The Work Force, 1999 November

Online content

Fullscreen
: _ Fighting forjobsamid =
_ Nassau County’s fiscal mess _

The fight for ie contracts hits diet Street from Buffalo to Brooklyn :
‘See Pages 2, 14, 15

ees

Led by CSEA Executive Vice President Mary Sullivan, in the center
wearing sunglasses, a large and vocal throng of hundreds of union
members show their support for the labor movement during the
recent Albany labor parade.

More photos of the huge Albany labor parade and state contract
protests are on Pages 14 and 15.

Messy Floyd visits, CSEA helps
with clean up along Long Island

LONG ISLAND — He was no Gloria or even Bob, but Hurricane
Floyd kept Long Islanders and others hopping last month with
emergency plans.

The storm lashed the East Coast and dumped record amounts of
rain on Long Island and the mid-Hudson Valley as CSEA members
prepared for the worst.

The storm left some flooding and minor damage as its calling
card.

CSEA members on Long Island who work in fire communications
doubled their staff to handle the influx of calls.

“We went from five to 10 dispatchers the day of the storm,” said
17-year fire communications technician Charles Albers. “It was not
as bad as anticipated but we still had our share of flooding, auto
accidents and burning wires,” he said.

“The quantity of calls increased five-fold during the storm,”
Albers added.

CSEA member Michael Ramirez, a dispatcher with the Smithtown
Fire District for nine years, echoed Albers.

“We had constant flooding and a lot of people who couldn't get
out because of falling trees,” he said.

— Sheryl C. Jenks

November 1999

Page 2 Oa

CSEA-backed bills
advance in Senate

The state Senate’s recent return to Albany included passage
of two pieces of legislation already passed by the Assembly.

Both bills are currently awaiting delivery to the governor. The
Clinic Access and Anti-Stalking Act of 1999 (A.9036A/S.6146)
creates a separate crime of stalking, creates sanctions for
various stalking offenses and increases penalties for repeat

offenders.

The bill also creates a new crime of “criminal interference”
for various types of assault or harassment of individuals seeking
reproductive health services or religious worship.

CSEA’s lobbying ensured that language to protect labor
activities such as peaceful picketing was included in the final

bill.

The Senate also passed a CSEA-supported bill,
A.9308A/A.6144, which makes it a Class FE felony for making a
false bomb threat to a school or placing a false bomb on school

property.

Individuals under the age of 19 would also face a mandatory
one-year revocation of their driver’s license for doing so.

Speaking from the heart about
contract issues, hardships
at Long Island Speakout

Anger, frustration,
embarrassment and sadness
were vividly displayed during
a recent worker’s Speakout
held on Long Island to give
CSEA state workers the
opportunity to have their
voices heard by their elected
officials.

More than 200 CSEA
members came out to
support their union brothers
and sisters who, one by one,
told their stories of personal
and professional hardship to
20 elected officials who came
to listen.

“When my child needs a
new pair of sneakers I can’t
just say ‘yes.’ I have to think
about that money and if I can
spend it right now. I’m
embarrassed to say that
sometimes sneakers have to
wait,” said CSEA member and
state transportation
department worker George

Bux. “This issue of a contract
and raises isn’t just about
me. It’s about her,” said CSEA
member and state motor
vehicles department worker
Timara Imperiale as she
pulled her 7-year-old
daughter, Giana, closer to her.

CSEA Suffolk Retiree Local
President Barbara Reynolds’s
message to politicians was
blunt.

“lam retired from state
service but | still work. Why?
Because | could never live on
my pension.” Reynolds told
the applauding crowd.

After CSEA members
spoke, the elected officials
pledged their support to help
get the word to Gov. George
Pataki.

AJl speakers were urged to
send copies of their speeches
to the governor and to the
media.

— Sheryl C. Jenks

CSEA’s public health
watchdogs battle E.coli
outbreak, prepare for flu

The largest outbreak of E.coli bacteria
contamination in the nation’s history
landed on the doorstep of CSEA members
who worked non-stop recently to identify
and track the deadly strain of germs.

For weeks, CSEA members at the
world-famous, state-run Wadsworth Lab in
Albany prepared hundreds of bacteria
cultures.

Members at the state Health Department
lab also expertly handled the details of a
full-scale investigation into the
contamination which killed two and
sickened more than 1,100 Capital District
residents.

TV station WRGB’s Darlene Hyme receives a flu shot from
CSEA member Cindy Schulte, a Schenectady County
supervising community health nurse. WRGB was promoting a
statewide vaccination program aimed at senior citizens.

And while the lab was reeling with the
E.coli outbreak caused by tainted water at
a county fair, other CSEA members in the
department continued to help prevent
public health crises.

Scores of union members across the

state who work for the
state and county health
departments are
tackling the upcoming
flu season by dispensing
advice, information and
shots to senior citizens

and others susceptible
to the virus.

CSEA members from the state’s Wadsworth Lab helped battle

a recent E. coli breakout. From left, Dawn Grock, Bill

Lab workers strained
As the E.coli crisis
unfolded, CSEA
Wadsworth Lab Local President John
O'Keefe and his colleagues put in long
_ hours identifying the
microscopic strain
that plagued the
county fair water
supply from among
| thousands of strains
| of bacteria.
| “This is a great
/ example of how the
system does work in a
crisis situation,”
O’ Keefe said.
Union members and
| lab employees Bill
McDaniels, Dawn
Grock, Dennis Raciot,
I. Ling Blot, Helen
| Kosinski and Doris
"| Fedorowicz prepared
| hundreds of the small
agar plates which
were used in the tests.

Normally, there are
a few hundred petri
dishes with an agar
base available in the
lab.

When hundreds of
stool or blood samples
have to be cultured
immediately, however,
thousands of petri

dishes have to be prepared and numerous
reports have to be typed, reviewed and
rewritten.
Members at the lab went into overdrive.
Water samples from the county fair were
received and tested by CSEA members,

Stephansky.

November

ce)

McDaniels, Helen Kosinski, Dorie Fedorowicz, and Larisa

and all test results were recorded by union
members. “This strain of E.coli had
already proven it was deadly so every
clinical step was taken with the utmost
care,” said local President O’Keefe.

Battling the flu

Away from the hectic Wadsworth lab,
CSEA members are battling this year’s
version of the flu and pneumonia with a
statewide vaccination program aimed at
senior citizens.

The national Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention predict 20 million
Americans will get the flu this season and
20,000 will die. :

CSEA member Cindy Schulte, a
Schenectady County supervising
community health nurse, recently
publicized the availability of both flu and
pneumonia shots by giving flu shots to
various Capital District television and
radio personalities and politicians.

“The more we put the message out the
better the response,” Schulte said,
referring to last year’s numbers and this
year’s projected targets.

Boosting participation in the vaccination
program has fostered greater cooperation
between the state and local government
health departments. It also has meant
state CSEA members are working closely
with their union counterparts in local
government.

“Now, because we're networking, using
the media and every single community
outlet, more seniors should be getting
their flu and pneumonia shots,” Schulte
said.

— Dan Campbell

THE WORK FORCE

Page 3

ISSN 1522-1091

Official publication of
CSEA Local 1000, AFSCME, AFL-CIO
143 Washington Ave.
Albany, NY 12210-2303
Danny Donohue, President

STEPHEN A. MADARASZ
Communications Director & Publisher
STANLEY HORNAK
Asst. Director of Communications
RONALD S. KERMANI, Editor
LOU HMIELESKI, Assistant Editor
CATHLEEN HORTON
Graphic Design & Support Services
RALPH DISTIN, Graphic Artist
JANICE NUSBAUM.
Communications Production Coordinator
BETH McINTYRE
Communications Secretary

The Work Force (USPS 0445-010) is
published monthly by Thé CSEA Publication Office:
143 Washington Ave., Albany, NY 12210.
Periodical Mail Postage paid at Post Office,
Albany, New York 12288.

Postmaster: Send address changes to:
CSEA, Attn: Membership Department,
143 Washington Ave., Albany, NY 12210.
CSEA on-line: The CSEA web site
can be accessed at www.cseainc.org

| Readers:

| Send any comments, complaints, suggestions or ideas to:

| Publisher, The Work Force, 143 Washington Avenue,
Albany, NY 12210-2303. |

COMMUNICATIONS ASSOCIATES

SHERYL C. JENKS Long Island Region
(516) 462-0030
Metropolitan Region
(212) 406-2156
Southern Region
(914) 831-1000
Capital Region

(518) 785-4400
Central Region
(315) 433-0050
Western Region
(716) 886-0391
Headquarters

(518) 257-1272

ANN CARROLL
ANITA MANLEY
DAN CAMPBELL
MARK M. KOTZIN
RON WOFFORD

ED MOLITOR

The Committee

LONG ISLAND REGION John C. Shepherd
METROPOLITAN REGION Lamont “Dutch” Wade
SOUTHERN REGION Diane Hewitt
CAPITAL REGION Marguerite Stanley
CENTRAL REGION Bruce Damalt, Chair
WESTERN REGION James V. Kurtz

SOR CMM,

somo

% o
*AFLCIOIOAG* Povaaen mnt

ee me THE WORK FORCE

In Touch with the

Work FORCE

\\ /f any members have voiced complaints
4. 1 recently that the news media seem to ignore
large-scale CSEA demonstrations and other labor
activities. :
It’s a point well taken.

CSEA actually generates a significant amount of media attention
statewide. We do the job right when it comes to communicating our point of
view to the media and framing issues in ways that make sense for news
reporting.

That does not guarantee coverage at all times or enough of it. It also does
not mean reporters will get the facts right or tell the whole story.

But there is a more fundamental concern that issues affecting labor and
working people are receiving only superficial attention. Too often they are
ignored in favor of political scorekeeping or show-business gossip.

That’s one reason why we have a union newspaper. It helps ensure you
get a fair presentation of CSEA activities and the issues we care about as a
union.

It’s also why CSEA uses television and radio advertising to make sure we
can get our important message to the public about the valuable work you
perform.

We continue, of course, to focus news media attention on what matters to
you and your family. You can help.

Newspapers, radio and TV stations are businesses that have to be
responsive to their audience. Let them know when they miss the story. Keep
after them and get your co-workers involved, too.

Like everything in our union, our collective action is greater than the sum
of its parts. This is just as important when it comes to media attention. The
pressure you create in your local community for reporters to follow our story
will help us in our contract and legislative battles.

oe

November 1999

Manhattan Psych at the crossroads:

Reaching outside the walls for help to survive

CSEA members working at the
Manhattan Psychiatric Center (MPC) are
trying to save their facility by reaching out
to the community.

Ravaged by budget cuts and the
scheduled loss of 20 percent of staff by
March, union members at this large
downstate facility have watched an endless
parade of unprepared clients being
released onto the streets.

Now, union members are finding strength
and support in the community for their
struggle to
survive.

More than
250 CSEA
members at
MPC took their
message to the
streets recently
to inform the
surrounding coramunities about these and
other workplace problems.

