- Spread the word: Cuts to SUNY must stop now
- ‘We’re in for the fight of our lives’ UUP rally cry: ‘Think ahead, invest in higher ed’
- Budget cuts force NYSTI shutdown
- New financial education services available from NYSUT Trust
- Political action takes center stage 2011 Winter DA UUP president calls on members to act
- Delegates get down to union business
- Candidate statements due to UUP by Feb. 25
- Elections update—Mailing labels
- Task force investigates pay equity: UUPers urged to fill out survey
- UUP service awards: All nominations due by April 15
- AFT program: Money available for members, dependents
- Sharing secrets of success: Morrisville professor helps ‘grow business’ in Honduras, Kenya
- Spotlight on UUPers
- ‘We will never forget’ — Labor marks centennial of horrific Triangle Shirtwaist fire
- Negotiations: UUP prioritizes members’ suggestions
- In other words: VP for Academics Fred Floss: Success in reach for autistic students
- Jones promoted to NYSUT/UUP director of staff
- Newest legislative intern hard at work at UUP
- Benefits UUP Benefit Trust Fund is just a phone call away
- AFT Advantage offers online discounts
Author Archives: United University Professions Admin
‘We’re in for the fight of our lives’ UUP rally cry: ‘Think ahead, invest in higher ed’
An early February chill greeted nearly 400 unionists who came to rally at the Capitol in Albany, three days after a proposed state budget left them financially out in the cold. They came bearing a strong message designed to heat up the debate over the future of SUNY. “Think ahead, invest in higher ed,” chanted members of UUP, NYSUT, students and other SUNY supporters at a Feb. 4 rally with a theme that matched the chant. “We say it is time for the state to think ahead and invest in higher ed. It’s time to invest in SUNY,” UUP President Phil Smith said in his address to the rally to the cheers of those assembled. “It’s time to invest in the future stability of New York and the financial well-being of future generations of New Yorkers.” Smith’s appeal came as the ink on the governor’s proposed Executive Budget was barely dry, a budget that—if enacted —threatens to send SUNY further into the fiscal abyss. The budget would cut SUNY’s operating budget by $100 million. Coupled with $585 million in previous budget slashes to the University during the past three years, SUNY is facing the loss of no less than one-third of its total operating budget. “We say these draconian cuts have gone too far,” Smith told the demonstrators. “Can SUNY take any more cuts? We say enough is enough.” He warned that the problems created by earlier budget cuts—overcrowded classrooms, course cancellations and delayed graduations—would only grow. Smith emphasized the future of SUNY has an impact on all New Yorkers. “SUNY affects all of us, not just those of us who teach there or who attend classes,” he said. “The future of SUNY affects the hundreds of thousands of New York families who are counting on a public college or university to educate their children.” HOSPITALS HIT HARD Smith said the proposed budget undermines the future of SUNY’s three teaching hospitals in Brooklyn, Stony Brook and Syracuse. The governor’s budget eliminates the entire $154 million state subsidy for the hospitals. It also cuts $3 billion from Medicaid funding statewide, which would severely impact the hospitals. “What is going to happen to patient care in this state, especially for people who are unemployed, uninsured or underinsured?” Smith asked. “Where will they go for health care? This has got to be turned back.” SUPPORT FROM NYSUT, LAWMAKER, STUDENTS NYSUT —UUP’s statewide affiliate—lent its support not just by having some of its members join the rally, but also by having two NYSUT officers address the gathering. “These budget cuts are horrendous. They are brutal, and we cannot accept them,” NYSUT Executive Vice President Andy Pallotta said. “We cannot accept further decimating the SUNY system.” “We’re angry, and we have every right to be angry,” NYSUT Secretary-Treasurer Lee Cutler said. “We cannot afford to let the people not be first. But that’s clearly what this budget does with its priorities, which is so out of whack with what the people of this state need.” One state lawmaker whose vote will help determine the final budget outcome also addressed the rally. While acknowledging the state’s fiscal plight, Assemblyman Bob Reilly (D-Colonie) said public higher education must remain a priority. “What we must do as a state and as a people with our university system is preserve the