Page 9 - Work Force February 2022
P. 9

Overtime pay increase helps at Helen Hayes Hospital
 WEST HAVERSTRAW — The staff
at Helen Hayes Hospital are often described as miracle workers, drawing patients from multiple states due to their favorable outcomes in challenging cases.
For CSEA members working at this state-run rehabilitation hospital, that means providing the ancillary services needed for a positive patient experience.
Since COVID-19 first hit, workers have had the added challenge
of staying healthy while also preventing the spread of COVID within the facility, all while working more overtime to make up for staff shortages.
According to Helen Hayes Hospital Local President Bruno Bednarski, news of a temporary increase in
the overtime pay rate couldn’t have come at a better time.
“There has been an uptick in the number of CSEA members who’ve been quarantined or are sick with COVID,” said Bednarski. “People are a lot more willing now to take on the overtime because of the extra incentive. It hit the nail on the head, as far as I’m concerned.”
Bednarski said workers at his facility had gotten word of nearby state facilities including Rockland Psychiatric Center and Hudson Valley DDSO receiving the enhanced
overtime rate. They inquired as to why state Department of Health- run facilities such as Helen Hayes Hospital weren’t yet included.
“When CSEA told us we were now included, a lot of people were happy,” said Bednarski, who added that he hopes the enhanced rate
is extended beyond its current expiration date.
As this edition went to press, CSEA and New York state have also successfully negotiated temporary overtime pay agreements with the state Office of Children and Family Services (OCFS) and Department Of Corrections and Community Supervision (DOCCS).
Helen Hayes Hospital, which
was founded in 1900 as the first freestanding state hospital devoted to treating people with disabilities, provides both inpatient and outpatient rehabilitation services. The hospital, which was renamed in 1974 for famous actress and hospital supporter Helen Hayes MacArthur, who lived nearby, was opened partially in response to another pandemic. Children suffering the physical effects of tuberculosis were treated there. By the 1920s, polio was a leading cause of hospitalization there.
— Jessica Ladlee
CSEA member Fathima Izmie, a cook/supervisor at Helen Hayes Hospital, thanked our union for advocating for enhanced overtime. (Photo courtesy of Bruno Bednarski)
  PRESENTS
Zoom COMEDY
  G NIGHT WITH PERFORMANCES BY
          GINA BRILLON
“THE FLOOR IS LAVA” AMAZON PRIME
CHRIS MONTY
”JUST BE HAPPY” DRYBAR COMEDY SPECIAL
CYRUS STEELE
HBO “COMEDY WINGS”
 WEDNESDAY FEBRUARY 23rd 2022 at 7 PM
    GET YOUR FUNNY ONLINE WITH CSEA!!
Join us on Zoom for an hour of fun with three hysterical comedians who can provide us some well needed laughter during such difficult times for so many. Bring your beverage of choice and enjoy the show!
To join us, visit:
HTTPS://CSEANY.ORG/COMEDYHOUR
Brought to you by CSEA’s Member Engagement Department Adam Acquario, Director • Mary E. Sullivan, President
 “I am very excited that the work of CSEA members at Wadsworth Labs is being recognized., It’s something I know everyone here will feel good about. As a union, members should feel good about our involvement in it. Despite so many challenges labor is facing, and we as a union are facing, this agreement sends a message that CSEA has always worked to get things d”one for members and CSEA continues that work.
— John Crandell, CSEA Wadsworth Laboratory Local President
  February 2022
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