The Public Sector, 1986 August 25

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THE
PUBLIC

SECTOR

Official Publication of The Civil Service Em
ployees Association, Local 1000,
American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees AFL-CIO.

Vol. 9, No. 17
Monday, August 25, 1986

September 1, 198

& fate ofeach
destiny of all

4, pages of American la-

bor history are filled with

successes and failures in the

struggle to achieve a better

life for you, the employee.
Unionism has been the

pulse of labor. But over these

past few years that

pulse beat has

weakened. The ranks of

organized labor has

diminished. Thousands

of jobs have been lost

in industry. Many who

had received wages

that allowed a measure

of security have been

forced to accept jobs

that pay the minimum

wage, and others are

being held hostage to

their pay checks by

accepting less and

giving up more.

In the midst of this erosion we find
ourselves blaming everyone; the
politicians, the biased media, greedy

Nn

corporations, and of course
the Reagan administration.
On this labor day we
should look to ourselves
to strengthen the
union movement by
becoming involved in
political action, purchasing
only those items that carry
the union label, and
supporting your brothers
and sisters to achieve their
goals in the workplace.
We need solidarity
and unity of purpose
to restore the pulse of
labor.
On this Labor Day
let us remember that
the fate of each is the

destiny of all.

\ Uidbe LIC uae
President CSEA

Putting faith in
his own worth
pays dividends.

Letters pour in for a very courageous teenager ®

By Charles McGeary

CSEA Communications Associate

DRYDEN — A story in the July 14 issue
of The Public Sector (“WHEN TRAGEDY
HITS HOME”’) about Sue Watkins, the
courageous teenager who is fighting to
overcome a tumorous cancer, has brought
“overwhelming” response from CSEA
members, Locals and Units statewide.

chemotherapy, her mother said,
Sue has managed to gain a few
pounds also.

“With my husband, Wayne, off
on summer training with the
Army, and the weekly visits to
Syracuse for tests, we have been

Sue’s mother, Carol Watkins,
says the number of letters offering
messages of encouragement and
financial help has climbed over the
100 mark. Sue’s father, Wayne, is a
member of SUNY Cortland CSEA
Local 605, where fellow employees
helped initiate a fund drive to help

In the good the family defray heavy medical
oP ne expenses. e
iS “We thought about trying to
summer answer every letter personally,”
Mrs. Watkins said, “‘but soon
time. realized it would take weeks, may-
be months, to write and thank
every individual. So, Sue asked me
to extend her sincere appreciation
through The Public Sector for their
help, prayers and good wishes.”’
Mrs. Watkins also asked that e
friends be advised of Sue’s current - . Me
Te aes Sie Me aeeote e THIS PHOTO of Wayne and Carol Watkins with a
first phase of treatinentand tests Baotoeranh of their daughter, Sues appeared on page 1
at Johns Hopkins Medical Center of the July 14 issue oi ie Public Sector.
5 in Baltimore, and she is continuing uety Busy, put for Sue) and ne
; weekly treatment and blood tests entire Watkins family, we jus'
PATCO — keeping the legacy | 2cUNy Upstate Medical Center want to say ‘thank you, again’ for
alive five years later. P ; ;
y : in Syracuse. Additional visits to all your letters and financial
Johns Hopkins are scheduled. In assistance. May God bless you e
spite of the usual after effects of all.”
AM, | HELPING today’s
young scholars helps us For CSEA members and the many Locals and Units who have requested we re-
all tomorrow. peat the original appeal for assistance to help defray the heavy medical
expenses of the Watkins family, contributions may be sent to:
Sue Watkins Fund
13 fo ne oan Nee Box 2000
THOUSANDS putting it away SUNY Cortland
for retirement day through De- Cortland, New York 13045 e
ferred Compensation Plan.
The Public Sector (445010) is published every other Monday by The Civil Service
Employees Association, 143 Washington Avenue, Albany, New York 12210. Publication Of-
Siuitie fice: 143 Washington Avenue, Albany, New York 12210. Second Class Postage paid at Post
Office, Albany, New York.
SECTOR 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 e
Employees Association Local 1000, AFSCME, SHERYL CARLIN Region I RON WOFFORD . Region VI
AFL-CIO 143 Washington Avenue, Albany, (516) 273-2280 (716) 886-0391
New York 12210 LILLY GIOIA Region II STEVE MADARASZ Headquarters
(212) 514-9200 (518) 434-0191
ANITA MANLEY Region nua
AARON SHEPARD . Publisher scape (
ROGER A. COLE Editor DAN CAMPBERL Hee
BRIAN K, BAKER . .Associate Editor CHUCK McGEARY Region V
(315) 451-6330
®

August 25, 1986

2 THE PUBLIC SECTOR

STAND UP and BE COUNTED!

EPTEMBER 1, 1986

Where asked:

Metropolitan
Region 2

How do you
feel about
unions becom-
ing involved in
the credit card
business’

August 25, 1986

EDITOR’S NOTE: CSEA will be participating, through it’s international affiliate AFSCME, in
an innovative AFL-CIO credit card plan in which eligible union members will be able to apply
for a major credit card at lower than normal interest rates. Preparation for participation in the
eredit card program are ongoing, with start-up anticipated sometime this fall. When
arrangements are finalized, complete details will be published well in advance of the effective
date. Judging by responses to this edition’s “Camera Close-ups” question, there should be

considerable interest in such a project.

a

MARALYNN
ZIMMERMAN
Dept. of Motor Vehicles
Local 010
“T have every credit
card and I’d get rid of them

to use a union credit card. I,

feel the lower interest is a
good idea. Why not have
union members _ benefit
from something that’s go-
ing to be good for them?”

BERT DANIELS
New York State Insurance
Fund Local 351

“T think its excellent for
the union and for the peo-.
ple. If members properly
use the union credit card
and do not spend more
than they can reasonably
afford, it will be a good
benefit to take advantage
of.”

ANNA BRYCE-

MCDONALD
Manhattan Developmental
Center Local 443

“T would prefer a union
credit card if the interest
rate is much lower. It looks
as though this is for the
employees’ benefit rather
than just purely making
profits on high interest
rates with other credit
cards.”

THE PUBLIC SECTOR

DIANE O’REGAN
Dept. of Motor Vehicles
Local 010

“T think its a good idea
any time people can save a
dollar. I would definitely
use it. Everybody’s getting
into the business, so why
shouldn’t union members
get the benefit? A lower in-
terest card is good, and I
should know. I have every
credit card you can

imagine.”

ON THE TELEPHONE —
Anthony Desgro, community
relations assistant for the
Brookhaven Town Planning
Department, spends a large
part of his work time
answering questions from
local residents about the
zoning code.

AT HIS BOOKS—Desgro
reads from a Braille zoning
code book. Blind since birth,
he has had all the volumes of
the zoning code printed in
Braille.

CSEA helped him make the grade

Not blind

to his own
merits

By Sheryl Carlin
CSEA Communications Associate

PATCHOGUE — Do you feel you’re underpaid for the work
you do?

That’s the way Anthony Desgro felt about his job as a
community relations assistant for the Brookhaven Town Planning
Department. But with some legal assistance from CSEA—and de-
spite a handicap that most of us have never had to deal with—
Desgro proved he was worth more money.

A lot more, in fact: his long fight resulted in an upgrading
from grade 13 to grade 18, step 3.

Desgro began his job with the town as a grade 13 in 1979. In
November of 1983, he wrote and submitted to Deputy
Commissioner Larry Callahan a mini comparable worth study,
hoping to justify his request for a pay increase. Two years later,
he was moved up one grade.

ALBANY — A ruling by a Public
PERB upholds Employment Relations Board officer has
upheld CSEA’s right to represent 75 Armory

Superintendents and Maintenance
Supervisors in the state Division of Military

CSEA’s right
to represent
DMNA staff

4

and Naval Affairs.