quality of our education, and make sure that education is accessible to all students,” he said. Several students were there to hear UUP’s message and were appreciative the union was watching out for their best interests. “SUNY must be funded. SUNY, the pride of New York, is at risk,” said UAlbany student Matt Annis, who is a legislative intern for UUP. “For my sake as a student and for every student and alumni, keep our legacy intact.” FIGHTING FLEXIBILITY The bad news from the proposed budget goes beyond sharp spending reductions. It also renews the fight over so-called flexibility, a battle that will be waged for the 11th time. The budget would give SUNY the power to lease campus property, as well as enter into public/private partnerships, both with limited oversight. Additionally, SUNY would be authorized to contract for goods and services without the approval of the attorney general or comptroller. While UUP thinks loosening the red tape on the purchase of goods is a good idea, the opposite is true for services. The union fears it would lead to rampant outsourcing and the loss of unionized positions. “This latest flexibility plan like the ones before it, is unacceptable and not in the best interests of SUNY students, faculty, taxpayers and the University itself,” Smith said. “SUNY campuses exist to teach students. We cannot sit back and allow campus assets that serve students to be compromised.” One encouraging note on the flexibility front is the absence of a provision for differential tuition. It was part of the flexibility proposal last year that failed to gain legislative approval. ADVOCACY IN ACTION UUP didn’t wait for the budget’s introduction on Feb. 1 to begin its advocacy press in Albany. Union activists visited the offices of 23 state lawmakers Jan. 25, telling them that SUNY cannot withstand any more cuts to its operating budget. “Every campus is hurting,” Glenn McNitt of New Paltz told Assemblyman Mike Spano (D-Yonkers), a member of the Assembly Higher Education Committee. Immediately after the budget was introduced, UUP posted letters on its website for members to send to their respective hometown lawmakers. The letters called on the Legislature to reject the $100 million budget cut for SUNY, restore the $154 million state hospital subsidy, and to oppose flexibility. As The Voice went to press, UUP was gearing up for a statewide multimedia campaign designed to build widespread support for holding the line against further spending cuts to the University. ARMED WITH THE FACTS UUP is following the lead of its national affiliate, the AFT, in strengthening its coalition of supporters of public education and public employees. At the national level, friends of working people are helping UUP and other unions push back against the attacks. For instance, a Huffington Post blog by former U.S. Labor Secretary Robert Reich defends public employees, noting that public servants are convenient scapegoats. “It’s far more convenient to go after people who are doing the public’s work, to call them ‘faceless bureaucrats’ and portray them as hooligans who are making off with your money and crippling federal and state budgets,” Reich writes. AFT is offering members and supporters the tools they need to fight back against unfair and inaccurate portrayals of public employees. The federation is posting on the Internet the facts that shoot down the misinformation making the political rounds. For example, the AFT points to research that debunks the myth that public employees earn more than their private counterparts. ARMED AND READY Smith provided UUP members at the Capitol rally with the verbal ammunition to speak up for SUNY and students in the face of massive spending cuts. “Just contact your state lawmakers. Tell them that SUNY cannot lose any more of its operating funds. Ask them to invest in students and in SUNY. Tell them that investing in SUNY is the best way to ensure a brighter future for the family of New York.” He closed the rally with a call to action. “Can we do it?” Smith asked, as the crowd enthusiastically responded, “Yes we can.” “Then let’s go do it!” Smith urged. — Donald Feldstein
|
Political action takes center stage 2011 Winter DA UUP president calls on members to act
