P
( ’s Conf heduled |
JUNGIU DIE | | CSEA Women’s Conference scheduled | -
CSEA’s Women's Committee is sponsoring the Eighth Annual Women's Conference
Nov. 18-20 at the Ramada Renaissance Hotel in Buffalo. 4
The theme of the conference is ‘Celebrating A Decade of Achievement, Forging a
Better Tomorrow” in honor of the Women’s Committee's 10th anniversary this year.
Individuals must make reservations with the hotel by Oct. 23.
Package rates per person are:
$186.72 single (one person, one bed)
“yw $139.97 double (two persons, one bed)
“dibs $139.97 twin (two persons, two beds) e
The package rates include two nights accommodations (Nov. 18 and 19), dinner 5
Friday, breakfast and lunch on Saturday and brunch on Sunday.
A deposit of $100 per person is required to confirm reservations. Make checks
payable to “Ramada Renaissance” and send to Ramada Renaissance, 4243 Genesee
Street, Buffalo, N.Y. 14225.
Registration begins 3 p.m. Nov. 18. A 10th Anniversary Party is scheduled that
evening. On Nov. 19 several workshops are scheduled, and.a workshop on Sunday
morning will conclude the program.
CSEA members interested in attending the 1988 CSEA Women’s Conference @
should contract their CSEA Local president for details and registration forms
on Remember, reservations must be made with the hotel by Oct. 23.
Mary E. Sullivan
EA Treasurer
Cs ALBANY — Details of the 1988 Annual
CSEA Delegates Meeting will be mailed to
local and unit presidents shortly.
9 The meeting will take place Oct. 30 to
e Nov. 4 in Lake Placid.
De e Statewide Secretary Irene Carr has
cr requested that any locals or units with
Ro e changes in their officers submit those
convention changes to CSEA headquarters. The
information is essential to the preparation
; of the registration process, she said.
inf ormati on Any changes in officers should be sent A
to:
Statewide Secretary Irene Carr
= S CSEA Headquarters
“Watch out in there! 143 Washington Avenue
Albany, New York 12210
... page 16 H
Procedure for political action rebate on 1988 dues :
CSEA members who object to the CSFA’s statewide treasurer. Requests will capita payment equivalent that had been
appropriation of a portion of their dues or be accepted during the month of October. used for aileteoat pete or iological
fees for political or ideological purposes i i purposes during the fiscal year an
eh aE ‘lective b gical PULP 7 Individual requests must be submitted. rebates that amount upon proper
unrelated to collective Dargalning ca Lists of members and fee payers are not icati
obtain a rebate. The CSEA political acceptable: Wach request 10" application. Requests for rebates are
ts to $5.20 for the fiscal Ns aldape it accepted individually, in writing, by
rebate amounts to $9.20 for the fiscal year —_ reimbursement must include the ;
ending Sept. 30, 1988. individual’s Social Security number. OESOME betwsen Apri! aud, Ane 16
‘ Specific details on complying with
The union’s procedures call for rebate AFSCME’s Constitution also includes a AFSCME’s rebate requirements will be
requests to be submitted in writing by rebate procedure. The International published at the appropriate time in ®
certified or registered mail addressed to secretary-treasurer calculates the per AFSCME’s publication Public Employee. Z
The Public Sector (445010) is published every other Monday by The Civil Service
THE PUBLIC Employees Association, 143 Washington Avenue, Albany, New York 12210, Publication
T R Office: 143 Washington Avenue, Albany, New York 12210. Second Class Postage paid at
YES Post Office, Albany, New York.
Address changes should be sent to: Civil Service Employees Association, Attn:
Membership Department, 143 Washington Avenue, Albany, New York 12210. @
Official publication of The Civil Service COMMUNICATION ASSOCIATES
Employees Association, Inc., Local 1000, SHERYL CARLIN Region | RON WOFFORD Region VI
AFSCME, AFL-CIO, 143 Washington Avenue, (516) 273-2280 (716) 886-0391
Albany, New York, 12210 LILLY GIOIA Region II STEPHEN MADARASZ Headquarters
(212) 514-9200 (518) 434-0191
ROGER A. COLE Editor ANITA MANLEY Region Ill Ne eu
KATHLEEN DALY Associate Editor (914) 896-8180 -
DAN CAMPBELL R WV ® rE 4
isis (518) 489-5424 <i
STANLEY HORNAK . Asst. Dir. of Communications CHUCK McGEARY Region V
(315) 451-6330
®
2
THE PUBLIC SECTOR
September 19, 1988
Sa Eee SE a id
In Albany County
No more horsing aroun
ALBANY — Shouts of “‘What do you want?
A contract! When do you want it? Now!”
recently filled the air of downtown Albany as
angry county employees voiced their
frustration with stalled contract talks.
Approximately 175 county workers — from
the Department of Social Services, Health
Department, Public Workers Department
and county jail — rallied in a downtown park
before marching on the county Legislature.
They were buoyed by support from the
union’s top leadership including President
Joe McDermott, Secretary Irene Carr and
Treasurer Mary Sullivan.
“‘We’re with you,’’ McDermott told them.
“Together, we will be successful.”
Then Capital Region President C. Allen
Mead took the gloves off and scored a
technical knockout against County Executive
James Coyne.
Mead, noting Coyne’s reputation as a rabid
sports fan, complained that ‘Jim Coyne is
such a weak county executive that he doesn’t
have the strength to reply to a letter we sent
seeking his intervention to get matters
resolved. But he wasn’t too weak to fly to
Puerto Rico and help select future draft
choices for a local basketball team.”
Mead also cited recent newspaper
accounts revealing that Coyne has recruited
county employees as partners in race horses
he owns.
The county executive’s defense has been
that he isn’t influencing anyone because he
doesn’t hire them. Mead described that
defense as ‘“‘strange, since the county
charter says he does.”
Following the rally, and an informational
picket line outside the county courthouse,
CSEA members filled the county
Legislature’s chambers. to overflowing.
Union representatives were then invited to
caucus with key legislators who immediately
agreed to set up a three-member grievance
committee to hear their grievances.
After winning the commitment, Mead told
REGION IV President
Al Mead, left, and
McDermott help
Albany County DSS
Unit President Marge
Flynn, on the picket
line.
September 19, 1988
statewide President Joe
county workers ‘‘Since our message has now
been delivered loud and clear, I believe that
we have more to gain than we had to lose by
this offer.
“Hopefully, our problems will now be
heard and shared by a legislative body well
aware of the county executive’s
shortcomings and inept administration,”’ he
added. These elected officials are smart
enough to sense that our anger reflects a
deep felt frustration by a silent majority of
the community.”
COVER KID Dominic Paratore was on the line
with his dad, Dominic, a Department of Social
Services employee, and his baby brother
Christopher.
3
THE PUBLIC SECTOR
AFL-CIO: CSEA has
arrive
By Anita Manley
CSEA Communications Associate
KIAMESHA LAKE — CSEA’s recent
affiliation with the New York State
AFL-CIO has swelled the state
federation’s public employee division
ranks by more than 220,000 members
and that has been a welcome event,
state AFL-CIO President Edward
Cleary told delegates at the federation’s
annual convention here.
CSEA’s new presence in the AFL-CIO
was evidenced by a contingent of top
union officials and the election of CSEA
President Joe McDermott as an
AFL-CIO vice president.
“CSEA’s affiliation and now active
involvement in the state AFL-CIO is a
major event for organized labor,”
McDermott commented. ‘‘It can only
make all of us stronger.”
Speakers at the four-day meeting
included Gov. Mario Cuomo, state
Attorney General Robert Abrams, Sen.
Daniel Patrick Moynihan, national
AFL-CIO Secretary-Treasurer Thomas
Donahue and U.S. Labor Secretary
Anne McLaughlin.
Cleary told delegates that the AFL-
CIO is committed to expanding its
political participation and emphasized
the endorsement of Democratic
presidential candidate Michael Dukakis.
Cuomo also urged votes for Dukakis
and reminded activists that the present
administration in Washington has
ra THE PUBLIC SECTOR
recent AFL-CIO convention,
forgotten what the union movement has
done for the U.S.
“Without the union movement this
country would not be ag great as it is
today,” he said. ‘It’s a simple fact.”
Abrams also expressed the need for
change. “Workers are risking their
lives in the workplace while the federal
government is sleeping,” he said.
McLaughlin, a member of the Reagan
administration cabinet, while not
specifically addressing labor criticism
of the administration, expressed a three-
TOP LEVEL MEETING — CSEA President Joe McDermott greets Gov. Mario Cuomo at the
pronged approach to help unions grow
stronger.
“Unions have to be leaders in change
to increase productivity,” she
explained.
Labor should concern itself with
education and training, affordable day
care — for children and the elderly —
and cooperative labor/management
relations.