THE PUBLIC SECTOR

CSEA previously represented the super-
intendents and supervisors until challenges
from the DMNA administration and other

Still dissatisfied, Desgro contacted CSEA for legal assistance.
According to CSEA Attorney Lester Lipkind, Desgro grieved
under a clause which states that ‘‘where there are grave
inequities, the individual has the right to grieve.”

Blind since birth, Desgro has learned to work hard and stand
strong for his beliefs. The articulate young man obtained his :
bachelor’s degree in meteorology and oceanography at New York
University.

“T went to school in the Bronx and I lived on campus,’’Desgro
explained. “It was an excellent experience for me.”

But even then, his handicap sometimes made his life difficult.

“Like when I missed a year because the Braille books
couldn’t be ready in time,” he remembers.

At the Planning Department, Desgro’s job consists mainly of
supplying zoning code information to the public. ‘I also get
involved with suggesting amendments to the code,”’ he said.

Desgro has had all the volumes of the zoning code printed in
Braille and he deletes outdated information, adding new info as
the need arises.

“Oftentimes, people put limitations on you because of a hand-
icap. You just have to work that much harder but you can do the
job,” he says.

Says Lipkind: ‘Tony really impressed me a being a hard
worker and a unique individual. He truly believed he deserved
more and he was willing to go the extra mile to prove it.”

Desgro said that he would advise other members to try to
work out their problems from within before filing a grievance.
“But it’s really nice to know that the union is there for you if you
really need their help.

“T personally am grateful to CSEA for supplying the funds for
legal representation. The union served me well and I appreciate
it,” he added.

unions tied the matter up in the courts for
several years.

The PERB officer placed the employees in
CSEA’s state Operational Services Unit
after rejecting bids for representation from
the Teamsters and PEF.

CSEA also represents about 700 other
civilian employees of DMNA.

August 25, 1986

“This Month in Labor History” is prepared by the New York State Labor History Association.
By Michael M. Hirsch

Five years ago this month, the Professional Air Traffic Controllers
Organization (PATCO) went out on strike. A feisty, independent-minded
union squared off against a newly-elected conservative administration in
Washington. The Reaganites wanted to recreate a strong executive, limit
trade union power, and reorganize the national economy. Five years
later, the labor movement still reels from the conflict.

The PATCO walkout was really two strikes in one. The first
concerned the union’s understanding of its members’ needs — higher
wages, reduced hours, better equipment, improved working conditions,
and an industry-related retirement plan. Almost 90 percent of all air
traffic controllers became medically disqualified before even reaching
retirement age because of job-induced high blood pressure and other
stress-related ailments.

But there was also the second PATCO strike — the symbol of a
combative, rank-and-file-dominated union taking on the federal _
government. This symbol and the Reagan administration's manipulation
of its own symbols into a union-busting crusade — is the real legacy of the
walkout.

The PATCO strike became the key incident which conditioned labor
relations for the next five years. Employers who sought concessions now
went after them with a vengeance. Even in industries where profits were
high, the issue for labor became not whether to take concessions, but
which ones. PATCO became a symbol for union busting and resistance to
union busting.

After rejecting a final contract offer from their employer, the Federal
Aviation Administration, air traffic controllers struck across the country,
but not in sufficient numbers to stop all air traffic. While over 11,500
PATCO members walked off the job, 3,500 controllers crossed the picket
lines and were joined by retired, military, and supervisory personnel.
These scabs kept the airports open and airplanes flying.

did not draw the support of key labor allies in the industry. These unions
were still smarting from what they considered to be PATCO’s snubs of
their own earlier strikes, and from the air controller’s public endorsement
of Ronald Reagan’s candidacy for president.

Organized labor began to mobilize when it became clear that the
issue was no longer simply support for PATCO but sympathy for the
plight of the strikes and opposition to the Reagan administration’s
“scorched earth policy.”

Acting for the administration, Transportation Secretary Drew Lewis
ordered the summary firing of all strikers and their permanent black-
balling from the industry. Jerry Wurf, the late president of AFSCME,
said of the firings, “‘We can’t stand still and watch these decent people
being thrown out of their jobs and blacklisted from federal employment
with less due process than would be accorded a person with a record of 80
arrests accused of raping a 93-year old woman.” The AF'L-CIO’s Lane
Kirkland likened the Reagan response to a ‘‘massive, brutal carpet
bombing.”

Before the PATCO walkout, national strikes were routinely mediated.
The Postal Strike in 1971 is a good example. President Reagan’s response
to the striking air controllers offered no room for maneuver. Either the
strikers capitulated or they would be replaced. There would be no fact-
finding, no negotiations, and no independent study of stress,
understaffing, or equipment dysfunction. John Dunlop, Secretary of Labor
under Gerald Ford, called the Reagan response ‘‘unprecedented”’ in
modern times. ‘The administration has decided to leave no avenue of
escape for the union, You just don’t do that,” he added.

In late October, the Federal Aviation Administration decertified
PATCO as the bargaining agent for the air controllers. Without its legal
standing to collect dues from the remaining working controllers, PATCO
disappeared. ‘

There are lessons here in the need for planning and solidarity. But

Coming in early August during a lull in the tourist season, the strike

there is also a lesson in courage.

Ill-fated strike leaves labor
with label it doesn’t deserve

By Roger A. Cole
Editor

“Labor got a bad rap” with the
misconception that it did too little too late in
coming to the support of PATCO during the
1981 strike, according to CSEA Director of
Personnel and Employee Relations Dennis
Battle.

In fact, says Battle, AFL-CIO President
Lane Kirkland and a host of international
union leaders rallied behind PATCO before,
during and after the strike.

Battle was deeply active in PATCO during
the years leading up to the ill-fated 1981
strike, serving in a variety of union
positions, including shop steward and
PATCO Local president, from 1971 to 1977.
From 1977 through 1980, Battle was a
member of PATCO’s professional staff,
serving as regional representative for
Upstate New York and New England. He
helped establish PATCO’s nationwide
Political Action Committee,

Battle joined the Federal Aviation
Administration in 1969 as a personnel spe-
cialist, but in 1971 became an air traffic
controller in Chicago. In 1973 he transferred
to Syracuse, where he served as a PATCO
Local president, and in 1977 transferred to

& Albany. He joined CSA in his present

position in October, 1980, just nine months
before the PATCO strike began.

Battle remembers that terrible, stressful
working conditions were at the core of the
discontent of controllers, turning PATCO
into what he called one of the most militant
unions in the nation from the mid to late
1970's. But as a hardcore militant bloc led
PATCO toward the 1981 strike, they
abandoned plans that included a public
relations campaign to educate the public to
the plight and problems of controllers and a
companion political action program to gain
pre-negotiations support in Congress. And
that, feels Battle, eventually doomed the
union. For while organized labor did in fact
largely back PATCO, the general public and
most members of Congress did not.

CSEA staff and members strongly
supported the air traffic controllers
throughout the 1981 strike, notes Battle.
Many CSEAers walked the FATCO picket
lines across the state, and contributed funds
and food to strikers. PATCO representatives
were warmly welcomed to CSEA’s 1981
annual convention, where they address the
delegates who later took up a large
collection to aid the strikers.

DENNIS BATTLE... he remembers.

August 25, 1986

THE PUBLIC SECTOR

5

erreuReereeeyn

“One’in every five “adult Americans is
functionally illiterate. Their basic skills are so
lacking they cannot function effectively, often
being unable to read or write a letter, fill out a
job application form, read a job notice or a
simple manual, or follow instructions on a
medicine bottle. And nearly twice that many
adults are classified as only marginally
literate, with the numbers increasing by an
alarming 2.3 million persons annually due
primarily to school dropouts, immigrants and
refugees.