UUP President Phil Smith sent a strong message about the importance of coalition building to more than 300 delegates and observers at the 2011 Winter Delegate Assembly and pressed them to activate members on their campuses to step up and spread the word to “think ahead, invest in higher ed.” Delegates also took action on a number of resolutions at the DA, held Feb. 4-5 in Albany. They decided to continue UUP’s relationship with the American Association of University Professors (AAUP) and approved several measures, including support for the continuation of the so-called “millionaire’s tax” and the state’s anti-bullying Healthy Workplace Bill (see related story at right). During his address to members, Smith detailed Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s proposed Executive Budget, which calls for a 10 percent reduction in state funding to SUNY, and massive Medicaid funding reductions and cutting $154 million in subsidies to the University’s three teaching hospitals. ONE VOICE Smith emphasized the need for coalition building at the DA. UUP is working with New Yorkers for Fiscal Fairness that supports a quality educational system for New York, along with affordable health care and housing, and other essentials for job growth and a thriving state economy (http://ABetterChoiceForNY.org). He also said plans were being made for a March rally for public higher education with other local unions, including NYSUT and Professional Staff Congress/CUNY. With organized labor under attack, it’s important for unions to align and speak out with a united voice. “We’ve got to get out there and let the Legislature know that enough is enough,” Smith said. DEFENDING ACADEMIC FREEDOM After some debate, delegates voted on a resolution regarding academic freedom. The measure reaffirmed the union’s defense of academic freedom for all bargaining unit members. Delegates also approved setting time aside at the 2011 Fall DA for a session on academic freedom for academics and professionals. OK FOR AAUP Delegates also approved a resolution to continue UUP’s relationship with AAUP, first by a voice vote and then by hand count, 154-78. The measure, brought up at the 2010 Spring DA, was put off until the Winter DA for a vote. The union purchases 1,000 AAUP memberships yearly. Delegates on both sides spoke passionately on the topic. A number of professionals demanded UUP disassociate with AAUP because the nationwide organization has traditionally shown little interest in professionals and their issues. Professionals met earlier in the day to discuss UUP’s relationship with AAUP. It was standing room only in the room; more than 100 professionals were in attendance. The UUP/AAUP issue was the meeting’s only agenda item. “This has been going on for a decade,” said Brian Tappen, an Executive Board member from Upstate Medical University and a professional delegate. “Let’s get real about what AAUP really thinks of us.” But UUP Vice President for Professionals John Marino said he supported continuing the UUP/AAUP partnership. AAUP has taken concrete steps to work much closer with professionals and UUP as a whole. “If we pull out now we will never know what they could’ve done for us,” he said. “We’re under siege,” said Artie Shertzer, Stony Brook Chapter president. “For us to disassociate with any other union now is just suicidal.” TEACHER ED IN JEOPARDY Meanwhile, the decimation of teacher education programs was discussed at a meeting for academic delegates. Those who want to see public education fail are using this new tactic. The national conversation on teacher education is focused on lowering standards to rock-bottom levels and paying for public education by eliminating pay incentives for advanced degrees and seniority. “What bothers me is that the teaching models are being proposed by consultants who will be paid to create and implement them,” said UUP Vice President for Academics Fred Floss. “They want to take education away from the experts—the faculty in these programs.” The consultants—foundations run by Bill and Melinda Gates, Lumina, and Pearson among them—want to make it easier to become a classroom teacher and to replace teachers that fail to meet student-achievement standards that put the onus solely on teaching. “According to one proposal, 80 percent of all first-year teachers would be fired each year as a way to ‘raise quality.’ I don’t know about you, but I can’t see how replacing teachers with more inexperienced teachers will help improve quality,” Floss said. Floss is a member of a NYSUT Teacher Education Task Force that is developing criteria that best correlates to better student achievement. On the task force are up to three UUPers from each of the 17 SUNY state-operated campuses with teacher ed programs. For more information or to help the task force, contact Floss at ffloss@uupmail.org. FRANCO, COFFEY HONORED Also at the DA, Old Westbury Chapter President Candelario “Kiko” Franco was awarded NYSUT’s Lou Cammarosano VOTE/COPE Award for exceptional performance by a UUP chapter. Old Westbury achieved a 46 percent increase in voluntary contributions in just one year. Smith and UUP delegates expressed their thanks and best wishes to Martin Coffey, who retired earlier this year as the NYSUT/UUP director of staff. — Michael Lisi
