bob's blue plate."
The notice was part of a Civil Service Employees Association (CSEA) campaign that urged people to vote no on the states proposal to hold a constitutional convention. In November the proposal was rejected with the help of CSEA.
Civil Service Employees Association (CSEA) activists Barbara and Warren Maloney march with signs at an October 1997 rally protesting a plan to contract out some public services in Cohoes, NY.
Civil Service Employees Association (CSEA) Metropolitan Region President George Boncoraglio and Congressional Representative Richard Gephardt (D-Missouri). Gephardt was a speaker at the Legislative Breakfast sponsored by CSEA's Women's and Political and Legislative Action committeees during CSEA's 86th Annual Delegates Meeting held in New York City. He is holding a cartoon by CSEA Graphic Artist Ralph Distin which was presented to Gephardt during the breakfast. The CSEA is New York State's largest union.