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PEP Archives | September
2002 Table of Contents | Public Employee Press Archives | Home
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"Let this be a stepping stone toward
a brighter future."
Carmen
Charles, President, Local 420
By ALFREDO ALVARADO
June is traditionally the month for graduations, when students mark
the completion of rigorous studies and eagerly look ahead to new challenges.
On June 28 at Kings County Hospital in Brooklyn, 25 new graduates
of the Patient Care Associate program celebrated this significant
milestone together with their families, Local 420 leaders and staff
of the hospital and the DC 37 Education Fund.
Ten days later, on July 9 at Bellevue Hospital, 94 Patient Care Technicians
graduated from the training course for this entry-level title. "You
are my first graduating class," said Carmen Charles, the newly
elected president of Municipal Hospital Employees Union Local 420.
"Let this be a stepping stone to a brighter future," she
told the PCTs.
The PCA program is open to Nurses Aides, Nurses Aides Transport and
Health and Hospitals Corp. personnel with one year of employment in
an HHC facility and a supervisor's recommen-dation. The PCT program
is also open to Nurses Aides and Nurses Aides Transport with one year
of employment in an HHC facility and a supervisor's recommendation.
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The HHC created the PCA position in 1995 as a competitive title,
but the union fought to reclassify it as non-competitive. With the
aid of the DC 37 Research Dept., the title's status was finally switched
on June 7. "This will strengthen job security for these members,"
said Ms. Charles.
Barbara Kairson, administrator of DC 37's Education Fund, congratulated
the new PCA grads and encouraged them to continue climbing the career
ladder. "We certainly hope this is not the end of your learning
experience. Continue to learn so that you may serve," said Ms.
Kairson, who attended the ceremony with Johnnie Locus, assistant director
of the DC 37 Hospitals Division and Helen Chappell, assistant director
of the Education Fund.
Hospitals Division Director Pat Brooks addressed the new graduates
at the Bellevue ceremony. "Serving patients is a crucial job,"
she said. "But I know you will treat them with the respect and
dignity they deserve."
"We're going to continue the tradition of quality care here at
Kings County Hospital," said PCA graduate Eileen Campbell, who
received an award for academic excellence.