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PEP Archives | October
2002 Table of Contents | Public
Employee Press Archives | Home
Union fights
on-the-job hazards
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By Diane S. Williams
Local 376 and DC 37 slammed the brakes on the Dept. of Transportation
with a surprise inspection Aug. 14 that revealed an unsafe fleet
of trucks in Brooklyn's Pulaski Street yard.
"This is the cesspool of the DOT," said Local President
Gene DeMartino, who joined DC 37 Council Rep David Catala to inspect
13 trucks. Six of the vehicles had more than 14 safety violations
each. "We still haven't seen the worst, because I think some
of the more dangerous vehicles were moved out," Mr. DeMartino
observed.
Over the last three years, the agency claimed to implement an 8-month
truck maintenance program. But the gnarled and unsafe trucks driven
by Local 376 members assigned to the yard under
the McGinness-Humbolt Parkway told another story.
"It's common practice for DOT to send these workers out on
unsafe vehicles," said Mr. DeMartino. His members risk life
and limb as they drive trucks with broken brake and signal lights,
crushed and mangled doors, fenders attached with duct tape, faulty
wiring, cracked windshields, exhaust fumes that fill the cabs, missing
back gates and other violations of state traffic and safety laws.
Should state agencies that enforce traffic laws and the NYPD ticket
the city trucks, the violations would be charged to the driver
whose livelihood depends on maintaining a commercial license
and a clean driving record and not the agency. The
set-up jeopardizes the public and the lives and licenses of the
union members.
Highway Repairers must turn to DC 37 for legal representation or
plead guilty to traffic infractions that are management's fault.
The drivers incur points and penalties from the Dept. of Motor Vehicles,
higher auto insurance rates, and discipline, including unpaid suspensions.
Driving the deathtraps
Members drive the deathtraps because management "plays a demoralizing
game of reward and punishment," said Highway Repairer Joseph
Cappello. Cronyism, nepotism and inside jobs are reserved for favorites,
he said, and the damaged trucks, license problems and discipline
are for the rest. Before the August inspection, DOT was in no hurry
to fix the trucks.
After meetings with the union and assistance from a newly formed
DOT Safety Committee, management took the unsafe trucks out of service.
DC 37 also won a new safety procedure: checking the city trucks
for violations before they hit the road. And the local is holding
ongoing labor-management meetings. "We're fighting to mprove
working conditions," Mr. DeMartino said.