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2002 Table of Contents | Public Employee Press Archives
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By GREGORY N. HEIRES
High Pressure Plant Tenders and Maintainers in Local 983 voted overwhelmingly
in June for a new contract with raises as high as 30 percent over
four years.
In a mail vote monitored by the American Arbitration Association,
members ratified the pact by nearly 98 percent, 167-4.
"Our members' patience gave us strength as we fought and held
out for a good deal," said Local 983 President Mark Rosenthal,
who is also DC 37's treasurer. "The overwhelming vote in favor
of the contract shows the strategy paid off."
The victory was especially sweet for Local 983 Vice President John
Daprile, an HPPT with 25 years on the job. "This contract will
mean back pay of $20,000 for many of our members," Mr. Daprile
said. "It feels like justice has been served."
Mr. Daprile was the driving force behind the negotiating team, which
included Mr. Rosenthal and HPPT Mike Woodworth, an Executive Board
member. Mr. Rosenthal credited DC 37 Executive Director Lillian Roberts,
who attended several negotiating sessions, for helping jump-start
the stalled talks earlier this year.
An important provision of the pact equalizes the pay of High Pressure
Plant Tenders throughout the city.
Previously, Plant Maintainer (Hospital) Tenders in the Health and
Hospitals Corp. and those at the Sanitation Dept. were paid more than
HPPTs at the City University and other agencies.
With the new agreement, everyone in the title series will be paid
at an hourly rate of $24.88 effective June 30. The previous rate was
$19.19 at city agencies, $19.92 at Sanitation and $20.80 at HHC.
The local was able to negotiate a large raise because Section 220
of the state Labor Law covers the HPPTs. As "prevailing-rate"
workers, their pay is supposed to be similar to their private sector
counterparts, and they can base their wage rate on a survey by the
comptroller. The pact brings HPPTs close to the pay rates of Oilers,
similar private sector workers.
The agreement also recognizes that HPPT job responsibilities have
expanded beyond maintaining boilers to include refrigeration and air-conditioning
equipment.
In arguing for their pay hikes, Local 983 pointed to those expanded
duties and the important role members played in getting downtown city
buildings up to speed after Sept. 11.
Basically, the four-year agreement follows the pattern of DC 37's
other contracts during the past four years. The difference is that
the "equalization" provision kicks in on June 30, the last
day of the pact. On June 30, HPPTs at CUNY and most city agencies
will get 9.41 percent, those at Sanitation will receive nearly 5.5
percent and those at HHC will receive .93 percent.
Key participants in the talks included Director Dennis Sullivan, and
Assistant Directors Frank Burns and David Paskin of the DC 37 Research
and Negotiations Dept., Senior Assistant General Counsel Mary O'Connell
and Local 983 attorney Arthur Schwartz.