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2002 Table of Contents | Public Employee Press Archives
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More than 400 DC 37 activists caught the early bus to Albany May
7 for the union's annual Lobby Day.
At a lunch meeting, the unionists heard from the three most powerful
officials in the Capitol, Gov. George E. Pataki, Senate Majority Leader
Joseph L. Bruno and Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver. Other state legislators
came to show support for DC 37's working families. DC 37 Political
Action Chair Leonard Allen presided over the day's activities.
"It's not always about getting more," Executive Director
Lillian Roberts reminded members. "Sometimes it's about keeping
what we've got. So we're also here to protect the benefits we've won."
In the weeks preceding the daylong event, local leaders and political
staff worked tirelessly with state officials on the union's legislative
agenda. And at the grassroots level, the rank-and-file lobbyists took
time from their jobs and families that day to press the lawmakers
on housing, education, pensions and job security. Their personal visits
helped put a face on issues that affect the lives of public employees
and downstate New Yorkers.
"Lobbying is the bedrock of political action," state AFL-CIO
President Denis Hughes said. He praised DC 37's new leadership for
its pursuit of "honesty and integrity" as "a progressive
social force."
Gov. Pataki attended the DC 37 Lobby Day luncheon for the first time
in his eight years in office. He told the participants they were "ordinary
men and women who responded with heroism on September 11 and kept
the city going." Mr. Pataki said the state's "partnership"
with public employees should go forward with "no gimmicks, no
tax increases and no lay-offs."
"DC 37 is an important part of everything that goes on in New
York from 9-11 to everyday services," Sen. Bruno said. He pointed
out that he had sided with DC 37 to halt the sale of the Off-Track
Betting Corp. and fought to stop Workfare participants from displacing
city employees.
Still, some DC 37 presidents noted that the two Republicans had stopped
short of making commitments to support the Rent 2002 Campaign, which
calls for renewing and strengthening tenant protections this year,
and other hot issues.
As legislators acknowledged the hit New York City had taken Sept.
11 and praised DC 37 members as "the true heroes who worked around
the clock," Assemblyman Silver said that it would be "hypocrisy
to reward your vital services with exorbitant rents and eviction notices."
After lunch, the union members fanned out through the Capitol and
met legislators to advocate pension improvements, increased educational
funding and reinstatement of the commuter tax.
"Lobby Day focuses on the members' future," said Local 924
member Joe Time. "It protects our benefits and gives our families
hope for better education, housing and contracts."
"I came to learn more about the political process and to make
a difference," said Agnes Whitehurst, a Juvenile Counselor in
Local 1457 who has participated in Lobby Day for five years. "I
see today as an opportunity to follow up on my vote."
Pressure from unions and community groups had convinced legislative
majorities to support the Rent 2002 Campaign. The bills to extend
rent regulations to 2008 and repeal luxury decontrol passed in the
State Assembly in April. But as PEP went to press, it appeared possible
that the state senators would not vote on the bills before the session
ends.
The grassroots lobbyists soon got news of advances on other key legislation
they had pressed for:
Grassroots Lobbyists win early retirement
plan
On May 20 - only two weeks after hundreds of DC 37 activists bused
to Albany to lobby for members needs - Gov. George E. Pataki signed
early retirement incentive legislation into law.
As the city grappled with a $5 billion budget gap, which unions hope
it can close without deep service cuts or layoffs, early retirement
was high on the DC 37 agenda.
"As public employees, our lifeline is directly linked to politics,"
DC 37 Executive Director Lillian Roberts said. "Winning early
retirement shows how important it is to have an army of political
activists in our union family."
The retirement legislation contains two parts:
Part A is a traditional
early retirement incentive for workers in targeted titles.
Part B establishes what's known as a "25-55
plan" without early retirement penalties. Under this
plan, participants with at least 25 years of service who are 55 or
older may retire without a cut in their pension benefit.
Early retirement was a key item on the legislative program that Ms.
Roberts discussed in April with Mr. Pataki, State Assembly Speaker
Sheldon Silver and Senate Majority Leader Joseph L. Bruno. DC 37 President
Veronica Montgomery-Costa, Treasurer Mark Rosenthal and Secretary
Edward W. Hysyk accompanied Ms. Roberts at those crucial sessions.
As lawmakers considered the retirement bills, Local 1320 President
and DC 37 Pension Committee Chair James Tucciarelli returned to Albany
with pension experts Joel Giller, DC 37 general counsel, and Dennis
Deahn, field director of the DC 37 Health and Security Plan.
The New York State AFL-CIO backed the legislation. The Albany office
of DC 37's parent union, the American Federation of State, County
and Municipal Employees, played an important role in ushering the
early retirement incentive through the political process.