“It’s time that labor and
management sat around the table, not
across it,’’ she said.
delegates.
CSEA Executive Vice President Danny Donohue receives some information about Employee
Assistance Programs, above. At left, state Attorney General Robert Abrams addresses
September 19, 1988
ACTIVIST
A page of information you can use as a
union activist and an individual.
ef
Older women must plan
By Lilly Gioia
CSEA Communications Associate
Today’s mid-life woman has more
choices in her life than any
generation of women who ever lived
before. Women in their 30s, 40s and
50s can look forward to a longer life
span, more years working and
access to more educational
opportunities than have ever existed
in history.
But looking over the horizon to the
year 2000, savvy, smart mid-life
women already see a landscape filled
with large numbers of older American
women who are poor and living
alone. According to the U.S. Census
Bureau, the average income for
women over 65 is only $6,300.
The rate of late-life and mid-life
divorces is rising alarmingly, and the
average age of widowhood is now
only 56 years old. Many older
women retire with less than $1,000
in personal savings while 80 percent
RSE
yaar is Pera OL:
It’s never too soon!
of American women retire from jobs
with no pension benefits at all.
To chart a better course for their
future, today’s mid-life women require
trail-blazing skills to arrive at healthy,
financially secure retirement years
where they can afford to truly enjoy
the fruits of years of hard work. How
to provide now for the quarter of
one’s life that will be spent without
earned income from a job is the
challenge CSEA Women’s
Committees are examining closely.
Because women live about seven
to 10 years longer than most men
and four out of five women can
expect to become widows at some
point in their lives, mid-life women
must begin to prepare now to face
potentially lengthy periods where they
will be fending for themselves.
Married and single women alike
can't afford the attitude of ignorance
is bliss when it comes to developing
financfial skills, notes Dr. Christopher
Hayes of Long Island University.
Hayes, who heads a federally-funded
project at the National Center for
Women and Retirement Research,
warns that “women must know the
information to plan effectively.”
According to Hayes, too many
women still feel overwhelmed by
money matters. They conclude that
planning for their future now is
premature, ‘too far ahead to think
about,” or it’s “too upsetting to think
about getting old,” or ‘I never
wanted to be bothered with it; my
husband takes care of the big money
decisions.”
CSEA mid-life women activists are
realizing more and more the need to
get facts and understand the money
realities of being 30, 40 or 50 years
old, and facing the possibility of
employment discrimination based on
sex and age. Women workers over
40 have a one-third higher
unemployment rate than men the
same age and when employed earn
only 55 percent of what older men
earn. The financial gap between the
sexes widens with age.
CSEA activists can take a leading
role in fighting the feminization of
poverty by supporting organizations
such as the Older Women’s League
(OWL), a non-profit Washington,
D.C., based group advocating for fair
treatment of mid-life and older
women.
Employers and the public need to
know that training a 40-year-old
woman for a position means the
possibility of still 25 more years of
service because older women
workers are much less likely to leave
the labor force or change jobs than
are younger workers. The turnover
rate for women in their 50s is one
sixth that of women in their 20s.
Because many women are not used
to pursuing their own needs, their
unions need to take a leading roll in
getting them to address the important
issues of their later years, especially
their finances, health care, job-related
and emotional issues.
This summer CSEA Metro Region
I's 1988 Workshop program kicked
off with a seminar on the need for
financial planning for mid-life women
and the CSEA Statewide Women’s
Committee plans a follow-up program
in Buffalo this November 18-20.
3/ Employment and Retirement Issues for
Women
4/ Taking Control of Your Health and Fitness
“A WOMAN'S GUIDE TO SOCIAL SECURITY”
Available at local Social Security offices
PENSION RIGHT CENTER
1346 Connecticut Avenue NW
Washington, D.C. 20036
(202) 296-3778
Compensation & Benefit Consultants
1500 Meidinger Tower
Louisville, Kentucky 40202-3415
(502) 561-4541
US SOCIAL SECURITY ADMINISTRATION
Office of Central Records
300 Greene Street
Baltimore, Maryland 21201
Include your present name & maiden name (if
married)
Include your Social Security number
Include your date of birth
Important information is available
BOOKLETS: OLDER WOMEN AND JOB DISCRIMINATION,
APRIMER
DIVORCE AND OLDER WOMEN
Contact: The Older Women’s League SOCIAL
730 Eleventh Street, N.W. SECURITY:
Washington, D.C. 20001 ‘
BOOKS: GROWING OLDER, GETTING BETTER, A RENGION
HANDBOOK FOR WOMEN IN THE ;
SECOND HALF OF LIFE. Addison-Wesley
1983
Written by Dr. Jane Porcino, Ph.D. FREE 1988
BUT | NEVER THOUGHT HE’D DIE GUIDE TO
The Westminster Press 1978 SOCIAL SECURITY:
Written by Miriam Baker Nye
PREP PROJECT: Long Island University, Southampton Campus TO OBTAIN
Southampton, New York 11968 SIAN OF
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4 Booklets, each $4.15. Checks payable to SECURITY
ey, ACCOUNT:
1/ Looking Ahead to Your Financial Future
2/ Social and Emotional Issues for Mid-Life
Women
September 19, 1988
THE PUBLIC SECTOR 5
Off to a good start!
CSEA’s new leadership recently sat down
with their counterparts from the Governor’s
Office of Employee Relations (GOER) for
their first meeting as the CSEA-New York
State Labor/Management Executive
Committee. CSEA President Joe McDermott
said that CSEA must play a more vigorous
role in the labor-managment process instead
of waiting for management to take the lead.
McDermott also stated that the labor/
management committee should seek
practical solutions to workplace problems
instead of spending time on philosophical
issues. i
Pictured, left to right, Elizabeth Moore,
director of GOER; Nancy Hodes,deputy
assistant director of GOER; Jerry Dudek,
deputy director of GOER; Michelle Agnew,
assistant to McDermott;
McDermott; Danny Donohue, CSEA
executive vice president; and Frank
Martello, CSEA director of field
services,
Hay
Management
Consultants
Development and Installation of a Job Evaluation
and Salary Administration Pregram
Orange County Government
Orange County study —
a lemon
Employees underpaid, but upgrading plan flawed
GOSHEN — CSEA is blanketing Orange
County lawmakers with letters and petitions
in the wake of a controversial consultant’s
report that found the county seriously
underpays its employees, but does not offer
improvements for many CSEA-represented
workers
The study, completed earlier this year by
Hay Management Consultants, recommends
at least $1.75 million in salary upgrades for
Orange County employees. However, the
recommendations call for considerable
salary hikes for professional and
management personnel, while clerical and
blue-collar workers get the short end of the
stick.
To date no action has been taken on the
report and there are indications that some
county officials also have misgivings about
the findings.
But while critical of specific aspects of the
report, CSEA does find value in its assertion
that Orange County needs to pay its
employees better wages.
“This is a beginning that opens the door
for further discussion,” said CSEA
Collective Bargaining Specialist Larry
Sparber. ‘‘It reflects what we’ve been saying
all along, but doesn’t go far enough. There
should be further analysis.”
That point was echoed by CSEA Research
6
THE PUBLIC SECTOR
Assistant Ed Molitor who conducted an in-
depth analysis of the Hay study.
“Tf nothing else, the study demonstrates
that Orange County’s salaries are well below
what they should be in a competitive
market. It should be used as evidence for
making salaries more realistic — but the
magnitude of the increases should be left to
the negotiating process,” Molitor stated.
Molitor recently told a meeting of the
Orange County Unit that there are a number
of problems with the Hay study
findings and the methods used to arrive at
the recommendations.
For example, Molitor explained that the
methodology used to evaluate each job title
was inconsistent. Different survey groups
were used in each of the job title
comparisons for the various segments of
county employees.
Salaries of professional and managerial
employees were compared with the salaries
of public benefit organizations and industry
employees in New York state, while clerical
and blue collar workers were compared to
private sector workers in Albany and
Binghamton.
There were numerous examples where the
Hay study did not differentiate between
titles traditionally considered promotional
lines such as typist and senior typist. This
also occurred in other areas where licensed
practical nurses (LPNs) ranked equally
with registered nurses (RNs) and social
services caseworkers ranked with senior
social workers.
Molitor also pointed out that some of the
Hay study’s recommendations would violate
contractual and civil service provisions. He
noted as well that it calls for a pay for
performance system and potential across-
the-board pay cuts for some titles, both of
which are unacceptable to CSEA.
Members of CSEA Local 836 are now
bringing these objections to the attention of
county officials to let them know what they
really got for the $65,000 they spent on the
study.