They enlisted the help of area
community leaders, church leaders, and

[SEA REPRESENTS

60 . Aes
200 WorKEas w 11s WO"

effects on the community. And it puts the
entire community in danger,” Boncoraglio
added. Potentially violent patients are
forced out of MPC and released to the
streets because of the drastic shortage of
state-financed supervised housing and
outpatient services, employees said.

Every morning on their way to work and
school, Harlem residents must step over
former MPC patients who are now living on
the streets.

“The mentally ill deserve better and the
people of Harlem deserve better,”
Boncoraglio said.

“These shameful cuts are a recipe for
disaster. If another tragedy like that of
Kendra Webdale occurs as a result, the
state will have blood on its hands,” the
region president said.

Webdale was pushed to her death on
New York City subway tracks by a former
state mental health client.

Reaching out for strength
“By reaching out to community and

religious leaders, we are broadening our
fight to include others that will be affected
by these cuts,” said MPC local President

CSEA Manhattan Psychiatric Center workers
take their message of workplace problems to
the streets.

politicians, led by the Rev. Al Sharpton of
the National Action Network and Ollie B.
Wells of the New York Conference of

Ministers, to get their message out.

Participants marched from the
psychiatric center on Wards Island through
the heart of Harlem to the State Office
Building. They chanted and blew whistles
to bring attention to what union leaders
called New York State’s darkest secret —
the disgraceful actions of the state Office of
Mental Health.

%

gZ

66 e don't have enough staff. Last year, a client nearly choked to death. At that time, we
had one staff person for 10 residents. Now they want us to work three night shifts and
two day shifts in one week so they can cover the overtime. And they've taken away all weekend
passes. I don’t mind working 40 hours, but it should be the same shift all week. Some of our
employees are taking care of elderly parents or children and they tell us it’s just too bad that

Steve Muller, developmental aide — Taconic DDSO

they are disrupting our lives. 99

Issue affects all

“At its heart, this is a community issue.
These cuts affect the entire community,”
said CSEA Metropolitan Region President
George Boncoraglio.

“The mentally ill of Manhattan can no
longer receive mental health care locally,
and they suffer. A large number of jobs will
be lost, which has long-term economic

Maxine Rice.

“We must stop the early releases and
nonexistent after-care to have safe
environments, workplaces, and homes.
Residents of this community must be made
aware of the danger these cuts present,”
Rice said.

— Ann Carroll

See related story on Page 16

; of the Work Force é. rr)

November

RI aaa Page S

Poll shows public doesn’t want private prisons

The union movement's dislike for
privately run prisons is echoing in the
public.

A year after CSEA and its
international affiliate, the American
Federation of State, County and
Municipal Employees (AFSCME), began
a fight to defeat a scheme to build a
private federal prison in Sullivan
County, a national poll shows
Americans also distrust and dislike the
concept of prisons for hire.

A survey commissioned by AFSCME
found a majority of the public (51
percent opposed, 34 percent strongly)

L

The Public Agrees: Crime Shouldn’t Pay

66 he cost of living in this area keeps rising and our salary isn’t going up. Our pay doesn’t
keep up, and it’s imperative that we keep what we have with our medical and dental

ee : and
i AFSCME are

is opposed to contracting out prisons.

“It’s clear that profit and prisons
don’t mix,” said CSEA President Danny
Donohue.

“All over the country we have heard
state and local officials lament their
earlier decisions to support for-profit
prisons,” said Gerald McEntee,
president of AFSCME.

“These decision makers come to
resent and regret these money-making
enterprises because they have learned
the hard way that these companies are
accountable only to their stockholders,
not the taxpayers,” McEntee added.

CSEA
lobbied
state
lawmakers
the last few
years to
pass a law
that
prohibits
for-profit
state
prisons.

On the
federal
level, CSEA

supporting
legislation

that would
make it more
difficult to
contract out
correctional
services.

This move
to prohibit
the contracting out of federal
corrections facilities is gaining
widespread bipartisan support, union
leaders said.

The for-profit prisons operating in
some states have had serious security
problems.

More than 40 assaults, including 20
stabbings and two inmate homicides,
occurred in an Ohio for-profit prison.

New Mexico’s for-profit lockups saw
four inmate deaths and a guard
murdered the last year.

The poll also showed voters believe
government-run prisons are better
equipped than private companies to
handle violent criminals.

Poll respondents also said they
believe government-run prisons are
more accountable, are harder to
escape from, and do a better job
protecting the public.

“It is the job of government — and
not the lowest bidder — to maintain
the prison system and protect the
public,” Donohue said.

GSEA REPRESENTS

1OMS)

eT x
200 worKeas w THis WO

5) of

coverage. What the state offered us, we feel we're worth more than that. ”

Carol Mitrzyk, keyboard specialist — guidance department, Marcy Correctional Facility Wy yy
f ti

ee THE WORK FORCE

November

1999

CSEA members in Adult Protective

Services make a difference

GOSHEN — Yvonne Sturm likes the idea
she’s helping adults maintain their
independence.

And that’s important, especially when
she thinks of her widowed mother.

“Most of us can relate to that,” she said.
“It’s the way you’d want to see your own
family.”

Sturm, a case supervisor with the Adult
Protective Services Division of the Orange
County Department of Social Services,
sees to it that her clients get the services

they need to remain independent or, if
needed, helps her clients with placement
in an appropriate facility.

The focus of Adult Protective Services,
said Sturm, is helping disabled individuals
take care of their needs, whether the
disability is mental or physical.

Clients range in age from 18-year-old
young adults to elderly. Their problems
may include substance abuse, or they may
be former mental health patients,
developmentally disabled or elderly
persons physically unable

to care for themselves.

Once a referral is made,
the caseworker does an
‘%y| assessment of the person’s
| condition and determines
| the person’s needs.

Sturm said a client may
| refuse help — and it is his
| or her right to refuse.

“Then we have to make
a decision,” she said. “Does
the person understand the
risk of not accepting help?
‘| Then it’s up to the
caseworker to call ina
mental health professional
| to make a determination.”

In some cases, a client
| may be appointed a

Frank Alteio, Yvonne Sturm and Victoria Caruso of the
Orange County Department of Social Services discuss an
Adult Protective Services case.

guardian by the court to

oversee the client’s affairs.
“We had a woman who

was leaving her stove on

SEA REPRESENTS

and she would
wander into the
road after her cat,” said Sturm.

“She wanted to stay in her home, so the
judge ordered that someone should live
with the woman and take care of her
needs. Eventually, she had a stroke and
ended up in a nursing home,” Sturm said.

Sturm said caseworkers have performed
services such as managing a client’s
money for them — paying their bills,
shopping or setting up a budget.

$2 9. a
‘00 Workers iw 118 WO

Stopping elder abuse

Sturm’s department also investigates
reports of elder abuse.

“Most abuse comes from the person’s
own family,” she said.

In these cases, the caseworker will help
the client obtain an order of protection
from the court or get services for the
relative.

“We may suggest the client be moved
into a supervised living situation,” said
Sturm, “or we'll provide the caregiver with
part-time help or send the client to an
adult day care situation for a couple of
hours a day.”

Protective services for adults are free to
all adults regardless of income. For more
information, contact the county
Department of Social Services or call
1-800-342-3009.

— Anita Manley

66 lhe hardest part of my job is tyring to calm angry complainants. Some of the stories | hear

from them are really very sad.9

Barbara Maniscalco, law stenographer — CSEA Courts Local, Long Island

November

19:99

THE WORK FORCE beerewA

Tugboat roundup propels canal system into

WATERFORD — CSEA members John
Callaghan and Tom Doin eased tons of
floating metal and growling diesels
toward shore on a recent sun-splattered
day, part of a display of union pride and
state heritage that is becoming the
backbone of the state barge canal
system.

Union members, including tugboat
captains, maintenance workers and others, are playing an
increasingly bigger role in operating and maintaining the watery
highway of commerce and tourism that bisects the state.

Callaghan and Doin and former tugboat captain Steve Wunder.
developed the state’s first tugboat roundup on the shores of this
river city to give residents a snapshot view of the canal system.

The event, the first for Waterford, was a fitting showcase for the
state’s floating workhorses — blue and yellow tugboats that
shepherd the annual flotillas of commercial and pleasure boats
from New York City to Buffalo.

“Events that celebrate the history and heritage of our canal
communities in general are desirable, as they represent the best of
the past and hopefully the future,” Callaghan said.

; Thousands of visitors
learned more about the
importance of the Barge Canal
to the state’s early
development and industrial
economy during the daylong
event.

SEA REPRESENTS

Wit MUnINES
200 worKens wn THis NOS

Tugboat captain and CSEA
member Tom Doin, at left,
maneuvers a tugboat to the
Waterford dock. Member
Nancy Kakule, above right,
secures the tug’s mooring
lines during a tugboat
roundup which showcased
the state’s Barge Canal.

spotlight

Not content with a
one-year success, Doin
and Callaghan are
planning a three-day
tugboat rendezvous next
summer, also in
Waterford.

“We are not only
reviving our history with
events like this, but also
inventing a brighter
future as we look forward
to a continuing increase
in recreational and
commercial use of the canal system,” Callaghan said.

This year’s success and their plans for next year have attracted
considerable attention.

“CSEA members like Doin, Wunder and our CSEA Local President
Ed Suprenant are committed to excellence in the workplace but
also to improving our communities through civic involvement,”
said CSEA Capital Region President Carmen Bagnoli.

“We hope that when the boating public learns to appreciate the
canal they will support our demands at the bargaining table,” said
CSEA President Danny Donohue.

Contract negotiations for CSEA members who work at the state
Canal Corporation began in March. Negotiators for both sides have
been meeting regularly.

Some union members who work for the state Canal Corp. see the

. waterway as a historic treasure and a link to the state’s future.

“It’s a great way to build bridges into the future of the local
community for the Canal Corporation and the canal workers. It’s
our past and our future,” Suprenant said.

CSEA leaders who work along the Barge Canal can get more
information about hosting similar tugboat roundups by writing
CSEA Eastern Barge Canal Local, Waterford Canal Shop, 200 Davis
Ave., Waterford N.Y. 12188.

— Daniel X. Campbell

l¢2. J of the Work Force )

i

“W: ‘ve got seven locks in our section and a bunch of reservoirs. We’re really busy in
the summer, cutting a lot of grass, cutting fallen trees, putting in bike paths. | like the

summer work we do, but I hate the winters — it’s too cold for me. 99

Keith Frazier, maintenance assistant — state Canal Corp. Lock 20, Marcy

THE WORK FORCE November 1999

Page 8

Reading, writing and renovation:

Cleaning it up, double time, in Rockland Co.

NANUET — They had only one month because of delays
in state funding, but Nanuet School District grounds and
custodial employees hustled mightily to prepare a newly
renovated school building for the first day of school.

This effort is one of several examples of CSEA members
saving taxpayers hundreds of thousands of dollars by
doing school renovations and classroom maintenance
instead of private contractors.

) “Our guys assembled all the furniture,” said Unit
fe f i Ce President Joe Zippilli.