President Reagan has proclaimed September
as Adult Literacy Awareness Month to launch
Project Literacy U.S. (PLUS), a television
campaign sponsored jointly by ABC and PBS.
ABC will air a documentary narrated by Peter
Jennings on Sept. 3 dealing with the plight of
illiterate Americans. PBS will present a
documentary on Sept. 17 to give visibility to a

HUESWHR GREER ERAT) QONHRLTHA OOH ETRE TERT KRRO Re

variety of local programs successfully
teaching basic skills to functionally illiterate
adults.

In conjunction with this effort, many Public
Broadcasting System affiliates across the state
will be airing the highly-acclaimed high school
equivalency series in late October and CSEA is
encouraging members to take advantage of
this opportunity. Designed to prepare people to
take high school equivalency exams, the
contents will also be very useful to workers
interested in improving their ability to pass
civil service exams, covering such areas as
arithmetic reasoning, arithmetic computation,
tabular reasoning, Algebra, understanding and
interpreting written material, grammar and
usage, and preparing written material. CSEA
members who wish to use the information as a
refresher course leading to improved job
efficiency will also find the series useful.

CSEA has an IDEA to help

CSEA is making available to CSEA
members and agency shop fee payers a
program of services to supplement the
PBS broadcasting in order to encourage
participation.

To find the series useful, participants
must be capable of reading at an eighth
grade level, and three workbooks to
accompany the programming are
necessary. Each of the 43 half-hour pro-
grams has previewing and post-viewing
activities and exercises associated with
them for maximum effectiveness.

Available through CSEA’s Institute for
Development, Education and Advance-
ment (IDEA) at the union’s statewide
headquarters in Albany will be:

¢ Pre-assessment, determining

readiness to participate in the series

* The three workbooks needed to follow

the program

Access to a toll free number for

tutoring when needed

¢ Post assessment, determining

readiness to pass the high school
equivalency exam, civil service tests
and college-level courses

¢ Scheduling assistance to take the GED

examination if applicable

Because part of the program cost is
covered by the CSEA State contracts, cost
of these services for state workers covered |

Tune in to improvement

by the ASU, ISU and OSU contracts is
$15.00, all of which is refunded when the
program, including the post assessment
test, is completed and materials returned
to IDEA. For all other workers
represented by CSEA, the cost is $24.50, of

To: Civil Service Employees Association
Attn.: IDEA
143 Washington Avenue
Albany, N.Y. 12210

which $15.00 is refunded when the pro-
gram is complete and materials returned.
To receive the study packet, fill in the
coupon below and return it with a check or
money order to: CSEA/IDEA, 143
Washington Avenue, Albany, NY 12210.

I wish to register for the series, including pre and post assessments, accompanying workbooks,
access to a toll-free number for tutoring, and scheduling assistance for the GED if desired.
Enclosed is my check for (circle one) $24.50, or $15.00 if in ASU, ISU or OSU. I understand that
if I complete the course and post assessment and return thr books in usable condition with no
marks on the inside, that I will receive a $15.00 rebate. If I keep the books and return only the
pre and post assessment, I will receive a $3.00 rebate. If my pretest indicates the program is
not appropriate for my needs, I will receive a full refund and be referred to an appropriate

educational provider.

Name.

Address
Agency/Employer____

CSEA Local No.
Work Phone.

City

Job Title __

Home Phone

Check Interest:
Promotional Exam
College Preparation

Social Security No.__

High School Equivalency
General Refresher

Programming to prepare for the high school equivalency examination will be aired on many
PBS affiliates across the state. The highly-acclaimed high school equivalency series is scheduled for
broadcasting as follows:

b sea is pleased to have
been able to negotiate the
underwriting of much of the
cost of employee participation
in this educational opportuni-
ty. I encourage members to

High School Equivalency Broadcast Schedule

Station City Start Days Time Repeat

Sat. 8:00 a.m,
8:30 a.m.
(11/1-4/18)

Sat. 7:30 a.m.
8:00 a.m.

(11/1 Start)

Sat. 7:00 a.m.
7:30 a.m.
(11/1-4/30)
Possible Repeat
Sat. a.m. (TBA)

WCFE Plattsburgh 10/28 T/F 2:00

WCNY Syracuse 10/28 2:00

participate in this proeraa to
increase general knowledge,
obtain high school equivalency
diplomas if needed, and im-
prove test taking abilities.

WMHT Schenectady 10/30 Th 3:00

3:30
WNED Buffalo 10/28 T/F 11:00
WNPE

WSKG

Watertown
Binghamton

10/28 T/F 2:00

Will Carry. Dates TBA in August
Contact Educational Services Department.
WXXI Rochester 10/28 T/F 2:00

The program will skip the weeks of Thanksgiving, Christmas and January 1.

—CSEA President
William L. McGowan

THE PUBLIC SECTOR August 25, 1986

PBS Labor Special

THE
GLOBAL |
ASSEMBLY
LINE |

Plant closings at home, sweatshops
@| abroad: Lorraine “Gray's award-winning

The trade crisis humanized.

Tues., Sept. 2, on PBS

Check local listings for station and airtime.

patterns.

filiates.

soc umeny shone the its with CSEA, as a public service, will
amati¢ footage shot on location in A 2 *
Mexico, the Philippines, and the U.S underwrite the showing of “The

Global Assembly Line” on two lo-
cal PBS affiliates on Tuesday,
Sept. 2. The tv special is a hard-
hitting examination of the human
toll of current international labor

CSEA WILL UNDERWRITE
SHOWINGS AT 10 P.M., TUES-
DAY, SEPT. 2 ON PBS AFFILI-
ATES WMHT IN THE ALBANY,
SCHENECTADY AND TROY
AREA AND ON WNPE IN THE
WATERTOWN AREA. Check you
local tv listings for times of both
labor specials on other PBS af-

Broudeasts made possible with support from

the Unions of the AFL-CIO"

Dutchess County Clerk William Steinhaus, center,
recently held a reception for Department of Motor Vehicle
CSEA employees and the community to celebrate 25 years
in the City of Beacon. Steinhaus reported that in its first
year in 1961, employees of the new satellite office
processed nearly 12,000 transactions. With Steinhaus is
former Dutchess County CSEA Unit President Mary Rich
and Unit Secretary Colleen Bleimeister.

Employees of the Dutchess County Department of

Motor Vehicle office in Beacon helped celebrate 25 years in
their satellite office. From left is Naomi Calabro, Maureen
Gage, Donna Horton, Ruth Hedrick, Joan Turenchalk,
Lynne Harbison, Barbara Hall, Lee Russo, former Unit
President Mary Rich and Unit Secretary Colleen
Bleimeister.

August 25, 1986

The Labor Institute of Public Altuirs [or eases

A silver satellite shines

mental Patient drug
abuse forum planned

Alcohol and drug use among psychiatric patients will
be the focus of a statewide conference on September 17,
1986 at the Ramada Inn in Binghamton. Entitled ‘‘The
Mentally Ill Chemical Abuser: Charting New Territory,”
this will include public policy analysis and clinical training.

It is estimated that as many as 50 percent of those
receiving services from the public mental health system
are chemical abusers. Treatment models are urgently
needed, as are policies that recognize the emergence of
this new population.

These concerns will be the focus of the keynoter, Marc
Galanter, M.D., professor at the Albert Einstein College of
Medicine, who specializes in research, training, and
clinical intervention for mental illness and chemical abuse.

Also speaking will be Clarence J. Sundram, Chairman
of the Commission on Quality of Care for the Mentally
Disabled. He has already indicated to Governor Cuomo the
need for better coordinated programs that address the
needs of the MICA population.