Orange County salaries
are well below what
the should be in a
competitive market
September 19, 1988
CSEA unity brings victory
Clinton County Unit beats opposition
PLATTSBURGH — After months of negotiations, a series of contract rejections and super conciliation, the Clinton County
CSEA Unit members moved the county Legislature from the brink of imposing a contract and negotiated the three-year pact
they had wanted in the first place.
“Tt was a superb show of unity,” said John D. Corcoran Jr., CSEA Region IV director, describing the uphill effort of the
unit members in the face of political opposition to their contract request.
North Country Field Representative Charlie Scott was surprised at the negotiated resolution to the contract problems. The
legislature had apparently decided to impose a contract rather than make a new offer.
“The people really made the difference,” Scott said. ‘‘They moved that county from a series of split raises over a three-year
period to a solid 5,5, and 4,1 settlement fully retroactive to January.
The original county offer was only retroactive to March. I was
surprised that the county even changed its position once. But the
unit moved the county several times over several days. It’s
amazing.”
Under the contract, easily ratified by the unit, the members will
receive 5 percent raises in the first and second years and a 4
percent raise followed by a one percent raise later in the third year.
The members’ show of unity at a legislative hearing was the
key to unlocking the snagged negotiations. With nearly 300 union
members surrounding county government buildings, as Scott and
Corcoran projected, the Clinton County legislators knew they had
miscalculated union and public opposition to their original contract
offer.
“J feel that the unit members were more united than the
legislators thought,” said Unit President Gerry Darrah. “It took
many meetings for the legislators to find out the unit members
were behind their negotiating team and its opposition to series of
split salary increases. That unity paid off. We negotiated what we
wanted, not what management wanted.
“Now they know CSEA members will work together to help
each other get a better deal.”
STATING THE CASE — CSEA Region IV Director John Corcoran, above,
stands out among a sea of Clinton County Unit members who appeared
before the county Legislature to argue for a satisfactory contract. It
worked — the legislature backed off from imposing a contract and offered
the unit exactly what it wanted. At left, unit members picketing the county
a — AREINS i a wy |
CSEA FIELD REPRESENTATIVE Charlie Scott also made
his point for a better contract offer before the legislature.
Nearly 300 members picketed a legislative hearing that
could easily have led to an imposed contract, had the unit
members not made their concerns heard so effectively.
September 19, 1988 THE PUBLIC SECTOR
7
In Chautauqua County
CSEA fights for jobs
By Ron Wofford
CSEA Communications Associate
DUNKIRK — A proposal to sell the
Chautauqua County Home and Infirmary
will be countered by CSEA’s full resources,
Region VI President Robert Lattimer
assured more than 150 members who work
there.
“We have received a committment from
President Joe McDermott that every means
at our disposal will go into keeping this
necessary facility in the public sector where
it belongs,” Lattimer said.
He was speaking at an emergency
meeting called by then Unit President Dick
Maggio after County Executive John
Glenzer proposed selling the county home to
solve its severe financial troubles.
The county Legislature must decide
whether to sell'the home, which represents
about 25 percent of the county work force.
Legislature Chairman Richard Davies has
named a seven-member special committee
to study the recommendation and report
back to the full legislature within a month.
Meanwhile, CSEA has launched its own
investigation into facts and figures put forth
in the sale proposal.
“We want to find out the facts, not just
what they tell us,”’ Lattimer said.
CSEA and AFSCME research, fiscal and
public health policy specialists will examine
the county’s financial records, including
past budgets, annual financial reports,
expenditure and revenue records and other
data before making realistic alternative
recommendations, he said.
A major part of the campaign to maintain
the home as a public facility will be to show
how valuable the home is to the community,
stressed Lattimer, Maggio and Ron King,
CSEA deputy director for local government.
“You have to become an integral part of
this effort,” Lattimer advised the members.
“When your unit president calls on you to
help, please respond in a positive way.”
Maggio, who has been hired by CSEA as
the field representative for the area, will
continue to be involved in the effort to save
the home and the jobs of those employed
there.
Former Unit Vice President Jim Smith
has assumed the presidency.
The unit and local activists have already
begun gathering petition signatures opposing
the sale and mounting a letter-writing and
phone-calling campaign to inform the
legislature how important maintaining the
facility is to the entire community.
Other measures are being planned as the
unit and supporters gear up for attendance
at a legislative hearing on the issue, with
more than 200 jobs in the balance.
“We want to find out
the facts, not just what
they tell us.”’
—Robert Lattimer
Region VI plans
women’s workshop
BUFFALO — “Putting It All Together’’
is the theme of a two-day conference
planned by the Region VI Women’s
Committee on Sept. 23 and 24.
“We're hoping to make this the kick-off
to a resurgence of activism by our
members in the region,’’ said Pam Caron,
region co-chair of the committee with
Ruby Everette and Judy DiPaola.
The conference will be at the Grand
Island Holiday Inn, near Buffalo.
A series of workshops and guest
speakers promise to make the conference
“a stimulating event that will have lasting
value for the working woman and the
union activist,’ Caron said.
To register, call the Region VI office at
716-886-0391. Hotel reservations may be
made directly with the Grand Island
Holiday Inn by phone at 716-773-1111.
Direct care workers
to meet in Region VI
NEWARK — A three-day Direct Care
Conference for people who work with the
developmentally disabled will be hosted
by members of Newark Developmental
Center CSEA Local 417 for the second
year.
“We'll be following the same format
that was so successful last year,” said
Local 417 President Marty DiSanto,
The conference will be at the Rochester
Marriott-Thruway on Sept. 26, 27 and 28.
Hotel reservations may be made directly
with the Marriot by calling 716-359-1800.
To get conference registration
information, call the Local 417 office,
315-331-7451. Registration is open to direct
care staff from any Region VI facility.
Elizabeth Moore, director of the
Governor’s Office of Employee Relations
(GOER), will be among the guest
speakers. Region VI President Robert
Lattimer will also speak at the
conference.
BUFFALO — A threat to the jobs of 300
Erie County Health Department workers
appears to have subsided for now. But the
members of Erie County CSEA Local 815
who mounted an all-out drive to reverse
the threat remain vigilant.
“We are determined not to let
something like this happen without a
fight,’’ said Shirley Heron, president of
the health department section of the
county employee unit.
The impending crisis came about due to
the loss of $4.2 million in state aid
because of legislative failings. The county
legislature did not establish state-
mandated health inspection fees for
restaurants and food vendors, which
should have been in effect Jan. 1. Erie
County was the only one in the state that
did not take the appropriate action.
When the legislature still hadn’t
approved the set of fees in June, the
CSEA sparks county action
health department’s acting commissioner
announced a timetable of cost-cutting
measures, including accepting no new
referrals for home health care, cutting
back on high risk maternal and infant
services, accepting no new patients to the
neighborhood clinics and beginning a
layoff of 300 of the department’s 1200
employees.
That’s when Heron and a core of her
unit members including Vice President
Paul Nagalski and unit steward Mary Ann
Farr went to work contacting their fellow
members and the public, urging them to
“get the county legislature on the ball’’ to
protect the needed services.
It worked — the legislature was
prodded to act responsibly.
Heron pointed out that CSEA was joined
in the efforts by the UAW and other labor
groups opposed to service cuts. While the
victory shows what a labor lobbying effort
Shirley Heron
can achieve, Heron says she and her
members will keep their eyes open for
similar threats and keep close tabs on the
legislature to make sure they do their
job!
THE PUBLIC SECTOR
September 19, 1988
Is it important to
register and vote?
LEONA AMES
Cayuga County
Local 806
“Tt should be top
priority for every
American! That’s how
the system works; if
you don’t vote, you’re
not heard.”
ANNE HAROLD
Orleans County
Local 837
“Of course.
Everyone should have
a say in every level of
government, from
village to city to
county, state and
federal. How else
would the politicians
know how to act on
measures if citizens
didn’t make their
stands known?”
VERONICA BRIJLALL
New York City State
Employees Local 010
“Don’t think a vote
doesn’t count, because
they really add up.
Research the
candidates and vote.
It’s important because
with no housing in New
York, poor and middle
class people are giving
up. Distinguish which
candidate will be best
for the country and
vote for him.”
GARY ELDRIDGE
Westchester
Developmental Center
Local 432
“Yes. It’s an
American right.”
SUE BIENIEK
Albany County
Local 801
“Yes, of course I feel
it’s important to
register and vote. It’s
one’s voice in the
political system. If one
doesn’t voice one’s
opinions, it’s giving up
one’s basic rights as a
human being.”
September 19, 1988 THE PUBLIC SECTOR ay
I’ve got an old mule and her name is Sal,
Fifteen miles on the Erie Canal.
She’s a good worker and a good old pal,
Fifteen miles on the Erie Canal.
We’ve hauled some barges in our day,
Filled with lumber, coal and hay
And ev’ry inch of the way we know from
Albany to Buffalo.