“They also cleaned the windows and the rooms, moving
furniture between buildings. Meanwhile, they were still
doing their regular jobs. Many of them worked weekends
to get the job done,” he added.

After letting the Rockland County Board of Cooperative
Educational Services (BOCES) use the elementary school
for 12 years, growing enrollments forced the district to
reclaim the building.

District officials applied for state aid to renovate the
80-year-old building, and work started only weeks before
school began.

“We had a lot of cooperation from
everybody,” said school district Business
Manager Phil Sions.

“You know, school districts are so
teacher oriented that we forget the
custodial staff, without whom we couldn’t
open our doors.”

“Everyone pitched in,” added school
Superintendent Mark McNeill.

“It was great to have that cooperation.
Opening day went very well. It was an
extraordinary effort,” McNeill said.

6you know, school
districts are so teacher
oriented that we forget
the custodial staff,
without whom we
couldn’t open our
doors.

— Anita Manley

“Wi want a fair contract, something we can live on.My Local is mobilized ... we're writing
letters, making calls, doing demos. That's what we should all be doing.

I'm upset with a lack of promotional opportunities for support staff. Management ignores
the real issues. They never address a problem.99

Tim McGraw, licensed practical nurse — SUNY Fredonia

November 1999 THE WORK FORCE Page 9

im Bennett works at Ground Zero. If it’s
too hot, too cold, too icy, too stuffy or
maybe just too wet from water overflowing

clogged dormitory toilets — Bennett,
hunkered down in the plant utility nerve

A janitor for 19 years, Mayberry said,
“It’s peaceful working at

SUNY Binghamton’s Jim Bennett monitors utility
systems campus-wide from his station in the plant

utility nerve center.

center of Binghamton’s sprawling state
university campus — hears about it first.

His counterparts, thousands of CSEA
members, witness the daily ebb and flow
of student and university life because they
are the backbone of the bricks and mortar
that are home to New York's higher public
education.

For Bennett, working the hectic
eight-hour shift that starts at 3 p.m. may
mean chasing a bat around a library office
or fixing a balky air conditioning unit.

“It’s different every day,” he chuckled.

Hines of miles away, as day faded
into night, CSEA member Sylvia
Mayberry gingerly dusted the high-tech
dental school lab equipment at the
University of Buffalo.

OR OR

Page 10

night.” The lab to herself,
the CSEA activist said she
isn’t afraid to work alone in
the large offices and labs,
“but I had to get used to it.”

The silence that greeted
Mayberry on her shift casts a
different aura in the confines
of a crowded hospital
winding down for the night.

While the secretaries and
administrative staff have left
for the night, the important
business of helping and
healing continues.

SEA member Debbie
Guarino, a nurse's aide

WORK FORGE

CSEA keeps

SUNY

Linda Ginter, secretary at
Trademarks and Licensing at SUNY
Buffalo, helps keep the office
running smoothly.

working in the pediatric
intensive care unit at SUNY
Stony Brook Hospital, sees
the real drama of life and
death which no television
show can adequately
portray.

“I love what I do, but it’s
very hard, very stressful
work” Guarino said as she
checked a child’s condition
on a computer.

“lam really tired. It’s hard
to flip back and forth for
weekends or vacations when
you are used to functioning
at night,” Guarino said.

CSEA member Sylvia Mayberry keeps sensitive dental
lab equipment clean at the University of Buffalo. too.

Dayside has its pressures,

umming, day and night

x

ecretaries keep university offices across

the state running smoothly, calming

anxious students and handling paperwork.

Maintenance Supervisor Bill Dandrea takes
care of leaks, masonry repairs and
carpentry at SUNY Purchase. Dandrea is
also the local's health and safety chairman.
"I argue with the bosses sometimes, and I
go tooth and nail to make sure my guys
have the equipment they need."

“The most
challenging part of
my job is working
with the students
and trying to be
helpful, especially
when they're new,”
said CSEA member
Carol Slavetskas, a
secretary in the
SUNY Binghamton
geology
department.

“They're just
totally lost and
have a million
questions,” she
said. “I'll do

whatever | can to
help them.”

Safe and reliable transportation is what SUNY Purchase CSEA

member Harvie Henderson provides when he turns a wrench as
a maintenance assistant.

H:? is always

nearby at SUNY Purchase, where
maintenance assistant Harvie Henderson
can tear apart the engine of a university
van or plow snow as part of his job.

“[ like my job,” he said, immersed up to
his elbows in the guts of an engine. “I'd
have to to be here 15 years!”

Love of the job has kept Andrew Menard
at SUNY Plattsburgh, where he takes care
of animals, and not the fraternity kind.

A laboratory animal caretaker, Menard
makes sure the chinchillas kept in the
school’s auditory research lab are well
cared for.

As Menard makes one last check on the
cages, cleaners Peggy LaFountain and
Mary Mahan peek inside the university's
day care center before pulling out the

mops and
brooms.

“It’s always so
bright,”
LaFountain said
about her
favorite
university room
to clean.

“And it’s so
filled with the
energy of the
little ones who
spend their day
there,” Mahan
chimed in.

SUNY Purchase grounds supervisor

George Halliday keeps the grass green

and the snow plowed.
OR OR

Page 1 1

Breathe outa in your workplace:
Air Quality Day
coming in November

This November, make it a point to take a breath of fresh
air. If you can’t, make it a point to let your employer know
about stale air in your workplace.

Occupational safety and health experts said there is
growing recognition that air quality is one of the most
significant health issues in the workplace.

Recognition will come Nov. 10 on New York State Indoor Air
Quality Day, which came about through a coalition of labor
groups and support from the state Legislature.

But CSEA members don’t need a special day to raise their
awareness of bad air. Take, for instance, members of the
Oswego County Local.

Clerical workers in the Local were subjected to exhaust
fumes from the highway garage.

An investigation by CSEA’s
Occupational Safety and Health
team resulted in increased
ventilation, which helped for
awhile.

Recently, new concerns were
raised, and CSEA is working to fix
the problem.

CSEA’s clerical unit workers in
general are most likely to be exposed to bad air because of
the hours they spend indoors and the types of buildings they
work in.

Air-quality issues are among the most common complaints
and require ongoing monitoring.

Sometimes it’s hard to tell if the air you breathe is good or
bad. Excessive buildup of carbon dioxide, for instance, would
be hard to detect without monitoring equipment.

There are a few things you can do to help determine
whether your building has good airflow. For starters, check
with your maintenance crew.

Your building’s engineering crew more than likely adjusts
dampers on air intakes as the seasons change, regulating the
amount of fresh air coming into the building, depending in
part on heating and cooling demand.

Your maintenance workers should be able to tell you how
well your building breathes.

You can also purchase a wall-mounted thermometer and
humidity gauge.

Wide swings in temperature and humidity indicate poorly
managed ventilation.

If you suspect an air-quality problem in your building,
contact CSEA’s Occupational Safety and Health staff in your
region office, who can inspect the site with proper equipment.

You can also make a point on Nov. 10 by holding a
“breathe-in.” Take a few minutes to go outside and take a
breath of fresh air with your co-workers.

Bring a plant to work. Plants soak up carbon dioxide and
give off life-nurturing oxygen, helping clean the air.

“LOCAL 1000 AFSCHE .
oon tise AL ory

Ss

.
265,000 memaens S1ROX™

Page 2 ES aaa November 1999

SACRE TON. BH BOA Ton

Indoor Air
Pollution

SOURCES AND IN-HOUSE CORRECTION

Two of CSEA’s publications, Heating, Ventilating and Air
Conditioning Systems, and Indoor Air Pollution, aim to help
workers police air quality in their workplace. Many CSEA
members have worn the “dead canary” pin, above, to bring
attention to poor air quality in the workplace.

CSEA, AFL-CIO slate safety conferences

More than 700 occupational safety and health activists from CSEA
will meet in November in Lake Placid to discuss worker safety.

The efforts of organized labor to improve conditions in the
workplace have made a significant difference in workers’ lives and
have helped make unio tronger.

But much work remains to be done — and the job of protecting
workers’ safety and health is becoming more difficult.

Political attacks on workers’ safety and unions have intensified.

Meanwhile, many employers are trying to shift resonsibility for
worker safety to the workers.

The AFL-CIO National Safety and Health Conference in December
will bring together union safety and health representatives from
across the union movement.

There is still time to register for the AFL-CIO National Safety and
Health Conference, to be held Dec. 12-15 in New Orleans.

In plenary sessions and workshops, participants will learn about
current safety and health problems and how to tackle them.

For more information, call (202) 637-5367.

DANNY DONOHUE

STATEWIDE PRESIDENT

t has been a remarkable
year for CSEA at the end of
a remarkable century.

It is only right that we
begin the new millennium
with an energized
membership that is moving
forward with CSEA’s agenda
to become an even greater
force for working people.

We are fighting for better
contracts; we are organizing

to become stronger and get our members more active;
and we are building our political muscle to gain better
budgets and laws.

CSEA is proud of who we are and what we do and we
must make sure every one of our members feels the
same way, CSEA’s accomplishments are great, but our
success must be measured again and again — each time
we stand up for fairness and fight to make sure every
person is treated with the respect he or she deserves

CSEA’s Accomplishments

There are so many benefits of belonging to CSEA. We
have fought hard over the decades to gain the right to be
a union and negotiate our wages and benefits. We have
fought in the capitol and in the courts to gain and
protect our pension coverage. We succeeded in
establishing safety and health protections for our
members and have vigorously pursued improvements
and enforcement.

CSEA has championed the issue of pay equity and
sought protections against discrimination of any kind.

CSEA is second to none in securing education and
training opportunities for our members that open the
door to career advancement. And we are unrivaled in the
range of member benefits, insurance programs, and
representation services of every kind.

As much as we have gained, nothing should ever be
taken for granted. It is up to all of us, every day, to keep
us moving forward. No matter what we have
accomplished, there is still so much more to be done.

Fighting for Better Contracts
For the past several years, we have worked hard in
CSEA to transform ourselves into an even stronger, more
effective force.
CSEA has demonstrated the undeniable spirit of
unionism throughout our history but it has been
especially strong and vital in the past year and has taken

hold in our membership through actions, not words.

It has been present in the thousands of state members
who have dogged the governor in every part of the state,
letting him know you won't work for peanuts and that he
should put his money where his mouth is when he says
we are the best workers anywhere.

From Buffalo to Brooklyn, from Cortland to Commack,
CSEA members came together to pester Pataki. In White
Plains and Plattsburgh and Binghamton, CSEA turned out
in force and would not be denied. Outside the Capitol in
Albany and on the grounds of the State Fair in Syracuse,
CSEA members have been relentless.

The true strength of CSEA is in our ability to stand up
for what's right whether the issue affects seven or 77,000
members. CSEA provides our members with whatever
support and confidence they need to succeed, no matter
who you are or where you work.

CSEA demonstrated that spirit of unionism in the
Village of Webster, near Rochester, where 15 members
stood together to face down unacceptable management
demands. We did the job right and we won.