Panelists responding to Dr. Galanter will be Johanna
Ferman, M.D., Deputy Commissioner for Clinical
Programs at the Office of Mental Health; William
Panepinto, CSW, Assistant Director, Division of Alcoholism
and Alcohol Abuse; and Paul Woodard, Deputy for
Program Services, Division of Substance Abuse Services.

A series of workshops will offer treatment models now
functioning around the State. ‘The workshops are being
selected by a panel of mental health, aleohol and substance
abuse experts from abstracts submitted in response to a
statewide call for papers.

Co-sponsors of the-conference are: Mental Hygiene
Departments of the Counties of Broome, Chenango,
Delaware, Otsego and Tioga; Binghamton Psychiatric
Center; Central New York Regional Office of OMH;
Central New York Directors Planning Group; and State
Communities Aid Association.

Programs and registration materials will be circulated
later in the summer. Any questions may be directed to
Evelyn R. Frankford, telephone (518) 463-1896.

THE PUBLIC. SECTOR, 7

Don Wood, who holds a Master’s degree
from Michigan State University says:
“Labor relations are becoming more
sophisticated...this program shows that
CSEA is aware of the change and is
taking steps to keep up with the times.

Top talent

Innovative program helps
|___CSEA to head of the class —

Kate Lacombe, a graduate of Cornell
University says she became interested
in working for a union because she was
a member in the wholesale and retail
trade. She adds: “I’m impressed that
CSEA takes such an active role on
behalf of its members.”

By Stephen Madarasz
CSEA Communications Associate

ALBANY — Management’s been doing it
for years, often to their gain and labor’s
loss. But through an innovative program
that is believed to be the first of its kind
run by a labor union, CSEA is tapping
into the talent of the nation’s top labor
relations schools.

Over the next six months, five recent
graduates (pictured above and at right)
will be serving an intensive internship
with CSEA designed to expose them to
every facet of union activity.

Says CSEA President William
McGowan: “It’s about time that Labor
realized that it’s losing good people by not
actively recruiting them...if we don’t do
it, chances are, down the road, these

Through both approaches, Battle
indicates that CSEA is in a strong position
to draw on the most qualified applicants
for staff openings. The result will be even
better service for the membership.

rigs time Labor

realized it’s losing
good people by not

actively recruiting)
—President McGowan

THE PUBLIC SECTOR

same people will be staring at us from the
other side of the table.”

CSEA has been recruiting out of the
best colleges for a number of years, but
this is the first time a comprehensive,
“hands-on’’ training program has been de-
veloped.

In addition to formal training sessions,
each of the individuals will work with
CSEA staff in negotiations, grievance
resolution, research, organizing, and
safety and health activities.

“This program makes sense for a
number of reasons” explains CSEA
Personnel Director Dennis Battle: ‘These
participants have outstanding educational
background- of course in any job success
depends on getting to know your
responsibilities and the people involved.
Over six months they can get thgat kind
of experience and we can see how they
handle themselves.””

No one is guaranteed a job at the end of
the six months. Depending on how their
work progresses however, they will be
encouraged to apply for staff positions
that may develop.

Battle notes that while this internship
will likely become an ongoing process, it
will not necessarily limit staff
opportunities for qualified members:
“The Personnel Committee is looking at
that issue right now and expects to
develop standard job qualifications that
take into account union activities by the
fall.””

Wendy Hord holds a Master’s degree from
Michigan State. She says:”’This program is
unique to the Labor movement...CSEA is
ahead of most unions...It’s really an excellent
opportunity to improve the quality of
services to members, which is what unions
are all about..

|

Pat Domaratz is a graduate of Lemoyne
College, who also studied in the Cornell La-
bor studies program at Onondaga

Community College. He says coming into the
Labor movement was a natural path since
his father was a UAW member. “I’ve also
been politically active for a number of years
and had the opportunity to work with people
from Labor.”

Pete Dominick, a graduate of Cornell
comments: “I’ve always been interested in
people having more input in the
workplace...Unions give people the chance to
have a say and develop better feelings about
their work.”

August 25, 1986

Special election ©
campaign mailings

ALBANY — CSEA will comply with all reasonable requests of F
candidates in the special election to fill two vacancies on CSEA’s f-
statewide Board of Directors to distribute campaign literature to
the membership at the candidates’ expense.

The two Board seats being contested are from Mental
Hygiene Region 2 and Tompkins County. They are the only two
seats out of an original 18 vacant seats in which more than one
candidate qualified by filing the required number of signatures on
"| petitions. A dozen other vacancies have been declared filled (see *
|accompanying story) since only one candidate each filed petitions |
|for those seats. Four other seats remain vacant since no one filed
petitions in those areas. |

The following procedures apply for
| candidates seeking the Mental Hygiene
Region 2 and Tompkins County seats:

¢ : af Candidates must pay in advance by I~
f ‘either certified check or money order

made payable to CSEA Inc. Cost is 30

‘cents per letter which includes printing

|(one-side only), handling and mailing via
jfirst class postage.
enn Pare

Maximum size for printed materials is
|8%” by 11 inches and the limit is one
| enclosure per mailing.

Candidates may have campaign materials printed and
envelopes stuffed elsewhere and then deliver sealed envelopes to
CSEA Headquarters for mailing. Or CSEA will print campaign
materials if provided with a master copy.

Twenty additional members have been officially confirmed as
members of CSEA’s statewide Board of Directors. They are in
@ addition to 81 members whose election to the Board was official in a
June election.

Eight of the newest 20 Board members were elected in the June
contests but the results were unofficial pending recent resolution of
a situation where write-in votes might have affected the mee of
those eight races. Declared official winners are June Roba! pies : : i
representing Education; Anthony Muscatiello, Health; Denis Tobin, |, Malling: uy He one on - siretcame first-served basis.
Labor; Carol Guardiano, Mental Hygiene Region 1; Henry Walters suis Sa Be oul mt ae 's for distribution as soon as
and Robert Watkins, both Mental Hygiene Region 3; Edward (Bud) possible but no later than 5:00 p.m. on Sept. 17.

i Questions should be directed to the CSEA Elections
A Mulchy, Mental Hygiene Region 5; and Kathy Berchou, SUNY. Processing Unit by calling (518) 434-0191, ext. 343,

Confirmed as official Board members as the sole candidates to Candidates may also purchase mailing labels and mailing
file petitions to fill a number of Board seat vacancies are Robert W. _ lists at cost.
Smith, State Department; Charlean W. Foster, Chenango County; Meanwhile, statewide board candidates, or proxies with
George Lawson, Delaware County; Mary Hanna, Franklin County; written authorization, may observe all aspects of the literature
Mary Hampton, Jefferson County; Mary Buckingham, Lewis distribution on weekdays between 8:30 a.m. and 5:00 p.m. at
County; Lynda Standish-Fritz, Livingston County. CSEA Headquarters, 143 Washington Ave., Albany. In addition,

they may observe the elections process (printing and mailing of

also canes a Dunbar Ontario county; (sabia snapln, ballots, picking up and opening of ballots, etc.) which is being

Orange County; Brion Black, Schoharie County; Bruce Damalt,

2 \handled by the Independent Election Corporation of America
A Seneca County; aut Arthur Hay Howell, Steuben ERNE : (EC ‘A), Lake Success, N.Y.
Board seats in Genesee, Tioga, Wayne and Wyoming Counties It is recommended that observers notify IECA in advance of
remain vacant at the present time. their visits by phoning (516) 437-4900.