|
Task force investigates pay equity: UUPers urged to fill out survey
Sharing secrets of success: Morrisville professor helps ‘grow business’ in Honduras, Kenya
As a businessman, UUP member Chris Scalzo knows a interesting opportunity when he sees one. As a volunteer, he knows how good it feels to help. So, when Scalzo, an associate professor of business and entrepreneurship at Morrisville, learned there were not-for-profit organizations that send professors and business professionals overseas to help grow businesses in developing nations, he investigated and offered his assistance. That was two years ago. In 2009, Scalzo traveled to Honduras with Winrock International, an Arkansas-based assistance program that sends volunteer experts to help sustain natural resources and increase economic opportunity all over the world. In Honduras, he spent three weeks working with a consortium of 18 dairy farmers on cost analysis. That project won him the President’s Volunteer Service Award, a notable national honor given by the Obama administration that recognizes contributions volunteers are making in their communities. KENYAN ADVENTURE Scalzo was on the move again in summer 2010, heading to Kenya to volunteer his time working with a company called Soy Afric, which makes and sells soy flour and soy meal in Kenya and to the United Nations for emergency food relief programs. This time, he traveled with CNFA, a nonpartisan, non-profit Washington, D.C.-based group dedicated to stimulating international economic growth by nurturing entrepreneurship and private enterprise. It cost Scalzo nothing but his time to make the trips; airfare, hotel, meals and incidentals were covered by the agencies that sent him. But these weren’t sightseeing trips; in Kenya, Scalzo put in eight-hour days working with Soy Afric executives and department heads during the three weeks he spent there in May. Before he left, Scalzo spent two months researching soy production and processing, knowing he would need the knowledge once he arrived in Kenya. The factory is located outside of Nairobi. MAKING A DIFFERENCE “I want to change people’s lives,” said Scalzo. “I can make the world a better place and I can show my own kids and my students that there are opportunities out there in the world, if you look for them. They need to see what’s going on around us. Its companies like these that we’ll be competing with in the next 20 or 30 years.” Once in Kenya, Scalzo met with department heads to get an idea of how Soy Afric does business and what the company’s goals are. Using his business expertise, Scalzo assessed the information and offered suggestions to redesign the plant’s layout. He also worked to help the company set up a new financial and accounting system. “This is a company that’s growing and they want to employ people,” he said. “These people want you to help, they want our advice. They’re looking at what we can offer and they will take what you have.” RETURN TRIP Scalzo is planning a return trip to Kenya in May 2011 to put a marketing plan into place that will help the company break into new markets; the company is looking at expanding into 10 surrounding countries, including the Congo, Tanzania and Uganda. He might not be going alone, though. He submitted a U.S. Department of Education grant proposal to cover costs for two Syracuse-area school administrators and a colleague at St. John Fisher College to make the trek. “Where they are now, that’s where the U.S. was in the 1930s,” said Scalzo of businesses in Kenya and Africa. “You’re looking at a group of people in Kenya who lift and unload 25-pound sacks of soy flour by hand, and these guys run. They’ll close that 80-year gap in 20 to 30 years.” While Scalzo is disappointed that there wasn’t funding to bring students with him to Kenya or Honduras, his trips will result in some key teaching moments. “These are real-life scenarios they will run into,” he said. “They can learn so much from these real-life situations.” Scalzo certainly did. He’s learned a lot about life in Kenya, and the strong work ethic of the people there. Helping Soy Afric grow and succeed was far more rewarding than he ever thought it would be.