CSEA demonstrated that spirit of unionism in places
like the Ichabod Crane School District near Albany, where
members stood firm for three years, learned the lessons
of solidarity and built community support to make sure
we got a good contract. Once again, we did the job and
we won.

Organizing for a Stronger CSEA

CSEA demonstrated the spirit of unionism in the Town,
of Dewitt, where workers rallied around the right to
organize, chose CSEA and stood firm until management
was forced to recognize the union.

But the spirit of unionism could not be greater than in
the 450 courageous Long Beach Hospital workers who
endured continued management harassment and
intimidation and still voted to join CSEA. They truly
demonstrated what unionism is all about and we are so
very proud to represent them.

The Long Beach workers clearly understood it is only
through your union membership that workers can
protect their rights, ensure respect and fair pay and

Mary E. SULLIVAN
EXECUTIVE VICE PRESIDENT

f you put in a productive

40-hour week, you should

expect to receive a wage
that would allow you to afford
food, shelter, medical care,
clothing and transportation,

But the sad fact is that

millions of Americans are
working harder and longer
and still don’t take home
enough money to escape
poverty.

New York has one of the
highest per capita incomes of any state in the nation, yet
more than 3 million of us live in poverty.

One out of every four children in New York is growing
up in poverty, Even more shocking is the fact that more
than a third of the state’s poor families with children are
poor despite having a parent who works full-time, year
round,

Over the last 20 years, an enormous gap has grown ,

Supplement to THE WORK FORCE

between the richest Americans and the rest of us.

While Wall Street is booming, Main Street is crumbling.
While CEO salaries are skyrocketing, working people are
taking it on the chin.

If the salary of the average worker had risen at the
same rate as the CEOs, they would be making $139,000 a
year.

Today, Bill Gates of Microsoft makes more money
before lunch than most people will earn in a lifetime.

At the root of this massive rise in CEO pay and
stagnation of worker wages is the decline in workers’
bargaining power.

It is not a surprise to anyone that our nation’s 20-year
decline in worker wages has coincided with the decline in
the power and effectiveness of the labor movement.

But those days are over. That may have been the past,
but it’s not our present and it isn’t our future!

We are pressing politicians for fair contracts, rallying
and protesting on streets across New York to call
attention to our issues, and informing the public of the
valuable work we perform.

November 1999

These are the officers’ reports
presented at CSEA’s 89th
Annual Delegates Meeting held
in Washington, D.C. from
Oct. 18-22.

Complete coverage of the convention will
be featured in the December issue of
The Work Force.

benefits. They should serve as an example for all of us
about what it means to stand up for what you believe in
— especially in the face of determined opposition.

Flexing our Political Muscle

One of the most important aspects of CSEA’s strength
as a union is our effectiveness as a political force. The
power of the vote should never be underestimated
because it protects our interests in so many ways. That’s
why it is a continuing priority to register people to vote
and encourage active participation in the political
process at every level, from school boards to the state
Capitol to Congress and the White House.

We must continue to make our presence felt at every
level of government. In the past year, these efforts have
paid off with solid victories in areas such as tier
reinstatement legislation which protects previously
earned pension credit.

We've also strengthened the future for our members
who work with the developmentally disabled through a
share of the New York Cares program, and we worked to
secure the largest school aid package in the state’s
history.

There is still so much more to be done and it is a
never-ending responsibility to hold public offici
accountable for their actions.

Strength of the CSEA Membership

Every day, in every part of the state, there are
countless examples of CSEA’s spirit at work.

In the course of the past year, | have traveled to every
corner of our magnificent state and have met with
thousands of members, individually and in groups.

Seeing your spirit and commitment to do the job right
makes me proud to lead this great union and gives me
tremendous encouragement about our future.

CSEA is growing. Our member involvement is growing.
Our strength is growing. And if we all continue our
efforts, we will be more prepared than ever before to
meet the challenges that lie ahead.

Our demands are basic and we deserve nothing less.

We want fairness and respect from our employers.

We want a voice in what happens in the workplace,
and sufficient compensation for the contributions we
make every day.

We want benefits that protect our health and that of
our families and security in our retirement years.

And we're going to continue to achieve all of these
things and more because we're CSEA,

We're proud of who we are and what we do. We're
standing up for what we want and demanding what we
deserve. Those who take us for granted do so at their
own risk,

We're getting stronger every day because members
and leaders believe that, together, we can make a real
difference; that we all have a part to play in the struggle;
that, together, we do have the power to take care of each
other.

That is what unions do.

Page i

BARBARA
REEVES

STATEWIDE
SECRETARY

he Wall Street
titans were
wrong earlier

this decade: The
nation’s working
poor received a
wage hike and the
economy took off.

Despite gloom and doom reports to the
contrary, paying American workers more helps
the nation’s economy.

But the disparity in income between rich and
poor continues to grow at an alarming rate. Had
the status quo arguments against minimum
wage hikes in the early 1990s succeeded, the
income gap would be even worse.

Even skilled workers are losing ground.

Corporate earnings are up 5.2 percent. While
real wages grew 2.2 percent for the second year
in a row, they are barely keeping pace with
inflation, and are hardly commensurate with
this decade's corporate successes.

Meanwhile, proposed congressional tax cuts
would boost benefits to the richest taxpayers
while cutting funding to domestic programs —
such as education and Medicare — vital to
American workers.

Financier J. P. Morgan had a rule: he never
let his CEOs earn more than 20 times what his
workers earned. CEOs in 1998 earned an
average 419 times greater than average blue-
collar wages in the United States.

In an era when social justices were few,
Morgan's rule now seems downright generous.
But unions do have the means to fight for more
wage equality.

A strong economy provides bargaining
leverage for unions. Good times make it harder
for employers to justify job cuts, smaller wage
increases or benefit reductions. And unions are
showing the strength needed to fight for

workers.

t year, “paycheck protection” bills and
initiatives were defeated in 32 states. The
attempt to silence the political voice of working
families instead brought new strength and
momentum to union political action.

A labor poll this year shows 56 percent of
American voters believe unions have a positive
effect on our country, while more than half
believe unions are strong.

As we move into the new millennium, let's
not overlook the incredible achievements
organized labor has brought working men and
women the last 100 years.

*Unions raise wages.

*Unions provide benefits and pensions.

“Unions protect safety.

*Unions provide security and stability,

We need to continue to fight and organize, to
ensure the American worker does not lose more
ground to the income disparity plaguing our
nation and instead shares in the economic
prosperity labor has helped create.

CSEA, through our mobilization campaign, is
leading the way.

Our goal is to make sure CSEA’s working
families get a share of the prosperity
surrounding us.

Page 2

Supplement to THE WORK FORCE

MAUREEN

S. MALONE

STATEWIDE
TREASURER

s I write this
rticle, it’s
ight after |

watched the

recent Ryder Cup

matches. For

those of you who

do not follow

sporting events, this is a bi-annual golf match
between the best professional golfers in the
United States vs. the best professional
European golfers. At stake is a trophy for the
group amassing 14 or more points. There is a
lot of money involved, but not for the players.
Some saw this as an exhibition, some thought
they should be paid, some voiced upset at the
selection process. All these gripes took place
before the actual event.

What occurred during the 72 hours of
actual competition? The United States team
could not have done much worse the first 48
hours. Shots went into the rough, putts would
not fall, in general, things did not look good.
The captain of the team got the players
together, reminded them of the meaning of the
match, reminded them of the American spirit,
reminded them of the common goal and the
need to focus on the end result.

What happened the last 24 hours of
competition was the greatest comeback by
any team in Ryder Cup history. Each U.S.A.
team member put aside his individual
complaints/gripes and did the very best job
for the good of the team. Tears of joy and
American pride flowed from these golfers
because by working together they
accomplished what most people had given up
on, a victory, made sweeter by the hard work
involved in making it happen.

CSEA reminds me a lot of this recent
sporting event, Many individuals only see the
pessimistic side of life. Many individuals do
not see the need for a union, a need for
political involvement, or any good
accomplished through working together. As a
union, CSEA sees things differently

CSEA is actively involved in today’s labor
movement in New York State - a union rebirth
where individuals have put personal issues
and apathy aside to be involved in CSEA. Look
at the dramatic results, The first Albany Labor
Parade in over 10 years. A New York City
demonstration spanning the Brooklyn Bridge.
Workers speaking out in Long Island and the
Hudson Valley about deteriorating working
conditions. Buffalo area unionists following
their employer demanding fair wages.
Hundreds of CSEA members in Central New
York letting New York State fairgoers know
New York works because CSEA members
work,

Putting aside individual complaints, setting
our sights on our most important goals and
working as a team, CSEA will remain the force
for public sector workers in the State, County,
City, Town, Villages and School Districts. In
the private sector, CSEA is growing in
numbers, as well as reputation. Every day we
prove that together we can make a
difference.

November

Nick LAMorRTE

LONG ISLAND REGION PRESIDENT

reetings from Region One! I can’t believe

a year has passed by so quickly. By now

you should be tired of hearing about the
new millennium, Y2K and the like. I've always
been optimistic and I’m sure all will be OK by
the time the new year comes around. Thank
God for public employees! Because I know
some of you have to work New Years Eve and
are directly responsible for handling any
problems when we hit the double zeroes.
Maybe that’s when we will be appreciated, but
don't count on it. The average citizen never
realizes the work of public employees until there is a problem that affects
them, like their garbage wasn't picked up, or a storm drain is filled, or
maybe their child forgot their lunch, or when they have to return to a
building for a book for homework and the list goes on. Funny how we
become important so quickly. We do our jobs everyday and so many take
it for granted. We do make government work and we should be proud to
take the credit for the fine work we do. As we all look into the future, we
think about the work ahead and the way our jobs will change. Will
technology help us or hurt us? Think back a hundred years, the horse was
replaced by the automobile. We lost most of our blacksmiths, but they
were replaced by mechanics. You can trace alot of jobs lost and then
again alot of jobs created. I guess it’s like an evolving cycle that continues,
but with a different generation of workers. Where will the work take us?

Region One continues to move forward. To recap the year, we again

held a wonderful Festival of Lights celebrating our diversity by honoring
Chanukah, Christmas, Kwanzaa and the Feast of the Three Kings. Our
Human Rights Committee attended Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. ceremonies,

continued on page 4

GEORGE BONCORAGLIO.
METROPOLITAN REGION PRESIDENT

ov. George Pataki raises his salary by
$49,000, and then offers those who

actually do the work of the state zero
pay increases for four years.

In New York City, a woman is pushed to her
death in front of a subway train by a mentally
ill man repeatedly turned away from state
mental institutions. Gov. Pataki releases plans
to drastically cut patient beds and staff
positions at state mental health facilities.

We, as citizens of New York State, have
reached a crossroad.

At this juncture, our elected officials are
steering the apparatus of state government away from serving the people,
and toward their political ambitions. We need look no further than our own
state contract negotiations and the state mental health system to see state
policies that hurt all New Yorkers.

We can choose one of two paths. We can throw up our hands in disgust
and declare there is nothing we, as individuals, can do; or we can take the
road less traveled and stand up and fight back. The road less traveled is a
long, bumpy, often lonely path, lined with naysayers.