Sullivan, Stack to chair executive committees

Members of CSEA’s statewide Board of Barbara Stack, longtime Board member
Directors have elected chairpersons of the representing the state Department of

Board’s State Executive and Local Motor Vehicles and a member of CSEA
Government Executive Committees at the | DMV Local 674, was elected chairwoman
Board’s reorganization meeting on Aug. of the State Executive Committee,
14. succeeding Judicial Board representative
Mary Sullivan, president of Herkimer Thomas F’. Jefferson, who did not seek
County CSEA Local 822 and Board reelection. Susan Crawford, president of
representative from that county, was Department of Corrections Local 656, was
reelected to another term as chairwoman _ elected vice chairwoman.

e of the Local Government Executive In other action, the Board members
Committee. Dominic Spacone, president of voted to extend for another year the
Niagara County Educational Employees contract retaining the law firm of Roemer
Local 872, was elected vice chairman of and Featherstonhaugh as the union’s legal

the committee. counsel. BARBARA STACK MARY SULLIVAN

® August 25, 1986 THE PUBLIC SECTOR cy

ps) 4 er

PLEASED AS PUNCH over the resounding reception to the CWEP
program bringing food vendors to the State Office Building Campus are
CSEA President William L. McGowan, left, and Thomas Hartnett, right,
director of the Governor’s Office of Employee Relations. Marie Carey, cen-
ter, stood in for her husband, CWEP Director Jack Carey, who is
recovering from an accident and was unable to attend opening ceremonies.

ENDING ‘a
ARIETY MS

employees eat it up _

Text compiled and photos by
Daniel X. Campbell, CSEA Communications Associate

ALBANY — Lunch served up by a sidewalk vendor has long been a noon time
tradition in and around Capitol Park in downtown Albany for thousands of state
employees and the general public-On a typical warm summer workday, thousands are
served by dozens of vendors offering a wide variety of items.

Until recently, thousands of other state employees located a few miles uptown at the
W. Averell Harriman State Office Building Campus relied on building cafeterias,
brownbag lunches or a hurried off-campus trip to the closest fast food outlet for lunch.

That changed in mid-August when, under a program coordinated by the Joint
CSEA/OER Committee on the Work Environment and Productivity (CWEP), sidewalk
vendors were invited to set up shop at the State Office Building Campus to serve state
employees there. The response has been overwhelming, both from vendors and
employees.

CSEA statewide President William L. McGowan, who was on hand along with state
officials to officially cut the ribbon inaugurating the vendor program at the campus,
noted that the idea originated with members and said it is an excellent example of how
the CWEP program can respond to employee needs.

THE PUBLIC SECTOR 1 1
1 0 THE PUBLIC SECTOR Au@usig25,@ 986

ALBANY
ACTION

Stiffer bill on toxins signed

ALBANY — Calling it “long overdue”,
CSEA President William McGowan has prais-
ed Gov. Mario Cuomo’s recent signing of the
long sought ‘toxic torts” bill. The new law,
which gives victims of exposuré to toxic
substances significantly more legal rights to
sue for damages, is a major victory for
workplace health and safety.

Until the law was enacted on July 30, vic-
tims of exposure had to file lawsuits within
three years of exposure to toxic substances.
But often illnesses resulting from exposure do
not develop until years later.

Under the new law, victims now have up to

Whistle blower

ALBANY — Public employees can breathe
a little easier about “blowing the whistle’’ on
government wrong-doing under a new bill
signed into law by Gov. Mario Cuomo.

The new law sponsored by Senate and
Assembly Labor Committee Chairmen
James Lack and Frank Barbaro, broadens
the provisions of a similar 1984 law. Under
that legislation, employees were only
protected from management retaliation if
their complaint concerned health and safety.

ot
THE HARD QUESTIONS — Querying
candidates during recent PAC interviews were
Carol Craig, PAC Chairman Mike Curtin and
Tom Stapleton.

12

THE PUBLIC SECTOR

three years after they discover an illness to file
a suit for damages.

In a first of its kind provision, the law also
allows persons exposed to asbestos, chlor-
dane, polyvinyl chloride, tungsten carbide,
and DES to file retroactive lawsuits over the
next year for personal injury, property
damage, or death claims.

“This is a giant advance’ adds McGowan.
“Not only does it provide victims of toxic ex-
posure with some recourse, but it also sends a
message that someone is accountable if people
wrongfully suffer.”

law ‘louder’

Now employees can report any action they
believe to be a violation of federal, state, or
local law, rule or regulation, without fear of
reprisal.

CSEA backed both the original bill and the
present stronger provisions. President
William McGowan commenting on the new
law said that he hoped the Governor would
place the full force of his office and admin-
istration behind the law and not just pay it
lip service.

Moretime —~
to buy CETA
retirement

credit

ALBANY — In a significant CSEA
achievement during the recent state
Legislature session, Gov. Mario Cuomo has
signed legislation which reopens the time
frame in which former Comprehensive
Employment and Training Act (CETA)
employees may apply to purchase retire- @
ment credit for CETA service,

Former CETA employees who meet cer-
tain requirements now have until March 31,
1987 to apply to the state comptroller to pur-
chase their CETA time for retirement
credit. Previously, in addition to meeting
the necessary other requirements, applica-
tions had to be made within one year of
completion of five years of creditable serv- e
ice in the Retirement System. Among
eligibility requirements is that the
employee must have transitioned directly
from CETA service into regular public
employment also.

Many CSEA members and other public
employees have been denied the opportuni-
ty to receive credit for prior CETA service
due to failure to apply within the statutory @
time limit of one year. Under the new bill,
strongly supported by CSEA, those
employees who failed to make application
within the one year time frame for reasons
not of their own negligence can now do so
until March 31, 1987.

THE COMMITTEE —
From left, Al
Henneborn, Aileen
Ronayne, Cathy Green,
Bob Specht, Carol
Craig, PAC Chairman
Mike Curtin, Tom
Stapleton, Jeanne
Angiulo, Rita Wallace
and Eugene
Cammarato.

Region 1 PAC grills candidates

Candidates seeking CSEA’s endorsement during election years usually find
themselves on the hot seat when they appear before the union’s political action
committees. As part of the union’s effort to find candidates throughout the state who
would best represent public employees, members of Region 1’s PAC recently put their

political hopefuls through the wringer.

Members in Region 1 will know what comes out in the wash well before Nov. 4, and
selected candidates will receive CSEA backing, including contributions.

August 25, 1986°

U MBRELLA

PICKING UP PAPERS
is a daily occupation but
no sweat for John

ONE? Working her
first summer at Robert

ANY-

_ BUSINESS MAY BE 2
PICKING UP but “fun’’ is
-how Janine Pelletiere
“describes hex-tirst summer -

eas amegaber of the beach
dean-up tréew.

it

Montiro even in the hot
summer sun.

PASSING A PASS to a
patron is Nancy Ballard, a
park and recreation aide at
Robert Moses State Park.

Forsome in summer

Life’s abeach

© NEW YORK STAT

Blue skies, water, sand and concession stands. There
certainly are worse places to eke out a living and the hundreds of
public employees who work around the state at parks like Robert
Moses on Long Island don’t do much complaining.

Robert Moses State Park on Fire Island boasts the second
largest beach in Nassau and Suffolk counties. Most of the
positions there are seasonal and part-time and are filled by
recent high school grads and college students represented in their
first jobs by CSEA.

In the good ol’ summertime, maybe life’s not so bad after all.

0)

Ez

ase Lois Lit
sonal i
obert Mages.
"i for three years, With
her is Charles LiCata, anoth-
‘erpark and recreation aide,

August 25, 1986

THE PUBLIC SECTOR 1 3

Irving Flaumenbaum Scholarship Winners |

$9,000 in
scholarships
awarded to
members’ kids

FLAUMENBAUM

It’s good news for another group of stu-
dents and their parents who are members of
CSEA.

CSEA scholarship awards named in
honor of the late Irving Flaumenbaum —
former president of the Long Island Region
— recently were presented to 18 college-
bound children of CSEA members.