“These experiences were incredible,” he said. “I was a person who went with no expectations and got great adventures and experiences.” — Michael Lisi
|
‘We will never forget’ — Labor marks centennial of horrific Triangle Shirtwaist fire
Morris “Whitey” Passoff couldn’t believe his eyes. The 15-year-old copy boy for the New York World watched in horror as Triangle Shirtwaist Co. employees, most of them young women and teenage girls, climbed out windows and stood in groups of twos and threes on the thin ledges outside the upper floors of the blazing Asch Building. Then they jumped. Some held hands as they leaped, their long dresses flapping and tresses whipped by the wind before thudding the pavement below. They fell eight, nine, ten stories, choosing instant death over dying in the inferno that killed 146 workers—many of them female Jewish and Italian immigrants—on a sunny Saturday afternoon, March 25, 1911. “When my father got there, the fire was going full blast. He couldn’t turn away. Those kids jumping out the windows, it was a memory he never forgot,” said UUP retiree member Judy Wishnia, Passoff’s daughter, whose dad told her the story when she was a child. “He said it was like watching angels dropping.” Unions have never forgotten these fallen workers, whose deaths led to sweeping workplace reforms and a huge boost for the fledgling labor movement. In March, labor across America will pay tribute as they mark the 100th anniversary of the Triangle fire. A March 25 memorial will be held at the Asch building in Manhattan by Workers United, which includes former members of the International Ladies’ Garment Workers’ Union (ILGWU), which ceased after a 1995 merger. The ILGWU, a key player in labor history in the early 20th century, counted a number of Triangle employees as members. In Albany, UUP, NYSUT, and other unions will take part in a Triangle memorial at the New York State Museum. The names of the deceased will be read at both events. FIRE! No one knows how the Triangle factory caught fire; the fire marshal blamed it on a lit cigarette tossed in a scrap fabric bin under a cutter’s table. The horror began around closing time, at 4:45 p.m. That’s when worker Eva Harris screamed to factory manager Samuel Bernstein and pointed to smoke in a corner of the eighth floor. Bernstein tried to turn a hose on the flames, but it didn’t work. Workers doused the fire with buckets of water, but the blaze was already raging. An eighth floor bookkeeper who phoned 10th floor employees about the fire couldn’t reach the ninth floor, which lacked fire alarms. One of the two exits on that floor was bolted shut; management locked workers in so they wouldn’t steal. Dozens of employees were able to scramble out the second exit, which led to the roof. But fire blocked it minutes later. Terrified workers jammed into two freight elevators, which only held 12 people at a time. The elevator operators saved dozens of lives before the fire—and the bodies of workers who jumped down the shafts in a desperate attempt to escape—ground them to a halt. The flimsy fire escape twisted and snapped under the fire’s heat and the crush of workers clinging to it, sending victims spiraling to a concrete courtyard more than 100 feet below. The fire department’s ladder trucks were useless; they only reached the sixth floor. It was over in 30 minutes, but by then, nearly 150 workers had perished. Of those, 54 died by jumping; their bodies lay in piles on the street as firefighters worked to extinguish the blaze. Ironically, the building itself was fireproof. “It was for that generation as traumatic I suppose as the World Trade Center disaster was for us,” David Von Drehle, author of “Triangle: The Fire that Changed America,” in a 2003 National Public Radio interview. “It was a beautiful spring afternoon in the middle of bustling Manhattan and hundreds, then thousands, of people gathered to watch this fire burn through this factory and see these jumping and falling bodies.” JOIN A UNION! The Triangle blaze sparked intense interest in unions, which saw a sudden upsurge in membership after the tragedy; workers flocked to join the ILGWU and its fight for worker safety reforms and better conditions for factory laborers. And join they did. The ILGWU’s ranks swelled from 2,200 in 1904 to 58,400 by 1912, according to The Historical Dictionary of Organized Labor by J.C. Docherty. The Triangle fire and large-scale strikes like the Uprising of 20,000 in 1909-10 