“What can one person do?” they ask. “You can’t change the system,”
they chant. “You're just wasting your time,” they yell.

Though the road is long and the battle tough, we must win, because the
future of New York State depends on us. We have seen by the governor's
reckless acts of essentially throwing the mentally ill onto the streets that he
does not care about our future.

For if he truly cared about New Yorkers, he would not show such
disregard for the mentally ill, the people who care for them, and our
communities.

It is up to us to fight for the future of New York State. We are fighting for
respect for doing demanding jobs with little resources, we are fighting for
our families’ livelihoods, we are fighting for justice, we are fighting for those
who cannot fight for themselves. We are fighting for the future of New York
State, because the future of New York State depends on treating all people
with respect

Each of us, every day, does the business of making New York State a
better place to live. We do it at work every day, and we do it when we

continued on page 4

1.9/9.9:

CARMINE DIBATTISTA
SOUTHERN REGION PRESIDENT

3 t seems only
[pests that I
is preparing my
statement for our
1998 Annual
Convention. The
old adage must be
true, time flies
when you are busy.
The preceding
year has been one
filled with much
activity and
achievement.
Through it all, the
leaders, including
new and established, in our Region, were
responsible. They, with the aid and direction of
our talented and capable staff, have provided
increased participation in education and
training programs, Regional Committees and
meetings. Communications between the Region
and Units are at a very high level.

It goes without saying that the lifeblood of
our organization is the activists that participate
on a daily basis to represent the membership.
As I reported to you last year, since July of 1998
there has been an increase in the number of
new activists. These people need to be
educated and informed about how to represent
the membership. Accordingly, the Region
Committees, working with the Statewide
Organization, have increased the number and
type of training sessions (Shop steward,
Disciplinary, etc.) to meet that need. We have
also increased the number of sites where the
training is provided (i.e.: Middletown, New
City). In addition, we have also increased the
type of.training. For example, last Fall we held
our first Region Ill Health and Safety
Conference. This spring, we held our fist
Women's Conference and our first Political
Action Training. We are looking forward to
holding all these events again. The respective
Region Committees, working with our Region III
Education and Programs Committee, created
these programs. They should be very proud of
their achievements; the programs that were
presented received rave reviews from
participants. Interestingly, we are looking
forward to an even more ambitious training
program once the Region Membership
Committee hits their stride. Yes, that's right the
Membership Committee. They have set their
designs on creating and holding training
programs by industry. From the preliminary
discussion we know it will not be easy, but
Region Ill has always stood up to a challenge. I
am quite sure that the members of the
Membership Committee, working in conjunction
with the Education and Program Committee, as
well as the CSEA Education and Training
Department, will do a great job!

Speaking of committees, all Region Ill
committees have been appointed and the
members are very actively participating. Chief
among these committees, as you would expect,
is the Region PAC, which contains
approximately 90 members. This fall they will
be participating in or providing leadership to
campaigns in each county. They are a highly
motivated group. Of special note, are the

atives from our Dutchess County
fall they will be working in some
lt campaigns. As Region President, |
am very fortunate to be working with such
dedicated leaders.

Another committee, one that was just

created this continued on page 4

Supplement to THE WORK FORCE

CARMEN BAGNOLI

CAPITAL REGION PRESIDENT
et’s turn the clock back and
L inane our lives without CSEA.

A typical day — ten hours on the
job — might start by rising at dawn
and finding our own way to
overcrowded worksites with minimal
faci

We can't afford to own a car.

They're too expensive when you're
only making $1.25 hourly even
though we work 70 hours a week.

There's no such thing as overtime
in our world without unions.

For some, Saturdays are 6-hour days.
We get a “break” on Sundays. It's
only a 4-hour day.

No sick leave. No vacations. No personal leave.

In winter, offices open in the dark and close in the dark.

Sick workers don’t get paid. If they are seriously ill, they just
get fired. There’s always somebody waiting in the wings for a job.

You do whatever the boss says. No questions asked, Or
allowed.

There's no such thing as Civil Service tests. If you got your job
through political connections, you're a little better off. The
winner gets the spoils. But you better be on the winning side.

No Social Security either. Or pensions.

You carry your own weight or become a burden on your
family.

Children work, too. There’s no public education. You don't
want to give them any ideas.

While this may sound like “make believe,” it really could have
happened without unions. Solidarity was — and is — the engine
that guarantees those of us not born rich security and prosperity.

The basics that we take for granted — from living wages and
health insurance to leave time and pensions — were not gifts
from benevolent employers. Workers had to organize, Workers
had to get power, Workers had to protect each other.

Very often, people ask “What has CSEA done for me?” The
answer is “a lot.”

The union makes us strong.

Get involved,

ROBERT L. LATTIMER

WESTERN REGION PRESIDENT

ver the years I've been 2 :

privileged to know and
work with numerous

talented and dedicated

members who were courageous

(or foolhardy) enough to run

for office in their locals, units

or region,

Those who made a
difference shared a common
denominator — each one
reflected the lofty ideals
embodied in the official oath of
office.

Being an effective leader is a
matter of trust ... trust that the
individual will not be swayed
by expediency or popularity, but will stand up and face the
tough issues.

Responsible officers put the concerns and needs of the
members first. They remember that one of their duties is to
promote merit and efficiency in public service and to
protect the members’ rights impartially.

Sometimes, it means having to say “no.” This is not an
easy task, given the union politics which are ever present.

As another election cycle looms, you should carefully
scrutinize the record and character of the candidates to
determine who would best represent you.

It is not simply a matter of “power and prestige” as
someone told me years ago. There is real work to be done,
tough decisions to be made, and constant obstacles to
overcome,

Integrity, credibility, dedication, selflessness and energy
are all necessary ingredients to succeed. Be sure the
candidate you support has these qualities.

Finally, as my term comes to an end, I'd like to thank and
recognize CSEA members, officers, and staff in the Western
Region and throughout New York State, as well as those in
AFSCME, who were there when I needed you.

You supported me, cri ed me, disagreed with me, and
challenged me to go the distance for a cause which
continues to be formidable — safe-guarding and improving
the lives and livelihoods of CSEA/AFSCME members.

It has been an honor to serve you.

Jim MoorE

CENTRAL REGION PRESIDENT

ther years when I have done
this report, | have tried to
capture into words the
feelings I have had in regards to this
union and the labor movement in
general. This year has been an
exceptional year, Although the
frustration we have had with the
state and the lack of a contract has
taken up many hours of staff and
activist time, a reflection of the past 12 months still shows that
CSEA has grown in strength and in member involvement.

Our region has hosted two very succussful job related
workshops. The Region Probation committee spent many
evenings planning an exciting all day program and were rewarded
with great attendance from all over the region. Prior approval was
sought and received for training credits and everyone attending
rated the program most worthwhile,

There was great pride in watching the school buses roll into
Syracuse for the second time as the Region Schools Committee
presented i cond conference that was open to members that
work within our vast region at one of over 210 schools. Every job
title was represented, and the committee has already begun
planning for their next workshop, These conferences would not
have been possible without the local and unit donations that were
provided to the region. I thank the leaders of those units for their
cooperation.

After 29 years of union activism I am very aware of the
tremendous asset our staff can be to solving local problems. One
unit however must be given credit for helping out literally seven

ovember 1999

days a week and at all hours of the day. Our member benefits staff
from H.Q.’s have been present at 5 a.m. to greet a Highway Unit as
well as joining the night crew of a Psy. Ct. to bring union services
to their work location:

It’s important that the union be in the worksite and this
department has been a nice addition to the local and union
leadership as well as the L.R.S.

President Donohue's commitment to expanding the health and
safety department has been a big help in our region. Hundreds of
on site inspections have been conducted after the local union has
requested our help.

My job has been made much easier by the tremendous support
Ihave received from six people who have taken their position as
region officers to heart. They each have served as advisors to our
many region committees and truly have been there for the
members each and every time I have called upon them to help
out. Thank you each so very much, I am proud to call you leaders.

Although each day is usually filled with something exciting or
maybe just frustrating, there were several highlights that stand
out in my mind as memorable moments.

For three complete days | worked with many of the officers of
Local 414 in conducting Labor-Management meetings with their
director in coming to agreement on over 25 MOU’s that had been
outstanding for over a year as a result of a consolidation of two
facilities.

Words can not express the pride | felt looking at the sea of red
shirts that were present at the state fair demonstration against the
governor this August. To see our members driving onto the

continued on page 4

Page re J

}

LONG ISLAND REGION
PRESIDENT’S REPORT

conclusion

held our International Day and is working to
promote other ethnic events. The Saftey and
Health Committee attended Workers Memorial
events and played a part in establishing a
permanent memorial at a State Office Building.
The Social Committee sponsored popular Atlantic
City trips, planned our Region One & Three
Workshop, while the Education and Training
Committee set the program and continued
defensive driving seminars throughout the region.
A very active PAC interviewed candidates for
office, made recommendations for or against
endorsement and was active in political
campaigns. Our Public Relations Committee took
a giant step in sponsoring the CSEA Challange, a
walk/run event to promote CSEA by helping raise
the consciousness of those with handicaps and
disabilities. The Audit Committee met regularly to
review the books, made recommendations and
questioned spending. Our Constitution/By-Law
Committee recommended the creation of an
Executive Vice President position and revised
language to conform to the State Constitution.
The Health and Hospital Committee developed a
survey and polled the membership. The Womens’
Committee made strides and walked for Breast
Cancer, attended breakfast meetings and
sponsored guest speakers to talk to our
members. Our School District Committee
welcomed over 500 educational members to an
annual conference and is hard at work on next
years event, The PEOPLE Committee attends as
many region events as possible to educate and
promote issues on federal legislation, Our
Veterans Committee meets to discuss federal,
state and local, legislation that affects our
veterans. They have also brought MIA/POW Flag
to the attention of many who fail to display it on
a podium. The Membership Committee works
with our membership department continuously
updating agency fee lists and helping to
straighten out membership problems.

Thank you for reading the report, as you can
see, Region One is quite busy and now you can
appreciate how the year went by so quickly.
Lastly, I'd like to thank two Region Officers who
have served this union on state, region, local and
unit levels. Barbara J. Jones, formerly third Vice
President, retired in August. Barbara chaired the
Human Rights Committee and was instrumental
in bringing diversity to us. With her warm heart
and open mind, she help me plan events that
brought people of different ethnic backgrounds
together. Her open and frank discussions on a
variety of subjects will always be near my heart.
Catherine L. Green, second Vice President, will be
retiring in December. Cathy and I have been
friends for more years than I can remember and
certainly was instrumental in my becoming
region president. Cathy chaired and vice chaired
our PAC. I could always call upon Cathy to stick
out her chin and tell me like it is, or is not! Her
upfront style and honesty will be missed by all.
The region will be honoring them at our annual
Holiday party in December, all are welcome to

y FOTURE
ie * Bee ty,

if 2000

Page 4

Supplement

to THE WORK FORCE

METROPOLITAN REGION
PRESIDENT’S REPORT

conclusion

come home from work and give our time and energy to our
communities. We take pride in the jobs we do which make
New York State such a great place to live. It is a shame our
elected officials don’t seem to care as much about our
state as we do.

