Page 4 - Work Force March 2017
P. 4

  WorkForce
ISSN 1522-1091
Official publication of
CSEA Local 1000, AFSCME, AFL-CIO 143 Washington Ave. Albany, NY 12210-2303 Danny Donohue, President
EMILY COTE
Acting Communications Director & Publisher
MATHEW L. CANTORE Deputy Director of Communications
      Long Island Region: WENDI BOWIE (631) 462-0030
Metropolitan Region: DAVID GALARZA (212) 406-2156
Southern Region: JESSICA LADLEE (845) 831-1000
Capital Region: THERESE ASSALIAN (518) 782-4400
Central Region: MARK M. KOTZIN (315) 433-0050
Western Region: OVE OVERMYER (716) 691-6555
Headquarters: JILL ASENCIO (518) 257-1276
JANICE GAVIN Associate Editor
JASON D. HOSIER Graphic Production Specialist
BETH MCINTYRE Graphic Production Specialist
KRYSTAL JUBREY Communications Assistant
CommuniCations speCialists
    The Publications Committee: Karen Bright
Robert Ellis
Tim Finnigan
Debbie Nappi-Gonzalez Marie Snyder Rick Stahl Vincenza Turpin
 The Work Force (USPS 0445-010)
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     President Danny Donohue in touch with
The WorkForce
OF ur union is you...
ifty-six years ago, President John F. When I hear the question, “What has the Kennedy gave his famed inaugural union done for me lately?” I want to respond
         4 The Work Force
March 2017
address, where he challenged the American people with this famous phrase: “Ask not what your country can do for you — ask what you can do for your country.”
Eight years later, in response to a direct challenge from President Kennedy, our country achieved a new level of greatness when we became the first nation to successfully land on the moon. I don’t want to admit it, but I can still remember watching the landing on TV like it was yesterday.
Getting to the moon required not only a tremendous amount of work, but a certain level of public support from the American people. Failed mission after failed mission, with the Soviet Union making large strides toward the same goal, it might have felt easier just to give up. But we persisted, because we believed in what we could achieve together, even in those dark days of doubt.
Lately, I have been asked by some of our members, “What has the union done for me lately?” And I can understand a lot of the frustration people are feeling: working in
civil service is more difficult than it has ever been. State budget cuts have meant longer hours and stagnant pay. Management is more difficult than ever to deal with. More and more jobs are being given to temporary or hourly workers. We see it. And a passionate group of us are out there, trying our best to fight these cuts, take on poor management, and fight against attrition of union jobs. Sadly, every year, there are fewer and fewer of us, and it gets harder and harder to be effective.
as Kennedy would have.
Our union is not an entity separate from
you; you wash its face every morning. Our union is you, and every one of your co-workers. Our union is only as powerful as our members make it. If you are unhappy with your local or unit leadership, run for office and change it. Local and unit elections are happening this year. Or, at the very least, VOTE.
If you are upset with what the state
is doing with civil service, join a CSEA political action committee. In addition to our statewide and region committees, many of our locals and units also have committees. It’s a great way to use your voice to work toward real change.
If you are unhappy with management: pull together your co-workers and make
a stand — together. Right-to-Work is bearing down on us, and the governor’s administration is proposing even more cuts for the 2017-18 budget year. Now is not the time for us to sit back and wait for someone else to act.
Our union isn’t perfect (we’re all human, after all), and we’ve had a few failed missions here and there — I won’t deny that. But, in the face of adversity, we persist because we believe in what we can achieve together.
   










































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