were major catalysts. More than 120,000 marched in a funeral procession for the fire victims in a citywide day of mourning called by the ILGWU. “The fire certainly called attention to what unions had been fighting for and was vindication of what unions were talking about,” said UUPer Ivan Steen, a UAlbany history professor. “After this event, the public saw that the unions were right, there was a problem.” “The garment industry was an immigrant industry by and large and most people didn’t understand what unions did,” said Edgar Romney, secretary-treasurer for Workers United and a longtime ILGWU member. “The fire propelled unions’ growth as the public realized there was a need for safety measures for these workers.” UNSAFE WORKPLACE As workers joined unions in droves, an outraged public demanded action to improve unsafe workplace conditions. In June, 1911, the Factory Investigating Commission was created; union leader Samuel Gompers was a commissioner and Frances Perkins—who became U.S. Secretary of Labor—also served. The committee spurred more than 30 new workplace safety laws, including the installation of automatic sprinklers, lighted exit signs, fire walls, fire extinguishers and fire alarms in factories. Also ordered: building inspections, and proper lighting, ventilation and cleanliness in factories. “There were other workplace tragedies, but the Triangle fire led to major health and safety reforms,” said Paul Cole, executive director of the Albany-based American Labor Studies Center. Those reforms were a pipe dream for workers in sweatshops like the Triangle Shirtwaist Co. where employees toiled 12 hours a day, six days a week and were paid between $3 and $20 weekly, depending on their expertise and experience. “The Triangle Shirtwaist fire stands out because of the innocence of the people who were killed, they were mostly female victims, and employer disregard led to their deaths,” said UUPer David Cingranelli, a political science professor at Binghamton University. “Most workplace atrocities happened out of view, but this happened in the middle of a big city in front of thousands.” Perkins was one of those onlookers; the Triangle fire fueled her strong support for workers’ rights. As labor secretary, Perkins wrote New Deal legislation and was instrumental in bringing about landmark worker reforms such as the Fair Labor Standards Act and the Social Security Act in the 1930s. SAFETY FIRST While the Triangle fire sparked New York’s upgraded safety standards, it took decades for the rest of the nation to catch up. The federal Occupational Safety and Health Act—which had firm union backing— wasn’t enacted until 1970. Labor has been at the fore of workers’ rights, and those gains may not have occurred without labor’s push. “If you don’t have a union, it’s hard to insist on safety in your workplace,” Cingranelli said. And history repeats itself, like it did in December 2010, when 26 workers died and more than 100 were injured in a blaze on the ninth floor of a Bangladesh garment factory. Many of the workers jumped to their deaths; the exits to that factory were locked by management, to keep workers from stealing. “Things haven’t changed that much,” said Wishnia. “If it wasn’t for unions, there would be no worker safety at all.” — Michael Lisi
|
Negotiations: UUP prioritizes members’ suggestions
An atmosphere of intense focus and 10-hour days helped shape UUP’s priorities for contract negotiations with the state, as members of the union’s Negotiations Team and Negotiations Committee met for three days in January to review and assess members’ comments collected over the last several months. “The individuals who have volunteered to serve on the Negotiations Team and Committee share a strong sense of purpose,” said Chief Negotiator Jamie Dangler of Cortland. “They were extremely hard-working and productive in their commitment to clarify and prioritize the issues of greatest concern to their colleagues.” The Jan. 18-20 work session in Rye brought together a group as diverse as UUP’s membership, with academic, professional, part-time and full-time employees from all campus types and chapters represented. Before the three-day session was over, dozens of posters lined the walls, each one summarizing priorities identified by seven subcommittees charged with going over members’ input on specific terms and conditions of employment. The work session included a presentation by NYSUT/UUP Labor Relations Specialist