The time has come for us to stand up and fight back.
For New York to remain a great state, it is necessary for all
public employees to be treated with the respect and
dignity they so clearly deserve. Show respect and dignity,
not with meaningless words, but with a fair and just
contract — one that rewards our commitment to excellence,
willingness to do more with less, and our willingness to do
whatever it takes to make this state great.

The only thing that can defeat us in this fight is
ourselves. The swiftest path to defeat lies in sitting back
and saying, “The union will take care of it.” Each of us is
the union.

Our power lies in 265,000 individuals joining to form one
glorious, strong, unified voice. By leaving it to others to
speak out, our voice becomes a whisper.

In this contract battle, the unified voice of CSEA is being
heard chanting “show some respect” in every city, town
and village from Plattsburgh to Montauk.

It is up to us to continue this fight and mobilize even
more voices until we walk back into our workplaces with
our heads held high and a fair contract in our hands.

The future of New York State depends on us.

CENTRAL REGION
PRESIDENT’S REPORT

conclusion

state fair grounds prior to his arrival and then the solidarity
expressed in anger against our true opponent was worth all of
the effort that went into planning such an event. Again | thank
the staff and local leadership that made this event as well as
the other many demonstrations possible

T attended an employee recognition dinner at the
Binghamton Psychiatric Center that stands out in my mind as
en exceptional evening. Sometimes | hear management say all
the goods things about their employees yet the words ring
shallow. | felt that the employees present also sensed that
they were important and that their contributions to their
patients were appreciated. It's just a shame more supervisors
and management people don’t take the time to say thank you
for a job well done.

My involvement with the Central Labor Council has been a
good experience for me and for CSEA. As the council president
Thave learned the value of all unions supporting each other
for issues that are important to one union. Other union
activist have walked with us on our picket lines to help get a
contract and we have walked with them to prevent downsizing
and layoffs.

Our mobilization efforts have been met with cooperation
within the region. | am confident that rank and file members.
made thousands of phone calls and we sure produced our
share of yellow card messages for the governor. This union
must reach out to every member and give them an
opportunity to participate by allowing them a voice in their
destiny.

Over the course of the last 12 months, there have been
countless events within the region and among the locals and
units that | could single out. Involved in many of these events
by giving professional support have been our region staff that
is led by our Office Manager Catie Smith which I have had the
pleasure of working with for over 25 years, and our Region
Director Ron Smith which has never said no to any task that
has arisen.

So in closing, let me thank the over 1450 local and unit
activist that make up our great region. We stretch from Canada
to Pennsylvania but what really makes this region is the 42,000
plus members that belong to CSEA,

Novem

SOUTHERN REGION
PRESIDENT’S REPORT

conclusion

year, our Community Action Committee, is very
actively participating in fundraising for many worthy
causes (i.e., American Cancer Society). Their charge
also includes an assessment of membership
participation in community activities. The ultimate
goal of the committee is to establish a program that
will provide financial assistance to worthy
organizations in the region. Usually, committees start
out slowly. Not this committee, from the beginning,
they have been operating at full speed.

In our region, we sometimes take communications
for granted. By that I mean we, as leaders, constantly
reach out to each other. Whether at a meeting or a
training session, a Region Ill leader is in the midst of
the discussion. In addition, we go out of our way to
create and to disseminate information to other
leaders and members. An informed leader or member
is a supportive person. The more we educate and
inform our members, the smaller the problem of
dissension. In this regard, we are very fortunate in
our region to have a Communications Specialist who
loves her job; Anita Manley is that person. In a way,
our leaders have come to take her for granted.
Whenever we need to reach out to the public or other
members, she is ready and willing and able to show
our members how. She, in fact, on most occasions,
solicits member and leader participation prior to or
just as the event is unfolding. As an example, | give
you the Constitutional Convention Debate that we
participated in a little while back. Due to her
perseverance, our members and the public received
almost a daily dose of information about the damage
that ConCon could create. Whether through press
releases or the use of radio or TV, CSEA was very
visible and our members were very informed. |
remember being on two (2) radio programs, taping a
cable TV program and then debating with Political
Leaders the value of ConCon, all in one day. She set
that up while showing a unit's leaders how to create a
newsletter and interviewing members for a story in
the Public Sector.

As a union we have faced great challenges in the
last three (3) years. We have faced the challenges of
privatization, downsizing, decertification, ConCon,
Welfare Reform and transformation, to name just a
few. I have been fortunate to lead the region during
this difficult time. However, these issues may pale in
comparison to the challenge we face involving
negotiations for the state contract. To say the least,
the region officers, staff and I are working very hard
to assure our state sisters and brothers that they will
achieve a fair and equitable settlement. In that regard,
we have held meetings with our state local leaders
and their members, in order to advise and to obtain
member participation. We are very actively
participating in the mobilization initiative. Our state
locals have held demonstrations. Many more will be
holding demonstrations as time progresses. We have
created a region newsletter to assist in informing the
mobilizers. We will continue to meet with the
membership. In order to do so we, members and staff
have worked together. It looks like we have a long
road ahead of us. If we are to achieve the contract
that our members want, more work is needed. Greater
involvement by our members is needed. More
communication is needed. As a team we can get the
job done. | know that the officers of the region and I
believe that we, and you, are up to the challenge. No
group however can do it alone, In this regard, we
must all pull together, In this fight, we will also need
the assistance of our local government and private
sector brothers and sisters. That which injures one
of us, injures us all!

On behalf of the regional officers, | thank you for
taking the time to read my thoughts. | hope that we
have a very successful convention and | look forward
to working with you in the future.

On and off the job, volunteer
tackles important jobs with gusto

BUFFALO —
“I'm just giving
back to my
community,
because
without my
receiving the
same kind of
help in my
youth, I might
have ended up
on the streets,”
said Norm
Bineyard.

For
Bineyard, a
father who
works two
jobs, helping
and advising
young people \
is part of his . i Es
daily routine Norm Bineyard, a youth developmental aide for the state
on and offthe Office of Child and Family Services, finds time to coach
job. football among his other volunteer activities. He’s shown

When he’s here with two Buffalo Vets Little Leaguers.
not at his
12-year full-time job as a youth developmental aide for the state Office of
Child and Family Services, Bineyard works part-time as a court escort for Erie
County’s youth services division.

Then he squeezes into his already crammed day the jobs of assistant high
school football coach and a coaching assistant and activist for the Buffalo
Vets Little League football program.

“I work the night shift at Industry (the state-run facility for troubled youth)
and two days a week for the county,” said Bineyard.

“So thanks to my understanding wife, | have most of my evenings to devote
to coaching and helping out at the two football programs, at Turner Carroll
High as defensive coordinator and at the Buffalo Vets as league vice president
(and past president).

“IT help out wherever I can be useful. On practice days, | help out with
defense, and I also like to break down and analyze videotape of opposing
team offenses. On game days, I’m on the sidelines helping the coaches keep
up with everything, or wherever I’m needed.”

Like many of the parents involved with kids and football, Bineyard got his
start 12 years ago when his son first suited up.

“We've lobbied city hall to keep our field mowed and installed scoreboards,
lighting, fencing and a parking lot,” said Bineyard.

The benefits of helping young people grow into responsible citizens can be
a heartwarming experience, said Bineyard, who is also a steward for the CSEA
Local at his worksite.

“The kids call me ‘Coach Norm’ and I've even had the experience of young
adults coming up to me, who | might not recognize at first, but when | hear
that ‘Coach Norm’ I know where we first became acquainted,” Bineyard said.

“It’s great to see them growing up with a positive outlook,” he added.

— Ron Wofford

At 80,
he’s on
the job
and
loving it

NYACK — Jim
Frisbie may have
just celebrated
his 80th birthday,
but (1) he
doesn't look it
and (2) he has no
intention of
retiring. ss

on Sooo Eighty-year-old Jim Frisbie,
sinceio74 a cleaner for the State
“ Police, has no immediate

TENTS lans to retire.
formerly a New P

York City sanitation worker.

His father-in-law had the cleaner job before he
did.

“He asked me if I was interested in applying
for the job when he left,” Frisbie said.

“I like it here,” he added. “I get out and I meet
people. I know a lot of people here.”

Frisbie is part of a small, select group of five
dedicated union members who have stayed on
the job for decades and have celebrated their
80th birthdays.

While rank has its privilege in the State Police,
age has extended certain privileges to Frisbie.

Indeed, Frisbie has the respect of all the
young state troopers who work in the Nyack
barracks.

“I like to listen to their stories,” he said.

September's surprise Hurricane Floyd caused
some problems for the barracks, said Frisbie,
who had his work cut out for him the day of the
storm.

“The place was flooded,” he said. “We were
soaked.”

Regardless of the hurricane and other
problems big and small, Frisbie has no
immediate plans to retire.

“| intend to stick around,” he said.

— Anita Manley

November 1999. THE WORK FORCE |eertm ec]

me The Civil
= Service Employees
Association, inc.

LOCAL 1000 AFSCME
AFL-CIO

CSEA intensified its ground attack against Gov.
George Pataki for a fair contract and launched a
unique air assault in Buffalo — one of dozens of
contract protests around the state the last few
weeks.

Looking up, down, or all around, Pataki was
confronted by a sea of angry CSEA members as he
traipsed across the state squiring Texas Gov.
George W. Bush on a fund-raising spree.

In Buffalo, an airplane pulling a huge banner
which implored “Settle the CSEA contract now!”
streamed over tens of thousands of football fans
as Pataki rededicated the stadium.

In New York City, more than 2,500 activists
shouting contract slogans marched across the
Brooklyn Bridge to call attention to the union’s
fight.

The pressure is working

This pressure from thousands of members is
working, CSEA contract negotiators said.

In Albany, both sides continue to meet several
times a week.

Significant progress has been made on a wide
range of issues and is being reported weekly in
updates sent to Local officials and activists.

Continued on Page 15

Pre ee THE WORK FORCE

November 1999

Continued from Page 14

The major issues of raises and benefits must be resolved.

“We won't stop until we have a contract that gives us the respect we
deserve,” CSEA President Danny Donohue pledged.

A bridge to contract justice

The Brooklyn Bridge carried more than 2,500 union activists on their
way to contract justice recently.

The rally, led by Donohue and other union officials, filled the landmark
bridge and streets of Manhattan recently.

Gerald McEntee, president of CSEA’s international affiliate, the American
Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees, and AFSCME
Secretary-Treasurer Bill Lucy, joined the march and fired up the crowd.

Clockwise, from top left, downtown Rochester hosted one of several
Pataki protests recently. Scores of CSEA members dressed in red
contract T-shirts marched the streets as Pataki and political pal Texas
Goy. George Bush Jr. collected tens of thousands of dollars on a
fund-raising jaunt.

Torrential rain didn’t bother this contingent of diehard union activists
as they picketed for a fair contract at SUNY Plattsburgh.