\ a
The Public Sector, on behalf of CSEA's 2|
,000 members, takes this opportunity to
salute Frank Zammiello, whose dedicationfind determination have given a new and
higher meaning to the term “union activist}
A MAN W
“Frank Zammiello is someone special! What
he did in terms of his own time and effort to
save the waterway was outstanding and in the
finest tradition of CSEA. For myself, Dorothy
Penner-Breen and everyone who worked
with Frank on the canal campaign and other
projects, we say ‘thanks and well done.’ We
MISSION
like brothers. As far as | know, and you can
check it out, Frank Zammiello is the first
person to accomplish getting federal money
for the canal since it was built. He knew how
to coordinate the efforts of both political
parties, as well as cooperation from his fellow
employees and CSEA. He has been
“We worked well together, we were almost \
FRANK ZAMMIELLO, right, thanks state
Sen. James Donovan for his help in
obtaining additional funding and manpower
for the endangered state canal system.
pledge to continue the fight for more funds.”
— CSEA Region V President Jim Moore
ce a
(Ei “Frank Zammiello was an outstanding ie.
employee and gentleman. He always had a
positive attitude and his fellow CSEA
members were his prime concern. In all those
months and years he worked to help save the
canal, he wanted no special treatment or
privileges. Whenever the canal campaign took
him on his own time, he was always ready
recommended for the Governor's Award, and
deserves ita
~— Local 502 Vice President Harold Reinhardt /
>a
By Charles McGeary
CSEA Communications Associate
UTICA — After nearly 21 years with the
New York State Barge Canal Waterways
System, Frank Zammiello has put away his
welding torch, goggles and flash mask for the
last time.
The welder who was at the core of a tireless
campaign to save the historic canal from
further deterioration and threat of closing
recently closed out his own career when he
“It's been an honor and pleasure to know
and work with Frank. It will be difficult to fill
his shoes, but I'll do my best to live up to his
good example.”
e Local 502 President Bruce Shipman
walked proudly into his retirement.
Protecting the canal became an obsession
for Zammiello starting in the early 1980s when
the entire canal system was crumbling and
facing closure. He called it his ‘“‘personal
fight.”
While he will be especially remembered for
his successful canal campaign, Zammiello
build an enviable record of service in many
other areas.
The Navy veteran of World War II was
president of CSEA State Barge Canal Local 502
for his last nine years on the job. In addition
he served on CSEA membership, labor/
management and regional election
committees. He was founder of the State
Conference on Waterways and one of the
founders of the hugely successful Employee
Assistance Program (EAP).
The Public Sector reminisced with
Zammiello recently about his long campaign to
“save the canal.”’ Following are some excerpts
of that conversation:
Frank, do you remember when the CSEA
fight to save the historic waterway began?
(Pouring through his stacks of letters,
albums, clippings, photos and momentos)
... It was 1982. We had heard from
several sources, and we could see it in the
equipment conditions and loss of
personnel, that the canal was headed for
a phase out in a few years. As a friend of
mine said, ‘we were going to have the
world’s largest frog pond if something
wasn’t done.’
What did you do to get things turned around
and headed in the right direction?
I contacted Jim Moore (CSEA Central
Region V president). Jim quickly
responed by calling all CSEA Region V
presidents to meet with Dorothy Penner-
Breen, our regional political action
chairperson.
Did state authorities have anything to say at
this time?
Yes, they all denied the canal was in
trouble. Every state official we talked to
1 0 THE PUBLIC SECTOR
FRANK ZAMMIELLO, above. CSEA
BUMPER STICKER, right.
and willing to handle his regular welding
assignments the next day.”
Ye Shop Supervisor Don Cornmire
Z
1QyN
s BARGE CANAL
THE CIVIL SERVICE EMPLOYEES ASSOCIATION, Local 1000, American Federation of State, County & Municipal Employees, AFL-CIO
Ses:
said the canal was not headed for a phase
out. The more they denied it, the more we
would see it looked like a cover up. All
the bad signs were there.
So what did you do?
Dorothy and I went to see Assemblyman
Anthony Ruggiero with a few ideas. He
listened and said he would do what he
could do to help. We then took our ideas
to CSEA headquarters . . . had some
petitions and flyers printed and sent to all
presidents of canal locals along the
450-mile waterway. As president of Local
502 my area stretched from Little Falls in
Herkimer County through Oneida County
to Sylvan Beach . . . We set up press
conferences, interviews, speaking
engagements or just quick chats with
every mayor, supervisor, politician or
organization that would listen in every
town, city, village and crossroads. The
first public official to sign our petition
was Carl Eilenberg, mayor of Rome,
where the canal first opened.
What was the general response from those
public officials?
Excellent, couldn’t have been better. We
distributed our petitions everywhere. The
state refused to permit petition
distribution at the canal locks, the perfect
place for canal traffic, so we dropped off
hundreds of them at business
Were New York state legislators sympathetic
to the canal fight?
establishments . . . It was still rough
going. We made progress here and there
trying not to become discouraged.
Every one of them. Assemblyman Tony
Casale, of Herkimer, called a special
meeting at Lock 18. Then in October 1983,
CSEA President Bill McGowan toured the
waterway, stopping at locks and terminal
shops all the way. That’s when the media
really took notice. We also requested and
received a special meeting with Oneida@
County Executive John Plumley . . . He
pledged his full support . . . I can’t forget
to mention the help we received from
state Sens. Donovan and Auer and
Assemblymen Matt Murphy from
Lockport and Mike Bragman from the
Syracuse area. I’m sure there was more
support from other politicians in other
regions, too. When we met with Sen.
Donovan in his Utica office we presente®
him with 35,000 petition signatures from
citizens concerned about the canal.
Was Donovan impressed by your numbers?
He was so impressed he set up a meeting
in Albany with Auer, Casale, Ruggiero,
Bragman and others who wanted to know
the status of the canal. At that meeting
we explained how the canal manpower
had dropped from a high of 1,400 to 493
Septembe|
men and women. As a result of the
meeting, and strong efforts by Donovan
@ and other legislators, the canal was
awarded additional working funds of
$650,000 and an increase in manpower to
550. Not much, not enough, but a start.
Also in 1985 we met with U.S.
Rep. Sherwood Boehlert to see if
we could shake loose federal funds. We
also began a letter-writing campaign to
Boehlert and U.S. Sens. D’Amato and
Moynihan to push for federal money.
Ang then what happened?
We took our fight to all those towns,
villages and cities asking everyone to
write letters to their congressmen and
senators to get a bill passed... . A bill
was drafted and passed in 1986, but
getting the money appropriated was
another story. In December 1987,
December 23rd to be exact, Senator
Moynihan called to say that $10 million
@ had been allocated. Then in January of
this year someone ‘pulled the plug’ again.
The allocation was halted. Moynihan was
furious when he learned the money was
cut and took his anger to the news media
... This past June Moynihan attended a
political meeting in the Utica area. I met
him there and he called me aside and said
... ‘Will you accept $5 million in canal
funds now . . . and fight for more later?’
19, 1988
What was your response?
I said sure. Five million is better than
nothing. It’s good for starters and we can
go from there. As I understand it, the $5
million is committed and the Army Corps
of Engineers has drawn up a rough draft
of what they plan to do with the funds.
As you look back, what do you remember
best?
I remember the great support from
village, town and city officials. I think of
state legislators Casale, Ruggiero,
Bragman, Auer, Murphy and Donovan.
U.S. Congressman Boehlert and Sen.
D’Amato and Moynihan and the others
who voted for the bill. But I also
remember the lack of support or any
cooperation from the commissioner or
other high officials connected with the
waterway ...I don’t know why but I do
know the support was not there when we
asked for it.
Are things now looking up for the canal?
Commercial tonnage is down, but
recreational boating is up. 50,000 pleasure
boats used the canal in 1984. Last year
(1987), 142,000 cruised through.
What would you like to see happen next?
I'd like to see the supervision and
maintenance of the entire waterway taken
over by the state Parks and Recreation
Department.
These past few years must have been hardship
on your personal life. What does your wife
say?
Mary Jane is a wonderful lady. She
understands what the canal means to me.
She knew that once I became involved in
the fight to save it, I had to stick it out,
no matter how many nights, days and
weekend meetings it took to do the job.
And now it’s time to enjoy your family again.?
Yes, (smiling) it’s time to get
reacquainted with my wife, daughter, two
sons and grandchildren. I’m really going
to enjoy spending time with them. Oh, I’ll
probably get involved in a CSKA retiree
local here in Utica,too . . . I’m officially
retired, but my heart and soul are still on
the canal.
Frank, you’ve been a CSEA member and
dedicated activist for many years. How would
you like to be remembered by your fellow
members?