Ed Giblin on mandatory, non-mandatory and prohibited subjects of negotiations. “Before the Team and Committee could be expected to thoroughly review and discuss the data, they needed to be clear about exactly what UUP can address at the table,” Dangler said. “It was extremely helpful to have the expertise of a labor relations specialist go over the rules and regulations of collective bargaining.” MEMBERS’ COMMENTS COUNT The seven subcommittees drew on a number of resources in assessing members’ concerns. Throughout the fall, members of the Negotiations Team embarked on a dedicated listening tour of every chapter in the state, where they heard members’ questions and opinions during chapter meetings. Information was also collected through task force and committee reports, during an open hearing at the 2010 Fall Delegate Assembly, and in face-to-face talks with members. The subcommittees also studied the results of a comprehensive online negotiations survey and member suggestions forms. “This was the first time UUP used hard-copy and electronic member suggestion forms,” said Associate Chief Negotiator Mike Smiles of Farmingdale. “This greatly increased the number of responses.” The union’s Ad Hoc Advisory Committee, which consists of one professional and one academic from every UUP chapter, also gathered information. Ad hoc members came up with a variety of ways to encourage colleagues at their chapters to share ideas, concerns and anecdotes regarding salary and other terms and conditions of employment. Among them: questionnaires, special department rep meetings, and focus groups. Negotiations Committee member Carol Braund is confident that members’ voices were heard. “I was very impressed by the process. The survey and member suggestion forms gave individuals a chance to say what they felt was important—and the privacy to know that it could be returned without identification,” said Braund, UUP chapter president at Upstate Medical University in Syracuse. “It definitely met my expectations in terms of encouraging people to be involved and sharing their thoughts.” GETTING IT DONE Armed with members’ comments and tabulated results from the negotiations survey, subcommittee members hunkered down with the paperwork and quietly went about categorizing the comments and rating the frequency of concerns. Each group summarized their issues and made oral presentations to the full group. “Our group worked well together,” said Lori Nash of Oswego, the academic part-time representative on the Negotiations Committee. “We quickly agreed on how we would approach the work we had to do. There was a lot of agreement about the issues that were in the member input, so everything moved along quite smoothly.” What’s next in the process? The Negotiations Team has a full schedule of meetings in February and March to prepare specific language for the package of proposals that will be presented to the state and to proceed with other preparations for negotiations. The Negotiations Committee must accept the conceptual proposals before the Team can sit down to bargain. There is no time frame for when the two sides will meet to exchange proposals. Gov. Andrew Cuomo must first put a negotiations team in place. The contracts of the state’s two largest unions—Civil Service Employees Association and Public Employees Federation—expire April 1. UUP’s contract expires July 1. “We are unsure as to when we’ll sit down with the state,” Dangler said. “But we are sure of one thing. When we do sit down, we’ll be ready to negotiate a contract that best reflects the needs of our members.” — Karen L. Mattison
|
Jones promoted to NYSUT/UUP director of staff
Labor Relations Specialist Susan Bloom Jones has been promoted to NYSUT/UUP director of staff. She replaces Martin Coffey, who retired in February after 19 years of service to NYSUT and UUP. “Susan has done a tremendous job for UUP as a labor relations specialist, and we are confident that she will continue to serve our members well as director of staff,” said UUP President Phil Smith. Prior to being named director of staff, Jones served since 1998 as a labor relations specialist assigned to UUP chapters at New Paltz, Maritime, Purchase and Optometry. She began as a labor relations specialist in 1989, assigned to NYSUT K-12 locals in the Elmsford-Tarrytown region. Before that, she worked in NYSUT’s Office of General Counsel in New York City, where she handled litigation matters, hearings and appeals.