Here, there, everywhere — Gov. George Pataki is confronted by CSEA
members at SUNY Cortland. Central Region Director Ron Smith
demands Pataki show some respect at the contract table.

Peanut Man, symbol of the union’s contract fight, leads picketers in
Syracuse.

aOR MT NT) a
> “ .
BEB RATINGYLABO
x ae pe
’ Ay vad f | al I : CSEA showcased its strength with a massive
: 4 turnout of union members and a float at the first
labor solidarity parade held in Albany in years.
Hundreds of CSEA members wearing red
T-shirts marched with representatives of more
than 40 other public employee and trade unions.
“We're a potent force in the Capital District
labor community and always ready to support
our brothers and sisters in the labor
movement,” said CSEA Capital Region President
Carmen Bagnoli.
“This exceptional turnout at the parade shows
labor’s clout and reach is growing,” he added.

November 1999 THE WORK FORCE Wate ty

At press time, CSEA was standing
firm against proposed furloughs to
deal with the Nassau County fiscal

crisis.

A welcome announcement from
county legislative leaders Bruce
Blakeman and Peter Schmitt

indicated they would not pursue

s- \ the county executive's
as \ ill-conceived plan.
ep “This proposal to furlough
workers is not acceptable to
CSEA,” said CSEA Nassau Local
President Tony Giustino.

“It does not solve Nassau
County’s problems and I
applaud the legislative

leaders for their decisive
action,” he added.

As CSEA battles the county on the budget
mess, the union continues its prolonged fight
to represent the Nassau County case

management workers.

In June, the state Public Employment

Relations Board ruled CSEA was the

certified bargaining agent for these workers,
who do case management for the mentally
ill in Nassau County.

The county is appealing the decision.

CSEA sent the county a written demand
to start negotiations, but county officials
said they are waiting for the results of the
appeal.

“An appeal is not a stay on negotiations.
The county must negotiate. If they don’t we
will file an improper practice charge,” CSEA
Labor Relations Specialist Larry Borst said.

This summer the 95 caseworkers were
told they would be laid off.

After pressure was brought by CSEA and
the media, the county extended the
caseworkers’ contract until Dec. 31.

The caseworkers are responsible for
handling 2,000 cases — more than double
the state guidelines.

CSEA has appointed interim officers and a negotiating
committee for the group.

“Not only are these people dealing with an incredibly
stressful job, they have the added uncertainty of their
future employment. CSEA will fight for these workers
every step of the way,” said Giustino,

6Not only are these
people dealing with
an incredibly stressful
job, they have the
added uncertainty of
their future
employment. CSEA
will fight for these
workers every step of
the way. >)

‘pave furs gorute |
asst Ne se

“The ad at left has run in Newsday
and is part of Nassau County Local's

ee — Sheryl C, Jenks
‘\ effort to fight attacks on county :

Donohue receives prestigious
mental health advocacy award

CSEA President Danny Donohue has received network of

a prestigious award from a statewide mental
health advocacy group for his years of work to
improve the state’s mental health system.

Donohue immediately used the occasion to
blast the shortsighted policies of the state
Office of Mental Health.

The state Mental Health Association lauded
Donohue as _ the “recognized leader of a strong
and competent work force, including
thousands of state and local government
workers serving the needs of many New
Yorkers living with mental illnesses.”

CSEA and the advocacy group have
consistently said the promise of
deinstitutionalization for people living with
mental illness has been undermined because
state and local governments do not adequately
fund vital community services,

“The last 40 years, New York has
systematically undermined and shut down its

Page 16

Nove

THE WORK FORCE

psychiatric centers

without adequately

ensuring a

comprehensive or

consistent

replacement,”

Donohue said. P

“The cries of individuals living with mental
illnesses, their advocates and the dedicated
employees who care for them have largely
fallen on deaf ears in Albany,” Donohue added.

Mental health association President Joseph
Glazer said advocacy groups and unions have
the same goals of serving people living with
mental illness and promoting their efforts
toward recovery.

“It’s an honor to receive this award because
for decades CSEA has been fighting for a better
mental health system and too few people in
this state have noticed,” Donohue said.

mber 1999

CSEA President Danny Donohue,
seated at left, talks with reporters
about problems in the state’s
mental health system. Donohue is
flanked by Joseph Glazer,
president of the New York State
Mental Health Association and Fred
Fusco, head of the Mental Health
Association in Onondaga County.
Standing behind Donohue are
CSEA mental health activists, from
left, Hank Wagoner, Kathy Button
and Joel Schwartz.

A U.S. Senate race primer

Hillary Rodham Clinton,
NYC Mayor Rudolph Giuliani
aim for the Senate

They haven't formally declared their candidacy, but first lady Hillary
Rodham Clinton and New York City Mayor Rudolph Giuliani are squaring
off in the race for New York’s Senate seat in Washington.

CSEA encourages all its members to seek information and learn as much

as possible about all of the major candidates.
Here are some facts you should review about these two front-runners.

Hillary Rodham Clinton
Democrat

e Has been an advocate for significant increases in safe and
affordable childcare and after school care;

© Doesn't support school vouchers, saying they will harm the
public education system;

¢ Has pressed for higher standards in public education, quality
teachers, school construction, smaller class sizes and safe
schools;
Has worked to increase access to quality health care and increase health
insurance for children of working families. Has called for more funding for
breast cancer research;
Supports using a smaller portion of the nation’s budget surplus for cutting
taxes. Would use more of the budget surplus to shore up the Social Security
system and Medicare;

e Supports increasing the minimum wage;

° Has called for religious tolerance, human rights and strengthening democracy
during her trips abroad;

¢ Supports the Family and Medical Leave Act, the need to ensure equal pay for
equal work, and strengthening Social Security and Medicare;

¢ Has led a special committee to study the Gulf War Syndrome, resulting in
improved health care for veterans and their families.

Rudolph Giuliani
New York City mayor
Republican

e Favors school vouchers;

e Supports using the nation’s budget surplus for tax cuts;
Opposes legislation passed by the House to regulate health
maintenance organizations;

Lowered the New York City crime rate by 50 percent;
Enacted tax cuts worth more than $2.3 billion;
Lowered the welfare rolls by 440,000 people;
Tried to contract out the work of public hospitals and the Brooklyn Central
Laundry;
Used welfare workers to displace city employees;
e Formed the mayor’s Charter Revision Committee;
Didn't endorse raising the minimum wage.

Consider switching your
health plan this month

November is the annual option transfer period when
state employees may change their health insurance
plan and pre-tax contribution status.

Employees who wish to change health plans must
do so during this transfer period by contacting their
health benefit administrator in their agency's
personnel office.

Rates not set yet

As this article went to press, the year 2000 New
York State Health Insurance Program premium rates
had not been approved by the state Insurance
Department.

As soon as the 2000 rates are approved, a Rates and
Deadlines Guide will be sent to enrollees’ homes so an
informed decision can be made about health insurance
choices for the coming year.

Enrollees will have 30 days from the date the rate
information is released to change plans. Employees
who want to change plans must submit a signed
Health Insurance Transaction Form PS-404 to their
agency's health benefits administrator by the deadline
listed in the Rates & Deadlines Guide.

Enrollees who are not changing health insurance
plans should not take any action.

Health insurance choices for 2000

The health insurance “Choices” for 2000 publication
is scheduled to be mailed to agency health benefits
administrators’ offices in early November.

The publication describes the Empire Plan and the
New York State Health Insurance Program (NYSHIP)
approved HMOs in specific geographic regions and is
an important resource to use when contemplating
changing health insurance options.

Enrollees and their families who participate in the
HMO “Healthsource HMO of New York” should review
the “Choices” publication and choose a different
health carrier as Healthsource is not being offered to
state employees effective Jan. 1, 2000.

Members enrolled in the HMO “Kaiser
Permanente/CHP” should review the options available
in the “Choices” guide since Capital District
Physicians’ Health Plan (CDPHP) will be acquiring
Kaiser’s New York business by Dec. 31, 1999 and
Kaiser will no longer be a viable option.

Pre-tax Contribution Program (PTCP)

The Pre-tax Contribution Program (PTCP) allows
members to have health insurance premiums
deducted from their pay before taxes are taken out.

This may lower a member's taxable income and
provide more spendable income.

Under Internal Revenue Service rules, by
participating in the PTCP members may change their
health insurance deduction during the tax year only
after a qualifying event.

The PTCP is explained in the NYSHIP Health
Insurance “Choices” publication and is automatically
applied unless members sign a waiver indicating they
do not want to change their tax status for the year
2000 health insurance premiums.

Members should see their health benefits
administrator by Nov. 30, which is the IRS deadline.

No action is needed if members want to keep their
current pre-tax option.

: November 1999 THE WORK FORCE WartewA

CSEA’s notice of nomination and election

Based on the actions of the delegates at the
1998 CSEA Convention, our election cycle has
been changed. Elections for statewide officers and
region officers, as well as for the Board of
Directors, will be held at the same time. CSEA
members are urged to carefully read the election
information on this page and related stories in
future issues of The Work Force.

Elections for the following positions will take
place between Jan. 18 - Feb. 8, 2000.

Statewide Officers:
President, Executive Vice President, Secretary,
Treasurer

Region Officers:

Region 1: President, Executive VP, 1st VP, 2nd VP,
3rd VP, Secretary, Treasurer

Region 2: President, Executive Vice President, Ist
VP, 2nd VP, Secretary, Treasurer

Region 3: President, Executive VP, 1st VP, 2nd VP,
3rd VP, Secretary, Treasurer

Region 4: President, Executive Vice President, 1st
VP, 2nd VP, 3rd VP, Secretary, Treasurer

Region 5: President, Executive VP, 1st VP, 2nd VP,
3rd VP, Recording Secretary, Treasurer

Region 6: President, 1st VP, 2nd VP, 3rd VP,
Secretary, Treasurer

Statewide Board of Directors:

Representatives of the State Executive
Committee and the Local Government Executive
Committee

Check the CSEA bulletin boards at your
workplace for more election details.

CSEA Election Schedule for Statewide Officers,
Region Officers, Statewide Board of Directors

Oct. 15 was the deadline for nominating
petitions to be received at CSEA headquarters

Nov. 16: Ballot position drawing
Jan. 18: Ballots mailed
Jan. 25: Replacement ballots available

Feb. 8: Deadline for receipt of ballots (8 a.m.).
Ballots counted.

Election results will be announced after the
ballot count. Candidates will be notified by mail
of the results. Election results will be published
in the March 2000 edition of The Work Force.

Voting Eligibility Date

Only CSEA members in good standing as of
Dec. 1, 1999 will be eligible to vote in the
election.

Terms for
CSEA Statewide President, Executive Vice
President, Secretary, Treasurer:
The statewide president, executive vice
president, secretary and treasurer terms will

start July 1, 2000 and shall be for a single term of
three and three-quarter years, ending March 1,
2004.

Officers for CSEA’s Six Regions:
With the election year 2000, region officers
will serve four-year terms, commencing March 1,
2000.