The scholarship winners, three from each
of the union’s six regions, received their
awards at presentation ceremonies con-
ducted in recent weeks. Winners were
selected on the basis of such factors as
financial need, academic performance,

class rank, scores on standardized tests,
and involvement in school and extracur-
ricular activities.

The Irving Flaumenbaum Scholarships
are one-time $500 awards presented annual-
ly to members’ children graduating from
high school and going on to higher educa-
tion. This year, nearly 700 applications were
received for scholarship awards totaling
$9,000.

Winners are shown in pictures on this
page and pages 15 and 16. (Identifications in
captions read from left unless otherwise
indicated. )

i
Mik

LAI ID

oy ee ey F
tow 4 J

Tina Lauricella of Rockland County could not be
present for the scholarship ceremony, but she is
pictured here with her mother Ann.

HAUPPAUGE — Recipients of the Irving
Flaumenbaum Scholarships, and_ their
parents, were honored recently at a
luncheon at the CSEA Region 1 office.

John L. Sullivan, whose mother Karen is
a senior account clerk in the North Merrick
School District, CSEA Local 865, will be
majoring in medicine at Rensselaer
Polytechnic Institute in Troy, New York.

Sheila Logan has chosen to attend St.
Joseph’s College in Patchogue, New York,
where she will major in business

Clare and Sheila Logan; Region I President Danny Donohue; Mary and Jennifer Gergen; Kegion
I Scholarship Committee Chairwoman Dorothy Goetz; and Karen and John Sullivan.

management. Logan’s mother Clare is a
senior secretary at SUNY Stony Brook,
CSEA Local 614.

Jennifer Gergen, whose mother Mary is a
teaching assistant in the Amityville School
District, CSEA Local 870, will major in
international relations at Georgetown
University in Virginia.

Region 1 President Danny Donohue and
Region 1 Scholarship Committee
Chairwoman: Dorothy Goetz awarded the
winners with their $500 checks and
certificates.

ALBANY — In the Capital Region of CSEA,
Brian C, Flavell, Stacy Lynn Laurin and Tina
Marie Patterson won 1986 Irving
Flaumenbaum Memorial Scholarship awards.

Brian Flavell is the son of Maria I. Flavell, a
typist in the Saratoga Springs City School
District. She is a member of CSEA Saratoga
Springs City School District Unit, which is part
of the CSEA Saratoga County Educational
Local 864.

Stacy Lynn Laurin is the daughter of Marcel
John Laurin, a school bus driver in the Chazy
Central School District where he is a member
of the CSEA Central School District Unit,

14 THE PUBLIC SECTOR

August 25, 1986

Irving Flaumenbaum Scholarship Winners

Former New York City Local 010 President Rose Sutro, Claudette and
Melissa Thomas, and Region 2 President George Boncoraglio.

NEW YORK — Region 2 President George Boncoraglio recently
presented Irving Flaumenbaum Scholarships to winners in the New
York Metropolitan area.

Melissa Thomas is 17 years old and has been accepted into the
Fashion Buying and Merchandising program at New York City’s
Fashion Institute of Technology. Her mother, Claudette Thomas,
has been a CSEA member for five years and is employed as a clerk
at the Jamaica Office of Disability Determinations, New York State
Department of Social Services.

Tavia Dunn is 18 years old and has been accepted into the
program for Office Administration Technology at Baruch College in

Region 2 Scholarship Committee member LaMonte “Dutch” Wade,
Manhattan Developmental Center Local 443 President Margaret Meaders,
Lucille and Tavia Dunn, Region 2 President George Boncoraglio.

New York City. Her mother, Lucille Dunn, has been a member of
CSEA for seven years and is employed as an administrative aide at

manhattan Developmental Center’s satellite program located at Mt.
Sinai Medical Center.

A third winner, Deirdre R. Small, recently graduated from
Eramus Hall High School, Brooklyn and has been accepted at the
Pre-Dentistry Program at Brooklyn College. Her mother, Marietta
Johnson-Small, is employed as a clerk at the New York State
Insurance Fund. (Deirdre could not be on hand for the scholarship
presentation. )

Region 3 President Pat Mascioli presented Irving Flaumenbaum Scholarship
awards to two of the three southern region winners. Above are Ulster County
Local 856 President Sean Egan, Sharon and Robert Villielm Jr., Mascioli,
Chanie and Rachel Elewitz, and Region 3 Scholarship Committee Chairwoman
Diane Lucchessi.

FISHKILL — Two high school graduates from Rockland County
and one from Ulster County are winners of this year’s Irving
Flaumenbaum Scholarship awards in Region 3.

Chanie Elewitz of Monsey, a graduate of Bas Torah Academy,
plans to attend school in Israel where she will major in political
science. Her mother, Rachel, is amember of Rockland County Local
844 and is employed as a caseworker with the Rockland County
Department of Social Services.

Tina Lauricella, a graduate of Clarkstown North High School
will attend the University of Maryland where she will major in
business. Her mother, Ann is employed by the Rockland County
Veterans Affairs office and is a member of Rockland County Local
844.

Robert Villielm Jr. of Rifton is a 1986 graduate of Kingston High
School who plans to attend SUNY at New Paltz where he will major
in computer science and Spanish. His mother, Sharon is a nurses
aide employed by the Ulster County Infirmary. She is a member of
Ulster County Local 856.

which is part of the CSEA Clinton County
Local 810.

Tina Marie Patterson is the daughter of
Paul A. Patterson, a heavy equipment
operator in the Town of Catskill Highway
Department. Patterson is president of the
Town of Catskill Unit of CSEA, which is part of
the CSEA Greene County Local 820.

The CSEA scholarships recently were
resented to the winners and their parents by
Region 4 President C. Allen Mead.

Greene County Local 820 President Richard
Canniff, Stacy Lynn Laurin, Region 4 President C.
Allen Mead, Tina Marie Patterson, and §cholarship
Committee member Bill Fetterling.

August 25, 1986

Irving Flaumenbaum Scholarship Winners

LIVERPOOL — CSEA Region 5 scholarship winners
for 1986 were recently honored at an informal ceremony at
regional offices.

Region 5 President Jim Moore congratulated the out-
standing students who were accompanied by parents and
union officials for the occasion.

Amy Yauney, daughter of Frederick Yauney and the
late Helena Yauney of Croghan, is an honors graduate of
Beaver River Central School and the first applicant to ever win a
CSEA regional scholarship from Lewis County. Amy has been ac-
cepted at the State University of New York (SUNY) Albany and
plans to major in political science. Frederick is employed by Lewis
County General Hospital and is a member of Lewis County Local
820.

Kathleen Rusnak, daughter of Paul and Mary Rusnak of Bing-
hamton, graduated from Binghamton High School in 1986.

Kathleen has been accepted at Penn State University for the fall
semester. The National Honor Society member was active in the
school art club and student teaching, but is undecided on a par-
ticular field of study. Mary Rusnak is employed by Broome County
Office of the Aging and is a member of Broome County Local 804.

Wendy Roblyer, daughter of Shirley Roblyer, is a 1986 graduate
of Odessa-Montour Central School. Wendy, a member of the Na-
tional Honor Society, has also garnered several other scholarships
and is planning a medical career in physical therapy. She has been

a’
i

©

Oa

Region 5 President Jim Moore, Paul,
Kathleen and Mark Rusnak, Wendy and
Shirley Roblyer, and Odessa-Montour School
Unit Vice President Sue Collins, representing
Schuyler County Local 849.

YAUNEY

accepted at the University of Maryland-Baltimore Campus for the
fall term.

Shirley Roblyer is employed by the Odessa-Montour Central
School system and is a member of Schuyler County Local 849.

Local 178.