I'd like to think they know I had their best
interests at heart. And that I did the best
I could to protect their rights under the
contract, and to help save the canal from
being phased out. I never wanted or asked
for special treatment on the job, while
working on my own time to save the
canal. The canal campaign was a labor of
love. I was a welder and I did my job like
everyone else with no special favors.
THE PUBLIC SECTOR 1 1
babes
Local 431
TUPPER LAKE — Sunmount Developmental Center CSEA
Local 431 recently awarded two 1988 Arthur Grant Memorial
Scholarships for $600 and $400.
With the 1988 awards, named for a former Sunmount
employee and CSEA activist, the local has raised $10,000 for
scholarships. The winners are:
KEVIN HACHEY, an honors graduate of Tupper Lake High
School, is the son of Denise Peets, a therapy aide. He attends
Marquette University in Wisconsin.
REBECCA MINER, an honors graduate of Tupper Lake High
School, is the daughter of Penelope Miner, a therapy aide. She j
attends North Country Community College.
The scholarship committee included Frank Camelo,
chairperson, Arlene Tyson, Louise Drew, Edith Gagnon and
Cheryl Arsenault. x
“With the rising cost of education, we decided to increase the |
number and amounts this year,” said Local 431 President Don
Hesseltine. ‘‘We hope this will encourage other students in the
area to apply for future awards.”’
Local 305
OXFORD — Oxford State Veterans Home CSEA Local 305
recently awarded a $250 scholarship to Heather Hicks.
Heather is the daughter of Michael and Judy Hicks of
Oxford. Her mother is a licensed practical nurse at the
home. A graduate of Oxford Academy and Central High
School, Heather was a class officer and was active in varsity | —
sports, the school chorus and band. She attends Alfred i
University.
“1 want to thank all CSEA members and others who
participated in our fund-raising,” said Local 305 President
Joyce Mulvey. ‘This is our second scholarship and we are
already looking ahead to 1989 and possibly increasing the
award.”
Local 833
WESTMORELAND — Continuing a
17-year tradition, Oneida County CSEA
Local 833 presented three $500 scholarships
for 1988. The winners are:
JOHN DAVIES, son of Marvin and
Jeanette Davies and a graduate of Remsen
Central School, attends Clarkson University.
His father works for the Oneida County
Department of Public Works.
SHERRY FLEET, daughter of William
and Joanne Fleet and a graduate of Rome
Free Academy, attends SUNY College at
Geneseo. Her father works for the city of
me.
MICHELLE MELISKO, daughter of
Joanne Melisko and valedictorian of her
class at Utica Senior Academy, attends
Duke University. Her mother works at
Mohawk Valley Community College.
THE PUBLIC SECTOR
12
LOCAL 833 SCHOLARSHIP
winners recently received their
awards. Shown from left are:
Steve Hunter, committee
chairperson; Marvin Davies and e
son John Davies; William Fleet
and daughter Sherry Fleet; Local
833 President Dorothy Penner-
Breen; Michelle Melisko and her
mother, Joanne Melisko; and Joe
DeFina, scholarship committee
member.
September 19, 1988
SCHENECTADY — In a move that could save about 10 percent
of the project’s total cost, Schenectady County is using its own work
force for much of the construction work on an addition to the county
jail.
The plan to use county employees on the addition developed
through labor/management discussions between CSHA Local 847
and county officials.
Although the major construction work on the $600,000 addition is
being handled by an outside contractor, county employees did all
the site preparation and will do the interior contracting work. The
use of the county workers should save the county about $75,000.
“It just didn’t make sense for the county to contract out all of
the work when they had people on their own payroll with the
expertise to do the job,” said Local 847 President Frank Tomecko.
“That would be like paying twice.”
Lou Altieri, president of the county Engineering and Public
Works CSEA Unit, said that eight to 10 employees in his department
were involved in the site preparation, while another dozen, including
electrical experts from other departments, are doing the interior
work.
Altieri praised County Manager Robert McEvoy and the county
Board of Representatives for using the talents of their own workers.
The jail project could lead to public empleyee involvement in other
projects, he noted.
The addition, scheduled to be completed in October, will create
40 barracks-type units for the jail.
WORKING TOGETHER at the groundbreaking for the new addition to the
Schenectady County Jail are both CSEA members, who are doing some of
the work, and county officials. Third from left is Local 847 President
Frank Tomecko, and at center is Engineering and Public Works Unit
President Lou Altieri.
By Anita Manley
CSEA Communications Associate
THEILLS — A worker with more than
1,200 hours of sick time is given a
counseling memo when he takes three
days; another refuses to work his fifth
straight double shift because of fatigue
and is charged with insubordination.
These are just two examples of why
morale is falling apart at Letchworth
Developmental Center. Management is
only helping the downhill slide by going
back on labor/management agreements
Letchworth management breaks L/M agreements
on policies and procedures.
Months of frustration over continuous
violations of those agreements have
demoralized direct-care workers and
CSEA officials are concerned that
arbitrary changes in policies and staffing
have affected the quality of care at the
facility.
“Management has shown a total
disregard for the agreements that they
themselves made with our union,”’ said
CSEA Local 412 President Brian Cox.
“What is the sense of spending hours in
labor/management meetings and
negotiating and signing agreements when
they obviously have no meaning for
management?”
Meanwhile, CSEA’s statewide President
Joe McDermott pledged the support of the
union to resolve the problems. He
emphasized that the union is considering
a breach-of-contract lawsuit.
“We cannot allow management to
renege on agreements that affect not only
our members, but also the clients they
serve,’ McDermott said. “Management
must live up to its agreements, and we
will do everything we can to be sure that
happens.”
The attitude of facility officials has
perpetuated distrust, Cox said.
“T can’t continue to reassure my
members that certain procedures and
policies are in place when they’re not
honored by management,” he said.
In January, Cox alerted co-workers that
management officials were violating the
agreements. He asked for backing from
the state Office of Mental Retardation and
Developmental Disabilities (OMRDD), in
February, but received no response until
July.
The response? “It is within
management’s rights to null and void any
local agreement,”” OMRDD officials said,
adding that such agreements “are not
written in stone.”
“Then why bother?” Cox asked. ‘‘Are
they just paying us lip service?”
Also disturbing has been the absence of
facility Director Albert Robidoux, who has
not attended any of the meetings between
the union and management.
“T told him in April that he should visit
the facility to see what’s going on,”’ Cox
said. “You would think that with the
problems in recruiting and maintaining a
quality workforce that management would
try to reach out and improve relations.
“Instead they make changes in minimum
staffing without our input, they arbitrarily
change the bidding procedure for filling
job vacancies — again without our input —
and they spend their time looking for
reasons to bring employees up on
ridiculous charges.”
September 19, 1988
13
THE PUBLIC SECTOR
LABOR DAY WRAP-UP _
Labor Day was an opportunity for a show of union
pride for CSEA activists from Buffalo to Binghamton.
Two Labor Day parades in CSEA Region VI featured
enthusiastic participation of CSEA members and their
families, demonstrating staunch support for recognition
of organized labor’s role in American life.
In the Buffalo area, activists fashioned a float festooned with
balloons, streamers, union banners and bumper stickers to give a
positive CSEA image to onlookers.
In Rochester, many years of tradition were continued with
CENTRAL REGION 5
|
Scores of CSEA Central Region members turned out for the recent
Solidarity Picnic and Rally in Binghamton, which featured Region V
President Jim Moore as key speaker.
CSEA members filled the streets in Rochester this Labor Day.
Rain couldn’t dampen the spirits of these CSEA activists at the Rochester parade.
Monroe County activists leading the way in the Labor Council-
sponsored parade.
In Binghamton, more than 300 union members, family and
friends of labor attended the annual fellowship event sponsored by
the community and labor coalition in the Southern Tier.
Watch for the new series of Union, Yes! TV
spots during coverage of the Olympic games!
McDermott to speak in Jamestown
JAMESTOWN — CSEA President Joseph McDermott will
speak to a Region VI quarterly conference that will focus
heavily on the business and fiscal affairs of the union, according
to Region President Robert Lattimer.
Executive Vice President Danny Donohue, Secretary Irene
Carr, Treasurer Mary Sullivan and Comptroller David Stack
will also participate in the meeting, scheduled for Sept. 30 and
Oct. 1 at the Jamestown Holiday Inn.
Treasurer Sullivan and Comptroller Stack will lead a
discussion of CSEA fiscal policy and budget Saturday morning,
and President McDermott will be the luncheon speaker.
The address will be McDermott’s first to the region since
his election as president.
Reservations may be made directly with the Jamestown
Holiday Inn at 716-664-3400, and luncheon reservations may be
made through the region office at 716-886-0391.
