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JoAnna Fleming, Museum of Natural History Employees
Local 1559, Senior Maintainer I. My kids enjoyed
telling people that my mother is a welder. My
mother does all the different things like carpentry
and plumbing. It was pretty hard, but I weathered
it. Working with the men has made me stronger. I can
take pretty much of anything. We just have to stick
in there and show these guys that we are capable of
doing the job and they'll respect you. Thats what
I found at the Museum respect. And the best group
of men I could ever work with. We just have to learn
from these men were new for them too.
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Women have made great gains
in the workforce, but the barriers to full equality are still
high.
By JANE LaTOUR
Since the Civil Rights Act of 1964 banned employment discrimination
on the basis of gender, women have proved their abilities in
thousands of jobs they rarely held before. Although legal barriers
have crumbled, women are still largely excluded from a vast
array of well-paying occupations.
Not counting flaggers, women make up less than 3 percent of
the construction trades. In New York City, in a firefighting
force of 11,500, there are 23 women. Even in the professions,
despite stunning gains, full equality has been elusive. DC 37
attorney Audrey Browne points out that the number of women making
partner at law firms has never risen above 3 percent. And the
public sector, where civil service is the great equalizer, still
fails to provide a completely level playing field for women
seeking highly paid jobs.
The experiences of women in nontraditional work
demonstrates that womens place is everywhere they want
to be. Part I of this series will explore the stories of some
DC 37 members. Part II will examine strategies for change.
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JoAnna Fleming, Museum of Natural History Employees
Local 1559, Senior Maintainer I.
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JoAnna Fleming is a woman of all trades
welding, carpentry and plumbing at the Museum of Natural
History. Bored by secretarial studies, she was interested in
the money the men were making. An ad in the Amsterdam News led
her to apply for the job of Assistant Maintainer. The
first time I showed up to work was scary, she says. I
had three strikes against me: I was black, I was a woman, and
I was in a mans field. But that was 20 years ago.
Now, the Local 1559 member says, I wouldnt want
to work anywhere else.
The love of animals propelled Local 1501 member Kathy MacLaughlin
into a career at the Bronx Zoo. When she started in 1980, there
were only six women, but the workforce quickly became more diverse.
Early on, you had to prove you could handle the work,
she says. Today, as a Senior Wild Animal Keeper in Jungle
World, she cares for tropical animals from insects to
apes, hoof stock, reptiles and butterflies.
Her spirit of adventure led Local 376 member
Patricia Chever to her career as a Highway Repairer. She had
never done laborers work, but the job sounded interesting.
It was five days a week. It was outside. It was totally different
and it kind of fit me. After 10 years she says, I
love the job. I make sure I do everything to the best of my
ability. Its a good feeling to do something that
people can see and appreciate.
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Kathy MacLaughlin, Local 1501. A Senior Wild Animal
Keeper at the Bronx Zoo, she majored in Animal Science
in college. I was 22 when I got the job. Certainly
there was chauvinism. You had to prove that you could
do the job. You used your ingenuity to figure out how
to get the job done. Women are capable of juggling many
things at one time to get over barriers.
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In 1968, the Police Administrative Aide title
was created as a male-only job. Kathleen Reilly sued the city
and opened the door for women, including Lenora Gates, executive
vice president of Clerical-Administrative Local 1549. Hired
in 1970, she was in the second group of women to replace police
officers as 911 operators. I took it very seriously, understanding
that every day was a struggle for civilianization within a male
dominated agency, she says. It required you to be
the best that you could be. People didnt want you to succeed.
I was always challenged to go the extra mile.
Opportunities open
In the 1980s, as opportunities opened rapidly in many male dominated
professions, Local 436 member Annette Brooks broke into public
health. As an Epidemiologist II in the city Health Dept., she
specializes in pediatric HIV. I focus on conditions that
affect women and children and people of color my community,
she said. Ms. Brooks acknowledges her debt to the women who
came before her: All of my mentors and immediate supervisors
have been female, and Ive learned a lot from them.
JoAnna Fleming is disappointed that more women arent working
in the skilled trades. However, her positive experience is atypical
for tradeswomen. Thirty-nine years after the passage of the
Civil Rights Act, barriers still exist for women working in
blue-collar, white-collar, and professional jobs. If equal employment
opportunity is to become a reality rather than a goal, working
women need effective strategies for change.