Statewide Board of Directors:
The board of directors terms will begin July 1,
2000 and will run for a single term of three and
three-quarter years, ending March 1, 2004.

Election Oversight

The election process will be overseen by the
union’s Statewide Election Committee. The
balloting will be conducted by an independent
election agency approved by the union’s
statewide Board of Directors.

Any CSEA member may obtain
information about the election
process by calling the Election
Committee at CSEA headquarters
1-800-342-4146 ext. 1477

election is as follows

Nov. 15 (Mon.) Declinations deadline

Dec. 3 ri)
Dec. 13 (Mon.)
Jan, 18 (Tue.)
Jan, 25 (Tue.)
Feb. 8 (Tue.)
Feb. 18 (Fri)
March

Campaign Literature deadline
Voter List Inspection period begins
Ballots mailed

Replacement ballots available
Ballots due/8 a.m.; Tally commences
End of protest period

Oct. 30.
Based on the actions of the delegates at the 1998
Convention, the balloting for the AFSCME Delegates e

statewide office
are urged to

AFSCME DELEGATES
ELECTION YEAR 2000

In addition to our own elections, the year 2000 also has an
ASFCME Delegates election. The approved schedule for that

Nov. 16 (Tue.) Local/Unit President mailing labels available

Results published in The Work Force

Nomination meetings took place in each region on Saturday,

take place at the same time and as part of the CSEA ele

, region officers and board of directors. Members
refully read the election information contained in
The Work Force throughout the year 2000 election cycle as well as
the instructions which will accompany each mail ballot

INSIDE
ALBANY

Albany Area

Binghamton
Buffalo
Long Island

New York City

Plattsburgh
Rochester

A
ion will
ions for :
Syracuse

Watertown

1999 Inside Albany (www.insidealbany.com)
INSIDE ALBANY broadcast schedule

WMHT

WSKG
WNED
WLIW

WNET

WCFE
WXxXI

WCNY
WPBS

Saturday
Monday

6:30 p.m.
5:30 a.m.

4p.m.
10:30 a.m.

llam.
12 p.m.

1:30 p.m.
6:30 a.m.

9am.
5:30 p.m.
6:30 p.m.
6 p.m.

Saturday
Sunday

Sunday
Monday

Saturday
Sunday

Sunday

Saturday
Saturday
Saturday

page 18 EO aa

November 1999

SEFA campaign
under way with
help from CSEA

CSEA is again a major supporter of the
annual State Employees Federated Appeal
(SEFA) which
collects and
distributes
money toa
broad range
of charities
across the
state.

Union
leaders are
encouraging
members to
participate in
this unified
fund-raising
drive
conducted by
state
employees.

SEFA
donations
help support a broad range of charities
that include services to families, single
parents, young children, senior citizens,
people with disabilities, the sick, and the
homeless, among others.

Members again this year may donate to
specific charities. Donations may be made
as a one-time gift or spread out during the
year through payroll deduction.

For more information, contact your
agency SEFA coordinator or visit the
SEFA Web site at www.sefa.state.ny.us.

state
EMPLOYEES:
od

CSEA staff brings
home the silver in fight
against cystic fibrosis

CSEA headquarters staff came away
with silver medals recently in the 1999
Bard’s Sports Challenge, which raised
more than $32,000 to benefit cystic
fibrosis research.

Showing their skills in a variety of
athletic events were Kathy Cahalan,
Janice Nusbaum, Darin Rowlett, Scott
Futia, Steven Keith, Kelly Garceau, Sonia
Roberts-Smith and Team Captain Don
Kelly. Ross Hanna was teach coach and
Lorri Lemme and Marianne Kayser were
team alternates.

ETHICS AND
ECONOMICS —
Capital Region CSEA
members and activists
will want to mark their
calendars for the Nov. 8-9 New York

State Labor-Religion Coalition conference
in Albany. This year’s program is titled
“Organizing for a Just Economy: The Nuts
and Bolts of Ethics and Economics.”
Keynote speaker is filmmaker and author
Michael Moore. For more information and
registration, please call (518) 459-5400,
ext. 6294 ... WORK FORCE GARNERS
AWARDS — CSEA’s monthly newspaper,
The Work Force, received six awards in
the 1999 International Labor
Communications Association’s Journalism
Awards Contest. The Work Force took
second and third awards for best cartoon;
first award for non-periodical, special
publications, best use of graphics; and
honorable mention for non-periodical,
special publications, editorial excellence.
The awards were for 1998 publications ...
PEOPLE PERSON — The PEOPLE
recruiter of the month for September is
Jackie Edwards of the Capital Region’s
Local 414. She has recruited 43 new
PEOPLE members. PEOPLE is CSEA and
AFSCME’s Political Action Committee,
working to elect supporters of working
families to Congress ... PLAY BALL —
Unhampered by the fact that they have
been working without a contract since
April 1, some 80 state workers and their
families from SUNY New Paltz attended a
Hudson Valley Renegades baseball game
at Dutchess Stadium in Fishkill. Wearing
their T-shirts to show their solidarity,
members enjoyed an evening of food and
sports while showing support for their
local team ... MULLANEY HONORED —
19th century labor leader Kate Mullaney’s
grave in St. Peter’s Cemetery, Troy, is now
marked with a with a large Celtic cross,
purchased by the Troy Labor Council
with contributions from area unions ...
DEGROFF FETED — Hard-working

\
265,000 memBeRs StRON™

Harnetha DeGroff,
president of the
Division of Parole Local,
received the 1999

President’s Award by Capitol

Region President Carmen Bagnoli at
recent Region Workshop ... PEANUT
WHO? — CSEA members rallied around
“Peanut Woman” at a recent state
contract demonstration at SUNY Old
Westbury. CSEA SUNY Old Westbury Local
President Mary D’Antonio, “Peanut
Woman” Laura Gallagher and other CSEA
members were interviewed by the media.
The noon protest drew approximately 75
members ... SIGN OF QUALITY — The
self-directed DOT Hamburg Sign Shop
crew, the state’s first and only, has been
rewarded for the quality of their work by
a department official who knows whereof
he speaks. “This operation is a real
success story,” said Kevin Ruff, director
of the DOT highway maintenance division.
The self-directed team concept was
developed through meetings and studies
by DOT, in conjunction with CSEA and the
12 team members who comprise the sign
shop ... WESTCHESTER COUNTY
REFUNDS — About 300 Westchester
County employees are from $200 to
$20,000 richer because of a union court
victory that won them a total of more
than $1.5 million in back pay. “You could
hear me all over White Plains,” said Judi
Corticelli, who received one of the
checks. The workers were laid off in 1995,
when the county privatized laundry and
housekeeping operations at the county
hospital. A state Supreme Court judge
ruled the CSEA members should get back
pay because their jobs were never
removed from the county budget by the
board of legislators. CSEA attorney James
Rose said he has checks for 40 former
county employees whom cannot be
located. Former workers who believe they
are entitled to back pay should contact
the Westchester County Unit office at
(914) 285-2151.

November 1999 THE WORK FORCE botRe ks)

Retiree Bonnie Barber honored

For four decades,

ITHACA — For CSEA activist Bonnie Barber,
retirement hasn't meant slowing down.

These days she does just as much for the
union, if not more, than she did when she
was working.

For Barber, who proudly announces she’s
almost 80, that’s a lot.

She’s been presidént of the Ithaca Area
Retirees Local for the past 15 years.

She’s also proud to serve on the Retiree
Division Executive Board, as chair of the
Conventions and Arrangements Committee.

Last year, she took on the momentous
task of setting up the Retiree Convention in
her hometown of Ithaca.

“Last year when we had the convention
here in Ithaca, I worked my fool head off
trying to make sure everything was set up,”
Barber said.

“I got into some difficulty, but Albany
came through for me and everything worked
out fine. | worked so hard to get all my
ducks in a row — I think that was one of my
proudest moments in CSEA,” she said.

Honored for her work.

In appreciation of her 40 years of activism,
Barber was honored at this year’s annual
CSEA convention with the union’s Donald
Webster Memorial Mission Achievement Award.

Barber humbly protests that she doesn’t deserve the

attention.

“Someone told me | had been picked. | didn’t understand

why. I heard that several people wrote in and felt I
deserved the accolade. | didn’t. | was embarrassed,”
Barber said.

Humility aside, Barber admits she was pleased to get

the award, mainly because of her long-standing
friendship with the late Don Webster, for whom the
award is named.

“I was very happy, because I knew Don so well. He
was the one who asked me to chair the Conventions
and Arrangeménts Committee, and I’m still on it 15
years later. | must have done something right,” she

said with a chuckle. “It showed me that they appreciate

what I do.”

Top

photo, retiree

of the year Bonnie
Barber proudly
displays her Donald
Webster Memorial
Mission Achievement
Award. Below, she
shares a quiet
moment with her dog
Freckles.

First day a union member

Barber began her CSEA activism
when she started as a secretary/
receptionist at the former
Tompkins County Hospital, now the
Cayuga Medical Center, in 1959.

She joined the union her first
day on the job, after being
approached by two union
organizers.

“| thought it was the thing to
do,” she noted.

Barber took her pension and
became a CSEA Retiree Division
member in 1980, following the
hospital’s privatization by the
county, a move she fought hard
against.

“I was disappointed when they
voted to privatize the hospital. I

worked hard to try and keep
it public,” Barber said.
In the 1980s, her
CSEA activism
continued. She served
for a few years as vice
president and then
president of the
Tompkins County Local.
Barber has also
‘femained deeply involved
in local politics, and said
she’s never missed voting
in an election since 1941.

- Never too busy to help

Barber has been married
to her husband, Donald, for
the past 59 years. Even

though they are both retired,

they both stay busy.

At 85, he works five days a
week at a local supermarket and
volunteers one day a week at

the hospital.

She serves on several local
boards, volunteers at the hospital
about six hours a week, and

continues her union activity when
she’s not tending to her flowers,
bowling, golfing or doing crafts.
To those who are just entering the wérk force,
Barber has this advice about the union,
“Not only is it a good idea to belong to the
union,” Barber said, “but if they want security, they
need to belong and be active.”

— Mark Kotzin

Metadata

Containers:
Oversized 21, Folder 4
Resource Type:
Periodical
Rights:
Image for license or rights statement.
CC BY-NC-SA 4.0
Date Uploaded:
December 22, 2018

Using these materials

Access:
The archives are open to the public and anyone is welcome to visit and view the collections.
Collection restrictions:
Access to this record group is unrestricted.
Collection terms of access:
The researcher assumes full responsibility for conforming with the laws of copyright. Whenever possible, the M.E. Grenander Department of Special Collections and Archives will provide information about copyright owners and other restrictions, but the legal determination ultimately rests with the researcher. Requests for permission to publish material from this collection should be discussed with the Head of Special Collections and Archives.

Access options

Ask an Archivist

Ask a question or schedule an individualized meeting to discuss archival materials and potential research needs.

Schedule a Visit

Archival materials can be viewed in-person in our reading room. We recommend making an appointment to ensure materials are available when you arrive.