14
THE PUBLIC SECTOR
The Social Security Administration is
offering a new ‘‘Dial-a-Benefit”’ service that
gives you a chance to learn now, what Social
Security benefits you might expect when you
reach retirement age.
° After calling a toll free number —
Social :sovsszs0082 you'll receive a form in the
e mail that details your past wage earnings
Security and projects what your future benefits might
e be.
D ial- The estimate will be most accurate for
persons approaching retirement age.
a- Younger workers might want to update the
projections every three years or so.
There’s something else to keep in mind —
apparently the toll-free number has proved
extremely popular and many callers receive
constant busy signals. You can get the same
information sent out to you by contacting the
local Social Security office in your
community.
Benefit
September 19, 1988
= isa)
Mary Sullivan
CSEA statewide treasurer
CSEA statewide Treasurer Mary Sullivan
has made it to the top level of CSEA
leadership, but her rise as a union activist
started out almost as a joke.
She had been working in the Herkimer
County Department of Social Services for
more than six months before she found out
about the Herkimer County Employees
CSEA Unit.
@ ‘Not once was I approached about
CSEA,” she recalled. “But after a while I
got the idea something was out there, and I
signed a union card.”
The president of Sullivan’s CSEA unit
worked in her department and shortly after
approached her about upcoming elections.
“They asked if I was interested in
running, and they said what office,” Sullivan
said. “I jokingly said ‘president,’ and
@shortly after that, I was president.”
Her first task? Negotiating a contract,
something she had never done. To
complicate matters, sitting on the other side
of the table was her former high school
guidance counselor.
Sullivan credits her field representative at
the time with guiding her through the
negotiating process. But still, the job wasn’t
simple.
@ ‘I called an impasse and nearly gave my
former guidance counselor a heart attack,
because no one had ever called impasse,”
she said.
But it worked. The unit got a good
contract, and Sullivan had survived her
baptism by fire.
Her race for president of Herkimer County
CSEA Local 822 was also unusual, she said.
“J didn’t like the way the current
@president was running the local, so I decided
to run,”’ Sullivan said. ‘He looked around
and saw the support I had and withdrew. I
ran unopposed.”
One of her proudest accomplishments was
winning the right for a person on maternity
leave to reduce their unpaid leave by using
accrued vacation and sick leave. The victory
occurred in the early 1970s before the
practice was commonly used, she said.
Once on the statewide Board of Directors,
she wound up on the Personnel Committee
for seven years simply because when she
was asked, she said yes.
Sullivan has stayed with the union, at the
expense of her career as a social worker,
she noted.
“My professional career rose and fell with
the union,” she said. ‘‘As a social worker, I
had no where to go but up because it’s an
entry level position. But I lost promotions
because I was involved in the union.”
Still, Sullivan said she has no qualms
about that. Even in a conservative, anti-
union county like Herkimer, being a union
activist has been worth it.
“The union seemed to me more of a kick.
You could do more, you could help more. If
you were the only one working, you could
still make a difference,” she said.
Making a difference is important to
Sullivan. Perhaps that’s why she became a
social worker to begin with. She carries her
philosophy into her work as statewide
treasurer.
“I believe a social worker’s job is to teach
people how to do for themselves what they
don’t know how to do,” she said. “I don’t
believe it’s my job to do things for locals
and units that they think they can’t do. I
think I can teach them to meet the goals
that they set.’’
Sullivan knows about setting and
achieving goals. As the only local
government representative to be elected a
statewide officer, she has taken the concerns
and status of local government employees to
heart.
Their situations are very different from
those of state workers, she noted. For
example, CSEA negotiates 1,000 local
government contracts.
“The team sits face to face with
managers, the same managers they see day
to day in the workplace. It’s very personal,”
Sullivan said. ‘‘With state agencies, 36
members come to Albany to negotiate with
people they may never see again. It’s an
isolated happening once every three
years...
“T think local government has a great deal
to contribute but I think because of the
energy required at the local government
local and unit level, they may not have the
time to get involved in the union at other
levels,’’ she added.
“Many of our local government people
don’t realize — because CSEA doesn’t
communicate it — that what happens at the
regional and state level affects them.
Therefore it becomes important for them to
f
participate at those levels, so they can be
heard in the president’s office.”
But getting people involved at all levels of
CSEA is an issue Sullivan is concerned
about.
“We do not do enough, I think, to
encourage people to become CSEA activists.
They’re either intimidated by a job they see
as too complex or too time-consuming.
she said.
“The way to encourage activism is to get
members involved in the social committee
or the audit committee. You don’t have to
start as an officer,” she said. “It’s a
question of finding people who are motivated
by unionism, working together to make
things better for everyone, not as a vehicle
for personal gain.
“There’s more of the ‘I care’ types than
you can imagine, they just don’t know how
to get into the mainstream.”
Sullivan wants to make that mainstream
more accessible, and part of that entails
making sure the members are really aware
of the union and what it does for them.
“T think one of the big problems with
CSEA is the union doesn’t seem to be felt by
the rank and file. There needs to be a
visibility,” she said. ‘‘The visibility comes
from an expansion of the activist role on the
local and unit level.”
“Image building is something I see as a
priority of this administration, not only
externally but also internally — that the
union is strong and competent and cares.”
That is more than an image for Sullivan.
It is fact, and it is something she feels
responsible for.
“T believe I have a responsibility along
with the other officers to guide, direct and
lead, because that’s what we are — leaders
of the biggest and best union in the state,”
Sullivan said. ‘I like what I do. I believe
CSEA is special. It just hasn’t tooted its own
horn enough.”
September 19, 1988
THE PUBLIC SECTOR 1 5
-Splash!...
Employees on the lower floors of the
42-story Corning Tower at the Empire State
Plaza in downtown Albany have geysers to
contend with when they use the urinals in
the men’s restrooms. But although unwary
people have been getting showered by the
urinals for as long as a dozen years, you
could hardly call them “‘old faithfuls.”
That because the urinals spout water at
irregular, random times, without much
warning, and no one is ever sure when they
might get sprayed. And when they are not
spraying the area, the urinals belch out foul-
smelling sewer gas odors.
State Health Department CSEA Local 664
President Anthony Muscatiello is furious
that the problems have not been corrected
over the years, and especially since last
March when the problems intensified and
the state Office of General Services (OGS),
the building’s landlord, was formally
notified.
Muscatiello says OGS’s inadequate
response was to rip out urinals in the men’s
room on the second floor. The result was
that urinals in the men’s room on the third
floor inherited the problem and began
spraying water and belching odors. OGS.
covered those urinals with plastic, rendering
them useless, and the problems have since
moved upwards to include urinals on the
fourth and seventh floors.
Burp-p-p!
GIVING ‘EM A SAFE DISTANCE
— CSEA Local 664 President
Anthony Muscatiello stands well
back from urinals in the men’s room
on the third floor of the Corning
Tower building, even though the
urinals have been covered with . |
plastic sheeting to prevent water
damage from back pressure in the
pipes.
“OGS has got to fix the problem and not
just remove the fixtures,” Muscatiello said. ©
In the most recent futile attempt to correct talked with a reporter, had a different various times over the past 12 years, addin;
the situation, OGS removed the third floor opinion. " the problem worsened significantly in scat
me Hen now the fourth floor men’s room is a “It’s a case of someone taking a shortcut months. The first formal complaint was
waterfall, Muscatiello said. to make a few extra bucks and thinking he _ lodged last March.
“We've got people urinating in the sinks,” could get away with it,” the writer wrote in CSEA’s Muscatiello, whose local
he said. “It’s pretty near time OGS brought a “letter to the editor” column of the Times represents many state workers in the
in some outside consultants. Una chitin oree ne ee aie ais boatbaes
a A ith all of the inspections that were ve les wi ey hear
_An OGS Spokes cree said he believes the placed upon the workers and the contractors the sound of water suddenly rushing through ¢
situation is Sone 1 Py es Sanlat as at the time of original construction, someone the pipes but many still get an unexpected
waste water en ae B ae en a the high. Went in and disconnected some of the shower. Visitors stand no chance of escaping
same time poy eabee eos a 6b original piping . . . A relief vent or back water damage, he noted. One visitor to the
se Sap al eos a vent has been plugged off, and the air ahead Health Department recently “took a full
Paes a ue i EES ioe the P of the sewage has no place to go. It seeks bath” when he used the urinals, which was
POUsh Lower even pipes ae “pack _ the easiest route,” according to the letter embarrasing to the individual and the
urinals. Such a condition is known as “back signed py Edward E. Livingston of Albany, department, Muscatiello said.
pressure. described in a newspaper editor’s note as a OGS said it plans to clean out pipes soon
But at least one Albany area plumber- plumber steamfitter. in an effort to solve the problem.
steamfitter, reading about the situation in An OGS spokesperson told the Times Meanwhile, Muscatiello advises employees
the Albany Times Union after Muscatiello Union that the problem has been noted at and visitors, “be careful in there.”
