By MOLLY CHARBONEAU
Posted: November 19, 2001
DC 37 and many locals are pressing
management on air testing and protective measures to answer members
concerns about the air they are breathing in buildings near ground
zero.
And at DC 37s initiative, the New York Committee for Occupational
Safety and Health has convened a multi-union task force to confront
the many issues that face members near the disaster site.
A union news conference brought the issue to public attention Oct.
12 outside the Administration for Childrens Services just four
blocks from the disaster site. When ACS stopped labor leaders from
entering the building to meet with members and barred an independent
environmental expert hired by the union to test the air, a large group
of members went outside for an open-air union meeting. Their strong
feelings echoed other members anxiety about air quality throughout
lower Manhattan.
Often, management or the landlord has already hired consultants
to do air sampling. We review their findings carefully during reoccupancy inspections,
said Lee Clarke, head of DC 37s Safety and Health Dept.
We also urge members and managers to keep windows closed and
be sure the ventilation system is set to recirculate, to keep contaminants
outside.
At ACS, she said, there were reports that windows were left open over
a long weekend letting in bad air and prompting calls to the
union.
We wanted to test the air to determine if it was a sick or a
safe building, said DC 37 Administrator Lee Saunders. Our
members work every day removing steel from ground zero, our social
workers provide counseling, our hospital workers tend the injured
its outrageous that we were not allowed in to test the
air.
About 3,000 employees work in the building, including members of several
DC 37 locals.
Its a violation of the mayors executive order that
we cant go in to meet with our members, who are calling us about
scratchy throats, runny noses and eye problems, said Charles
Ensley, president of SSEU Local 371, which had hired the air-testing
expert.
Local 1549 President Eddie Rodriquez told the members, The union
is here to protect you, and we all need to stick together. Local
372 President Veronica Montgomery-Costa said, Yes, lets
get on with life, but not at the expense of city workers health.
Its in everyones interest, including managements,
to have these test results, said Ed Hysyk, president of Local
2627
Prevented from doing sampling, Local 371 arranged for some members
to wear personal air monitors in the building. Local 371 Safety Coordinator
Arnie Goldwag said the local would push for better filters on ventilation
equipment and press the city and state to sample the air regularly.