Jeffrey Granger, of Canandaigua, is a
graduate of Canandaigua Academy and
plans to attend Syracuse University,
majoring in chemistry education. He is the
son of Janet C. Brown, employed by the
Ontario County Social Services department
and a member of Local 835.

Michelle Stachowiak, of Buffalo, is a
graduate of Villa Maria Academy and plans
to attend St. Bonaventure University,
majoring in biology. She is the daughter of
Lorraine Stachowiak, a MHTA at the West

GRANGER

RODAK

Seneca Developmental Center and a

Se CHOWIAR member of Local 427.

BUFFALO — Region 6 winners of the
Irving Flaumenbaum Scholarship awards
picked up their checks and certificates in
ceremonies at the region offices,
accompanied by their parents and local

Nicholas J. Rodak, of Warsaw, is a
graduate of Attica Senior High School and
will attend Cornell University, majoring in
veterinary sciences. He is the son of Wanda
Rodak, a typist at the Wyoming
Correctional Facility, and a member of

The presentations were made by Region 6 °

President Robert L. Lattimer and
Scholarship Committee member Art Howell,
with local officers Michelle LaBarge,
Richard Marks and Skip Dunham also in

officers.

attendance.

Help
and
high
water

WANTAGH — In the right place at the right
time?

CSEA member Jim Martino figures he was
when a torrential storm flooded an office building
with about six feet of water, trapping 150
employees inside. At the time, Martino, a member
of the East Meadow Fire Department, was just
down the block at the union office and rushed over
to help rescue the workers.

“T was at the local when the call came in over
the radio, said Martino, who works in Nassau Local
830 as an administrative assistant to Local
President Jerome Donahue. When he arrived at the
scene of the flooding, most of the cars in the
parking lot were completely submerged.

“T saw two of them floating by,’’ he said. ‘It
was really unbelievable. The water was about
seven feet high in the lobby.”

The firemen used the trucks to pump out some
of the water and then they entered the building with

1 6 THE PUBLIC SECTOR

four rowboats which were provided by the Parks
and Recreation Department and the Nassau
County Police Department.

As computer terminals and refrigerators
floated by, the fireman set up guideropes to begin
the rescue.

“The Parks and Recreation commissioner sent
some CSEA members to help us and they really
deserve a lot of credit. They got involved and did an
excellent job,’’ Martino said.

After two hours, the water was down to about
three feet high and the firemen began walking the
employees out of the building. One woman was
eight months pregnant and Martino carried her to
safety, an act which was photographed and the
picture placed on the front page of a major Long
Island newspaper.

‘Luckily no one was hurt,’’ Martino said, ‘‘but
there are certainly a lot of people who are without
cars.”

August 25, 1986

COPIAGUE — It was a yearlong battle, but the
@  CSEA members in the Copiague Secretarial Unit,
armed with strong will and solidarity, finally got
their contract.

On Secretaries Day, while most secretaries
were being reminded they were appreciated, the
secretarial unit was walking a picket line in the
rain, protesting in particular against 11-month
clerical positions.

Effective July 1, 1986, the new, three-year pact
converts the 11-month jobs into 12-month positions,
with increases of 7.5 percent, plus increment, for
1985-1986; and for steps one through eight, 6
percent, plus increment, plus $400, in both 1986-1987
and 1987-1988.

Step nine will get 6 percent, plus $500, in each
of the last two years.

The mail clerk, part-time clerk-typist, and

by 7 percent in each year of the agreement.

Teamwork works, secretaries note

Vacation time has been increased, with the
converted 12-month employees becoming eligible
for four weeks of paid vacation.

Martin Luther King Day has been added as a 5
paid holiday, and the number of sick days has been
increased.

Ge
According to Unit President Marie Capone, f / /
“Tt’s really a good contract and it was ratified i f
overwhelmingly. I don’t think the board realized |
how much pull we had, but after the ‘ee |
demonstrations they started to move on the ‘it |
negotiations,’ she explained. ‘‘We had been without | (
a contract for over a year,” she added.

CSEA Field Representative John Cuneo said,
“The unit really stood strong and united and they
got a lot of help from the other CSEA units and
locals, and from the CSEA staff.’’

Members of the negotiating team included:
Cuneo, Capone, Connie Wunderlich, Nancy
O’Connor and Barbara Aiello.

{ clerical aide will have their hourly rates increased

School unit contract
the apple of their eye

® LEVITTOWN — The Levittown Unit of
CSEa Nassau County Educational Local 865
recently ratified a two-year contract which
includes salary increases of 8 percent in
each of the years.
Unit President Gary Coppola said he was
satisfied with the agreement. ‘There were

no givebacks at all
and the early
retirement

last contract.”

incentive has been carried over from the

In addition, it was agreed upon that a

+City workers find
new raises ‘grand’

WATERTOWN — Members of the Watertown City Unit of
Jefferson County Local 823 have voted an overwhelming approval
of a new one-year contract calling for a significant salary
increase, plus other improved benefits effective July 1.

According to Roger Kane, CSEA collective bargaining
specialist and chief negotiator for the 210 members in the unit,
the new agreement was ratified in late June.

Terms of the contract include:

An annual increase in salary of $1,000 for all

employees, plus any earned step.

+ Improved contract language concerning overtime and

time off.

¢ Employees now have the option to receive cash

payment in lieu of hospitalization coverage.
é ¢ Change in contract language regarding Election Day
off.

No increase of insurance premiums for employee

dependents. ie

The new agreement concluded several months of negotiations.
City Council members have also ratified the one-year pact. ;

The Watertown City Unit Negotiations Committee, in addition
to Roger Kane, included: Don Knight, Arthur Roshia, Bruce
Wilkins, Richard Oaks and Michael Blair.

committee will be established with
representatives from labor and management
for the purpose of reviewing inequities
which may exist in the salary schedules, so
that such inequities can be corrected in a
successor agreement.

CSEA Field Representative Mike Aiello
explained that the unit includes over 200
members who are nurses, custodians,
teacher aides, bus drivers and food service
workers.

Members of the negotiating committee
included: Aiello, Coppola, Joan DuBritz,
Ken Whalen and Natalie Schneider.

Irvington pact gains

laa ee Ar ata
@
August 25, 1986

VILLAGE OF IRVINGTON WORKERS will receive pay raises of 12
percent over the next two years following ratification of a contract. The
agreement also provides for a new holiday for Martin Luther King’s
Birthday, seniority language, a sick leave buyout plan and an increase
in life insurance. Seated above are Mayor Reginald F. Marra and Unit
President Steve Caporal. Standing are Region 3 President Pat Mascioli
and Collective Bargaining Specialist Don Partrick.

THE PUBLIC SECTOR 1 7

Tax break

M ore than 16,000 public employees —
including a host of CSEA members

— have enrolled in the New York State
Deferred Compensation Plan since its
introduction last year. Created by the
State to encourage workers to save for
retirement, the program offers a unique
before-tax savings alternative.

As the benefit program began its second
year, with more than $50 million in plan
assets, new features were added and a
new slogan — ‘‘The Benefit That Lasts A
Lifetime’”’ — has been adopted.

The new New York State Deferred
Compensation Plan allows for further
savings and tax reduction. In addition to
deferring federal income income tax, state
and local taxes are also deferred.
Contribution charges have been reduced
and all fees assessed on the distribution of
funds have been eliminated.

“Tf you are already saving on an after-
tax basis, this is a great way to reduce
your tax liability,” Lillian Roberts,
Commission of New York State
Department of Labor, said.

Benefits of savings plan add up:

brighter future

“Unfortunately, we don’t like to think
about retirement until later on in life. The
Deferred Compensation Plan is an
important tool which allows all of us to
prepare for a secure financial future,
during our productive years.”