— Karen L. Mattison |
Newest legislative intern hard at work at UUP
Mark Agnello, a graduate student at UAlbany’s Rockefeller College of Public Affairs and Policy, was hired in January as a John M. Reilly legislative intern. He joins intern Matt Annis to help handle UUP’s political action and outreach efforts. Agnello is working 20 hours a week tracking proposed legislation, researching and analyzing issues for potential legislation, arranging visits to lawmakers’ offices, and handling other duties associated with the union’s Legislation Department. Agnello is pursuing a master’s degree in public adminis-tration, with concentrations in homeland security and public finance. He earned his bachelor’s degree in history, with a minor in political science, from UAlbany. He spent his junior year at the University of Nottingham in England, completing coursework in international political and security studies. Prior to joining UUP, Agnello was a planning intern with the state Office of Emergency Management. Before that, he was a field operations clerk for the U.S. Census Bureau, and an intern for U.S. Sen. Charles Schumer. “Mark has proven himself as an asset to UUP’s legislative efforts, which comes as no surprise considering his personal and professional experiences,” said UUP Secretary Eileen Landy, who heads the Legislation Department. The internship is named in honor of John Reilly, UUP’s president from 1987-1993. — Karen L. Mattison
|
Spread the word: Cuts to SUNY must stop now
We were hoping that a new year and a new governor would turn a new page when it comes to state funding for SUNY. Unfortunately, what we got in Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s proposed spending plan was the same old story—another bone-deep cut in funding to state-operated campuses and our three teaching hospitals. The governor slashed SUNY’s state support by 10 percent in his Executive Budget, which would increase the total funding loss for state-operated campuses to about $685 million—or a third of SUNY’s annual operating budget—if it passes. It’s difficult to say just what the impact of Cuomo’s proposed cuts to our hospitals in Brooklyn, Stony Brook and Syracuse would be, since reduction targets haven’t been identified. But it doesn’t take a brain surgeon to realize that the governor’s plan for massive Medicaid cuts is intolerable and must be rejected, along with his call to eliminate $154 million in state subsidies. Fortunately, Cuomo’s draft budget is not written in stone. We must work tirelessly to rewrite this bleak chapter by sending a strong message to legislators to “Think Ahead, Invest in Higher Ed.” This is a time of action for UUPers. We need you to stand up and speak out against these cuts and proposals. We need you to get involved. BUILDING BRIDGES It is imperative that we redouble our coalition-building efforts and align ourselves more closely with area labor federations. Public education is under attack. Organized labor is under attack. It is time to join together with a united voice to fight for fairness and spread the word about the critical importance of proper funding for higher education, and the positive impact union members make at work and in their communities. UUP is working with New Yorkers for Fiscal Fairness, a coalition of churches, hospitals, inner city ministries, family health groups and unions—such as NYSUT, CSEA and PEF—to ensure New Yorkers have a quality educational system, affordable health care and housing, and other essentials for job growth and a thriving state economy. A vibrant public higher education system, one that’s adequately funded, accessible and affordable, is a requisite to reach those goals. We cannot allow the state to reduce SUNY’s funding any further. SUNY has shouldered far more than its share of reductions, and this trend must be reversed. If it isn’t, expect more of what happened at UAlbany and Geneseo last year, when those campuses announced stinging cuts to humanities and other programs. Students and parents will find larger classes, fewer instructors and fewer course offerings. Fewer courses would mean an extra year of school—and another year of tuition—for students shut out of classes required for graduation. ACT II And then there’s the undying issue of SUNY flexibility. This year’s plan would permit SUNY to lease campus properties, enter into public/private partnerships with limited oversight and hire services without further approvals from the state comptroller or attorney general. We oppose all those proposals. However, there are some things we can get behind, like the purchase of goods without the delays inherent in the state comptroller’s approval process. TIME FOR ACTION Cuts to SUNY need to stop now. Students can’t afford it. Parents can’t afford it. SUNY’s future affects the future of hundreds of thousands of New York students looking to public education for a college degree. They have a right to an affordable, quality education, the crux of SUNY’s mission. We need you, now more than ever, to step up. Please, volunteer to take part in one of our Albany advocacy trips to meet with legislators. Become involved with UUP’s coalition-building efforts. Organize a visit to the home offices of your local legislators. Get involved on your campuses. Tell everyone you know that investing in SUNY is investing in our future.
|