A number of veteran CSEA staffers director of organizing.
have new titles as a result of recent Donald Kelly has officially assurned
appointments at CSEA Headquarters, duties as CSEA assistant director of
Michelle Agnew has been named research. Kelly served most recently as
Cc SE A t ff administrative assistant to President Joe CSEA deputy director of contract
Ss a McDermott. She was previously assistant administration handling the Division of
é dlcector of the Joint Committee on Health Military and Naval Affairs and Office of je
Benefits. Court Administration Units.
appointments Also in the Executive Office, Kelly Debra Baum has been named as CSEA’s
Garceau is serving as secretarial assistant new director of the Labor Education Action
d to McDermott. Kim Hytko is steno office Program (LEAP). She has been serving as
announce supervisor while Barbara Collen has been _ acting director of LEAP. Baum will be
a appointed to a secretarial post. joined by a new staffer — Ira Baumgarten,
Lawrence Scanlon is now CSEA director who has been appointed assistant director of
of political action after serving as CSEA LEAP.
e
16
THE PUBLIC SECTOR September 19, 1988
—
“A
s take to the road
we —_ CSEA President Joe McDermott,
Executive Vice President Danny
Donahue, Secretary Irene Carr and
Treasurer Mary Sullivan have kicked
off a series of informational meetings
that will take them from one end of the
state to the other over the next few
weeks.
The statewide leaders are meeting
with CSEA regional executive boards,
local officials, activists and staff to
discuss union priorities and hear
concerns.
“We need to hear what’s going on out
in the field so we can find ways to
make CSEA work better,’’ McDermott
explained.
Pictured during a recent meeting at
CSEA Region II offices in
Manhattan are, from left, Region II
Secretary Harriet Hart, McDermott,
Region II President George
Boncoraglio, Region II Second Vice
President Denis Tobin, and Carr.
THE
PRIDE IS BACK
There are still some copies of the
handy reference guide for VDT
operators — Employees and VDTs:
Finding a comfortable fit — available
For your free copy, send the coupon,
below, to:
Linda Sage
CSEA Headquarters
OCA
from CSEA. 143 Washington Avenue
f Albany, New York 12224
nto —_-----_--________-___---- 1
1 YES! Please send me a copy of CSEAP’s “Employees & VDTs: I
| Finding a Comfortable Fit. '
for ! Name eee '
ee z | leas
q | city ma State Zip code. |
you! | |
{. Local_ |
eprerciermmen" -seveesenaan note!
|
HAZARDS OFA
e
SOLE TRUSTEE 2 <
Judiciary Unit
contract
ratification
DECISIONS,
DECISIONS...
Ballots for the CSEA-OCA
contract ratification will be mailed
to all eligible members the week
of Sept. 26, 1988. Deadline for
the return of completed ballots is
5 p.m. Monday, Oct. 17, 1988,
at the address on the return
envelope. Ballots will be counted
on Oct. 18.
IF YOU HAVE NOT RECEIVED
YOUR BALLOT BY OCT. 5,
1988, contact:
The Office of Field Operations
CSEA Headquarters
(518) 434-0191/Extension 288
for a REPLACEMENT BALLOT
September 19, 1988
17
THE PUBLIC SECTOR
Register! And vote November 8!
DUKAKIS
FOR PRESIDENT
CEA
*
State-Wide
Employee Education
Program
CSEA’s State-Wide Employee Education Program (SWEEP)
has been funded for another year by a grant from the State
Education Department. All employees represented by CSEA are
eligible to participate in SWEEP.
WHO SHOULD TAKE THESE COURSES?
CSEA members interested in:
1, Increasing on-the-job effectiveness
2. Preparing for Civil Service Exams
3. Preparing for the GED Exam
4, Preparing for college-level courses
COURSE DESCRIPTIONS
REFRESHER MATH
Course covers concepts, computation and problem solving
ae recone decimals, percents, tabular material and beginning
algebra.
WRITING AS A PROCESS
Content includes writing memos, reports, letters and
compositions using the skills of punctuation and capitalization; us-
age; diction and style; sentence structure; logic and organization.
READING COMPREHENSION
Focus will be on improving the comprehension skills of
scanning and reading for detail, identifying the main idea, using
context clues and drawing conclusions.
HOW ARE THE COURSES TAUGHT?
The first class night each week will be group instruction with
built-in practice sessions. The second night is an optional learning
lab for students wanting extra individualized instruction.
New course
schedule set
WHERE & WHEN?
All courses begin the week of October 10 and end the week of
December 12. The schedule and locations are listed below.
HOW CAN I SIGN-UP?
Clip off, fill out, and mail in the coupon below. Classes will be
filled on a first-come-first-serve basis. You'll be notified by return
mail where and when to report for the first class.
All sweep courses are free!
Mail To: CSEA/SWEEP
143 Washington Avenue
Albany, NY 12210
NAME: __
WORK ADDRESS: HOME ADDRESS:
WORK PHONE ( sae eee
HOME PHONE ( ) Ea
CHECK COURSE & IDENTIFY LOCATION
READING LOCATION
____ WRITING. sitcce eine Bal Seats
__ MATHEMATICS
SWEEP COURSE SCHEDULE AND LOCATIONS
LOCATION
Region I
Freeport H.S.
S. Brookside Ave. &
Sunrise Hwy.
Freeport
BOCES Brookhaven Tech, Ctr.
Martha Avenue
Bellport
Region II
Manhattan Dev. Ctr.
75 Morton Street
New York
CSEA Region 2 Office
11 Broadway, Suite 1500
New York E niet
CUNY Tues, & Thurs.
Region 11 6:00-8: m.
Dutchess Co. BOCES Tues. & Thurs.
Salt Point Turnpike 6:30-8:00 p.m. Reading
Poughkeepsie 8:00-9:30 p.m. Math
White Plains H.S. Thurs. Math
550 North Street 7:00-9:00 p.m.
White Plains
DAYS AND TIME COURSE
Tues. & Thurs. Math
7;00-9:00 p.m.
Tues. & Thurs.
7;00-9:00 p.m.
Reading
Tues. & Thurs. Writing
5:00-7:00 p.m.
Mon. & Wed. Math
5:00-7:00 p.m.
Reading
18
THE PUBLIC SECTOR
Region IV
Adult Learning Center
27 Western Avenue
Albany
North Country Comm. College
Hudson Hall
Saranac Lake
Mon, & Thurs.
7:00-9:00 p.m
Reading
Region V
Adult Learning Center
210 W. Liberty Street
Rome
Binghamton H.S.
31 Main Street
Binghamton
Reading
Math
Region VI
Olympia H.S.
1139 Maiben Lane
Greece
Adult Learning Ctr. & Thurs.
389 Virginia Street 6 :00 p.m.
Buffalo 8:00-9:30 p.m.
Math
9:00 p.m.
Reading
Math
September 19, 1988
* THIS, THAT AND THE OTHER THING _ ss
AFSCME Family
Scholarship Program
AFSCME’s Family Scholarship Program will again offer the
college-bound children of its members, including those in CSHA, a
chance to win a substantial scholarship.
CSEA’s international affiliate awards 10 scholarships each
year for $2,000; those scholarships are renewed for up to four
years.
To apply for an AFSCME scholarship, the child of a member
must fill out the AFSCME Family Scholarship Official
Application; write an essay of not more than 1,000 words titled
“What AFSCME has meant to our family”; provide information
on a parent’s AFSCME membership; have the high school
provide a grade transcript; submit results of the SAT or ACT
tests; and send in the package by the Dec. 31 deadline.
To get an application, write:
AFSCME Family Scholarship
ATTN: Education Department
1625 L Street NW
Washington, D.C. 20036
Commendable action
Dutchess County Unit President Carl Mathison is the recipient
of a commendation crediting him with solving the murder of a
teen-age girl.
Mathison, a probation officer who deals
with “high risk” probationers, helped police
develop information on one of his charges who
later confessed to murdering the girl.
In a letter to Mathison’s boss, State Police Superintendent
Thomas Constantine said: ‘Without his efforts, this murder
might have remained unsolved. Mathison was invaluable in
closing this case successfully.”
The body of the young woman reported missing by her
family in March was found in a wooded area of southern
Dutchess County in July.
Mathison said his client had been dating the girl. When
asked to take a lie detector test, the man refused. Shortly
thereafter he confessed to the crime.
“This is the first time I ever received a commendation
from the State Police and I’m very proud of it,’’ Mathison said.