Since money is deducted from each
paycheck, employees save on an
automatic and regular basis. As little as
$10 per pay period may be saved or up to
$7,500 per year so long as the total amount
does not exceed 25% of one’s annual
salary. Employees may now enroll on a
monthly basis.

Contributions may be invested in any
combination of the available investment
alternatives — the Guaranteed Interest
Contract, the Equity Option or the Money
Market Option. Participants may now
reallocate funds between these options on
a monthly basis.

Unlike an IRA, which reduces income
tax liability only upon filing your tax
return, deferred compensation creates an
immediate tax savings every pay period.
In addition, state employees can
contribute significantly more than they

can to an IRA. Participants are also
eligible to receive funds at retirement or
termination of employment, or if the
requirements for an unforeseen qualified
emergency are met (all without penalty).

Most important, before tax savings,
such as Deferred Compensation, grow
nearly twice as fast as savings in an after-
tax plan. This is due to the compounding
of a larger amount of money for a long
period of time.

Copeland, the State’s Plan
Administrator for the Deferred
Compensation Plan, has seven offices
statewide. For more information about
The New York State Deferred
Compensation Plan, call the toll-free
HELPLINE — 1-800-422-8463 or any one of
Copeland’s regional offices to arrange a
counseling interview with a Copeland
Account Executive.

The Copeland Companies (District Offices)

ALBANY BUFFALO LONG ISLAND (NEW YORK CITY ROCHESTER SYRACUSE WESTCHESTER

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Aibomy, MAY. 12211-2365 ‘Orchard Park, N.Y. 14127 te 439 New York, MY. 10038 Rochester, N.Y. 14625, LaFayette, N.Y. 13084 wvonK, N.Y. 10504
(518) 445-1231 (716) 662-096 eee 0 747 (12) 662:3010 (716) 586-5450 (315) 67'3384 (914) 273-3544

>

In their memory

BATAVIA — The memory of deceased CSEA

members at the Batavia School for the Blind of New
York will have a place of honor following the
dedication of a memorial plaque by Local 200
members.

“This is something we wanted to do for quite a
while,” said past president Joseph McGuire,
“especially with the passing of our longtime
president Helen Tolejko.””

The plaque, denoting the names of five other
deceased members, was unveiled by Local
President Jeff Wilbur before a gathering that
included relatives and friends, as well as co-workers
and school administration officials.

In addition to Helen Tolejko, the plaque honors
the memory of Harriet Lewis Denet, Roger
MacArthur, Ruth Shepard, Millie Miller and Cal
Totten.

18

THE PUBLIC SECTOR

aean ue :
"ar PLAQUE DEDICATION — From left, past Local 200 President
Joseph McGuire, with new officers Treasurer Roland Fitch, Vice
President Sharon Armstrong, Secretary Shirley Hasenauer and
President Jeff Wilbur. On hand to swear in new officers was Region 6
President Robert T. Lattimer.

I

August 25, 1986®

If it’s true that “if you want something a week on union business alone. ‘I just keep

done, give it to a busy person,”’ then Pat busy until I finish the job I’m working on,”
Dempsey is the one person you should look for. she says. ‘‘In an area the size of St. Lawrence
Dempsey is, by any standard, a dynamo. County, I try to get around to as many

meetings as possible, but I also use the phone a
lot. In the north country you have to.” One
person she calls a lot, says Dempsey, is CSEA
Field Rep Steve Ragan. ‘I’ve been known to
call him at any hour of the day . . . Steve and I
have an excellent working relationship.”
Part of her drive comes from the
satisfaction she gets from helping her fellow
union members, she says. ‘I really enjoy
talking to them about activities at their school.
Iam always ready to help if they have a
problem. If I don’t have the answer, I call
By her own estimate, she expends 20 hours Steve Ragan.”

OUR GOOD HEAL

Consider this: She is president of CSEA St.
Lawrence Educational Local 873, working
endlessly for non-instructional members in
seven North Country school districts; president
of the Heuvelton Central School District CSEA
Unit; a driver/clerk in the transportation office
of the Heuvelton school district; secretary of
the North Country Chapter of the New York
State Association for People in Transportation,
and a homemaker for her husband and two
sons.

- a
Pat Dempsey ... a dynamo.

CSEA’s Joint Committee on Health Plan Participating Providers, the Major
Benefits wishes you and your family Medical Expense Program allows for
continued good health, and reminds that routine health examinations for you, the
an annual physical examination can employee, if you are age 50 or older up to
determine the state of your health as well a maximum reimbursement of $100 in a
as detect disease in its’ early stages. calendar year; for covered spouses age 50

: Shag or older a maximum reimbursement of up

The Empire Plan Participating to $50 is provided. These benefits are not

Provider Program entitles all enrollees subject to deductible or coinsurance.

and their covered dependents to an annual

hysical FREE of ch: . For th i i
AND THE OTHER THING Trvellees who cies on ite Tapia Pig aa Boe aaa!

is

The setting was a church hall in Albany, but
the subject was definitely not religion as black
belt karate master Coleen Gragen recently
instructed a group of children and spouses of
Albany area union members in the fine art of
self defense.

It was all part of a program on self defense
sponsored jointly by the CSEA Regin IV
Women’s Committee, the Coalition of Labor
Union Women, and Cornell University’s School of
Industrial and Labor Relations.

In photo at left, Gragen strikes a fighting
pose as a child attempts to duplicate the move.
In photo at right, Alice Brady and Marcia
Caliacchia of Cornell and CSEA Region 4
Women’s Committee member Ellen Diange seem
pleased as punch over results of the class.

CSEA North Country members pitched in a big way
along with area farmers and other civilians to assist Ar-
my personnel in transporting thousands of tons of hay as
part of “Operation Haylift” to aid drought-stricken
southern farmers.

Thousands of tons of hay were transported by state
qeparinent of Transportation trucks driven by CSEA
embers to Fort Drum, near Watertown, for
transporting by rail and air to several southern states.
Several CSEA members from various area Locals
volunteered to handle the hay.

In photo at right are Harry Sillis, Bernie Raferty and
Robert Smith, all of Black River State Employees Local
015; Jefferson County CSEA Local 823 President Mary
Hampton, and Clarence Mitchell of Local 015.

@
August 25, 1986 THE PUBLIC SECTOR 1 9

Women build solidarity

2 sera ieee so Fri

CSEA’s WOMEN’s INSTITUTE GRADUATES...From left, Carol Sandford, Region 5; Bette Lawrenz, Region 6; Betty
Donna Murray, Region 5; Carol Garnsey, Region 5; CSEA Humphrey, Region 6; and Gloria Scott, Region 2.
Secretary Irene Carr; CSEA Education Specialist Peg Wilson;'

UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa.— Building stronger ties between which detailed how labor can prepare for the changing job site
members of different unions is the goal of the Summer Institute and the future of work.
for Union Women. It is a lesson that CSEA’s eight participants in Other workshop topics included: Legal issues for working
this year’s program say they will take with them far beyond their women; Preparing to negotiate for child care; Creative
weeklong session and put into practice through their activism. politicking; and Self-defense. The program also sponsored a field
The CSEA activists joined with labor women from throughout trip to the nearby Rushton coal mines, the site of the nation’s
the Northeast during the recent session held at Pennsylvania first female mineworker fatality.
State University. “We learned a lot in the workshop sessions’”’ says CSEA
CSEA Secretary Irene Carr also served on the Institute staff, | Education and Training Specialist Peg Wilson. “But we learned
presenting a workshop on ‘‘Union response to new technology,” even more from each other.”

Vote for CSEA-endorsed candidate \

e
20 THE PUBLIC SECTOR August 25, 1986

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Oversized 13, Folder 2
Resource Type:
Periodical
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Date Uploaded:
December 23, 2018

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