District Council 37
Search this site LINKS SITEMAP
HOME  |  ABOUT DC 37  |  JOIN DC 37  |  NEWSROOM  |  BENEFITS  |  CONTRACTS  |  POLITICAL ACTION  |  MEMBER SERVICES  |  CONTACT US
Newsroom
News Releases
  News Photos
  Public Employee Press
         
PEP May 2004
Table of Contents
    Archives
 
  La Voz
Latinoamericana
  Radio Show
  TV Show
     
  Public Employee Press

Women’s History Month

Fighting for equality

Women’s Committee programs focus on “foremothers” in the long struggle to achieve equal rights.

   
 

Above: DC 37 Exec. Dir. Lillian Roberts, Clerical Div. Grievance Rep Marilyn Charles, Cornell Labor Studies Director Sean Sweeney, Vice Chair Vanessa Tirado and DC 37 President Veronica Montgomery-Costa. Left: Local 154 Pres. Juan Fernández and committee members Marianela Santana, Francisca Roberts and Janice Williams.

 

 

By JANE LaTOUR

Clerical Division Grievance Rep Marilyn Charles kicked off the DC 37 Women’s Committee program March 22 with her poem honoring the exceptional contributions of women such as civil rights activist Dorothy Height, peace activist Dorothy Day, and labor activist Mary “Mother” Jones.

“Magnificent Women,” was true to the evening’s theme, “Women and Labor: Past, Present and Future,” and Ms. Charles concluded her presentation: “It’s never too late to start anew. The glass ceiling is chipping away.” DC 37 Executive Director Lillian Roberts welcomed the gathering and noted that, “Whether it’s our generation or our daughters’ generation — women are doing more.” Committee Vice Chair Vanessa Tirado hosted the event.

DC 37 President Veronica Montgomery-Costa pointed to two persistent burdens that still weigh down women workers: pay inequity and the double day — working a full shift or more for an employer on top of the immense task of raising children, feeding a family and keeping a home together.

Her view is backed up by author Dorothy Sue Cobble in “The Other Women’s Movement: Workplace Justice and Social Rights in America,” includes a 1925 quotation: “The whole question comes down to this: Shall we let women continue working longer hours than men, for less pay than men, and continue doing two jobs to their husbands’ one?” As Ms. Montgomery-Costa noted, “With all the years of struggle, we should be further along.”

   
 

World War II poster adapted
as a DC 37 coaster.

 

Recognition and renewal
Keynoter Sean Sweeney, director of the labor studies program at Cornell, spoke about the need for recognition and renewal. “We owe our female ancestors in the house of labor a debt we’ll never really be able to repay,” he said. “We have to revitalize our labor movement. Unless we recognize the contribution of others, we can’t understand the role we’re playing.”

On March 18, Clerical-Administrative Employees Local 1549 hosted its second annual Women’s Herstory event, including South African songs and poetry, union songs led by Local 1549’s Unionettes, and Sister Stories, each story celebrating a woman who made a difference in the speaker’s life. Member Judy Hampton spoke about raising three children and sending them to college. “My shero is the woman who then encouraged me to go to college.”

Amalgamated Professional Employees Local 154 celebrated “The Life of Harriet Tubman: A Freedom Fighter,” on March 3. Ms. Tubman’s story is well told in a new biography, “Bound for the Promised Land,” by Kate Clifford Larson.

Executive Board Member Francisca Roberts introduced the film, “A Woman Called Moses” and coordinated the event with Janice Williams. “Harriet Tubman is best known for her leadership in the Underground Railroad, which broke the chains of bondage and led many to freedom,” said Ms. Roberts.

Social Service Employees Union Local 371 hosted a panel on the importance of women’s votes in the current political environment. Carol Pittman, executive director of the New York State Nurses Association, spoke about the history of women’s activism and the importance of learning from it; Staten Island Advance Columnist Stevie Lacy-Pendelton focused on the connection between the long struggles for women’s rights and civil rights; and Public Advocate Betsy Gotbaum addressed the obstacles that still stand against electing females to public office. “It is tough for us,” she noted.

Local 1549 member Olivia Crum summed up the significance of the month of celebrations. “It’s important for women to be recognized and to show that we have contributed to the community and to the world and that we’re still standing.”

 

 
© District Council 37, AFSCME, AFL-CIO. 125 Barclay Street, New York, NY 10007.Privacy Policy
 This site is best viewed at 1024 x 768 resolution or greater with Internet Explorer 6.0 or greater.