WESTERN REGION vi
CSEq
\
OCAL 408 AFSCME, AFL-Cio
The Betsy Ross of Region VI
Before she fashioned a banner for her local’s union office,
Gowanda Psychiatric Center CSEA Local 408 member Linda Hussey
hadn’t done a lot of sewing. But when her local president at the
time, Joe Hageman, expressed his desire for a local banner similar
to the one that CSEA Region VI hangs at regional affairs, Hussey
volunteered.
The result is a snappy, professional-looking banner that has
evoked requests from other locals for one of their own and earned
Hussey the nickname, ‘Betsy Ross.”
Looks like Linda Hussey may have started a new career or at
least a sideline!
We're Good news for organized labor! -A recent
Gallup Poll found that public approval of labor
on the unions has improved six percentage points
since 1981.
way up! The poll results showed that 61 percent of
the general public approved of labor unions,
while 25 percent disapproved and 14 percent
had no opinion.
While there’s clearly more work to do in
getting more people to recognize the good
O@ work that unions do, the figures indicate that
qummmm ° must be doing something right.
Region II plans fundraiser
Wendell Rachelle, chairman of the CSEA Region II Safety and
Health Committee, has announced a fundraising fashion show and
disco to be held at the Marc Ballroom on Friday, Oct. 7, beginning
at 10 p.m. Advance tickets are $12 ($15 at the door) and can be
obtained by calling either (212) 625-2008 or (212) 514-9200.
From left, Leslie and Kerri 0’Mara, Megan and Rochelle O’Mara.
CSEA Cousins cop pageant honors
Two school bus drivers who are CSEA members and sisters-
in-law are the proud mothers of beauty queens. Rochelle O’Mara,
a bus driver for the Tarrytown School District, and Leslie O’Mara,
a driver for the Mamaroneck School District, entered their
daughters in a pageant for young children which was held in
Poughkeepsie recently.
Both youngsters, who were entered in different categories
because of their ages, won. Leslie’s daughter Kerri Scarlett
O’Mara was crowned Teeny Miss Star of Dutchess County.
Rochelle’s daughter Megan Maureen O’Mara took home the
trophy and crown as Little Miss Star of Westchester County.
As a result of their win, both are now entered in the Miss
American Pagaent which will be held in White Plains and the
Miss New York State Pageant to be held in Albany in November.
September 19, 1988
THE PUBLIC SECTOR 1 AS ]
WATCH ON WASHINGTON
McDermott urges act
Dear CSEA member,
Before the end of September, Congress will vote on two bills
which CSEA strongly supports. I am asking each of you to send the
messages below to your U.S. Representative and Sen. Moynihan and
D’Amato urging each of them to vote in favor of these bills.
CSEA needs your help to make sure that your Senators and
Representatives in Washington are alerted to the overwhelming
support for this legislation.
ACT FOR BETTER CHILD CARE (H.R.3660/S, 1885)
The number of women in the workforce has increased dramatically in recent
years. By the middle of the 1990s, two-thirds of women with pre-school-age children
and three-fourths with school-age children will be working. Fathers are also
assuming a much larger share of day-to-day parenting responsibilities. The need for
affordable, flexible, quality child care has never been greater.
THE ACT FOR BETTER CHILD CARE would help low and middle income
families pay for child care and expand day care services across the country.
THE FAMILY AND MEDICAL LEAVE ACT (H.R. 925/8.2448)
This requires employers to provide workers (both fathers and mothers) with
unpaid, job-protected leave for the birth, adoption or serious illness of a child or
parent. Employers, including state and local governments, would have to provide up
to 10 weeks of unpaid leave over a two-year period.
The list of the New York State Congressional delegation is at
right. Since the floor votes will likely take place on these bills
before the end of the month, please send out these messages as soon
as possible.
If we all work together, CSEA can speak with commitment and
power.
Yours in Unionism,
Toe
Joe McDermott
President
Hon. Alfonse D’Amato
U.S. Senate
Washington D.C. 20510
Dear Sen. D’Amato,
As a member of the Civil Service Employees Association, Local
1000 of AFSCME, I am urging your support for two bills of great
importance to American families.
The first, the Act for Better Child Care (H.R.3660/S.1885), will
help improve the quality of life for families by providing a decent
start for millions of children and enabling parents to be fully
ion
Contact your U.S. representative
Identify your U.S. representative from the list below and
District 1
Rep. George J. Hochbrueckner
District: Suffolk
District 2
Rep. Thomas J. Downey
District: Suffolk
District 3
Rep. Robert J. Mrazek
District: Suffolk, Nassau
District 4
Rep. Norman F. Lent
District: Nassau
District 5
Rep. Raymond J. McGrath
District: Nassau
District 6
Rep. Floyd H. Flake
District: Queens
District 7
Rep. Gary L. Ackerman
District: Queens
District 8
Rep. James H. Scheuer
District: Bronx, Queens, Nassau
District 9
Rep. Thomas J. Manton
District: Queens
District 10
Rep. Charles E. Schumer
District: Kings
District 11
Rep. Edolphus Towns
District: Kings
District 12 »
Rep. Jamor R. Owens
District: Kings
District 13
Rep. Stephen J. Solarz
District: Kings
District 14
Rep. Guy V. Molinari
District: Richmond, Kings
District 15
Rep. Bill Green
District: New York
District: New York
District 17
put their name in the blank space in the message at the
bottom of the page. The counties that the representatives’
districts include are also listed for your reference.
Rep. Hamilton Fish .
District: Orange, Westchester
District 22
Rep. Benjamin A. Gilman
District: Rockland, Orange,
Sullivan, Westchester
District 23
Rep. Samuel S. Stratton
District: Albany, Schenectady,
Rensselaer, Montgomery
District 24
Rep. Gerald B. Solomon
District: Columbia, Greene,
Saratoga, Warren, Washington,
Rensselaer, Dutchess
District 25
Rep. Sherwood L. Boehlert
District: Chenango, Cortland,
Otsego, Schoharie, Delaware,
Madison, Oneida, Montgomery,
Tompkins
District 26
Rep. David OB. Martin
District: Clinton, Essex,
Franklin, Fulton, Hamilton,
Herkimer; Jefferson, Lewis, St.
Lawrence
District 27
Rep. George C. Wortley
District: Onondaga, Madison
District 28
Rep. Matthew F. McHugh
District: Broome, Tioga, Ulster,
Delaware, Sullivan, Tompkins
District 29
Rep. Frank Horton
District: Wayne, Cayuga,
Oswego,
Seneca, Monroe, Oneida
District 30
Rep. Louise M. Salughter
District: Genesee, Livingston,
Monroe, Ontario
District 31
Rep. Jack Kemp
District: Wyoming, Cattaraugas,
Erie, Livingston, Ontario
District 32
Rep. John J. LaFalce
As a member of the Civil Service Employees Association, Local
1000 of AFSCME, I am urging your support for two bills of great
importance to American families.
The first, the Act for Better Child Care (H.R.3660/S.1885), will
help improve the quality of life for families by providing a decent
start for millions of children and enabling parents to be fully
productive at work and in their communities.
The second, the Family and Medical Leave bill
(H.R.925/S.1885), is long overdue and represents a modest step
toward adjusting our public policy to the realities of work and
family life in the late twentieth century.
Thousands of your constitutents are counting on your support.
Name_ ass
Address
20 THE PUBLIC SECTOR
., A eit Rep. Ted Weiss District: Niagara, Orleans, Erie,
productive at work and in their communities. District: Bronx, New York Monroe
The second, the Family and Medical Leave bill Disice a ih District 33 me
(H.R.925/S.1885), is long overdue and represents a modest step ‘ep. I arcia Rep. Henry J. Now
toward adjusting our public policy to the realities of work and Pere Ble Rate
family life in the late twentieth century. VACANT Rep. Amory Houghton, Jr.
Thousands of your constitutents are counting on your support. District 20 District: Allegany, Chautaugua,
Rep. Joseph J. DioGuardi Chemung, Schuyler, Steuben,
District: Westchester Yates,
Name, —— District 21 Cattaratigus, ‘Tompkins
Address
Hon. Daniel P. Moynihan | Hon.
U.S. Senate 3 a U.S. House of Representatives
Washington, D.C. 20510 i Washington, D.C, 20515
|
Dear Sen. Moynihan, a Dear Rep.
As a member of the Civil Service Employees Association, Local
1000 of AFSCME, I am urging your support for two bills of great
importance to American families.
The first, the Act for Better Child Care (H.R.3660/S.1885), will
help improve the quality of life for families by providing a decent
start for millions of children and enabling parents to be fully
productive at work and in their communities.
The second, the Family and Medical Leave bill
(H.R.925/S.1885), is long overdue and represents a modest step
toward adjusting our public policy to the realities of work and
family life in the late twentieth century.
Thousands of your constitutents are counting on your support.
Name
Address
September 19, 1988