Page 8 - Work Force November 2018
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Central Region President Colleen Wheaton to retire
 EAST SYRACUSE — CSEA is preparing to bid a fond farewell to our Central Region President Colleen Wheaton.
Wheaton, currently serving in her third term and 10th year as Central Region president, will retire at the end of the month, capping a career that includes about 30 years of activism in our union.
She began her union involvement in the late 1980s while working as
a secretary at SUNY Potsdam. She moved up our union ranks, serving as the local’s 2nd vice president and later local president.
In 2006, she was appointed as Central Region’s recording secretary, a position she held until she was elected region president in 2008.
She also held numerous committee and board positions at all levels of our union, including serving as chair of CSEA’s Statewide SUNY Labor- Management Committee, and as a delegate to the AFL-CIO’s Jefferson/ Lewis/St. Lawrence Counties Labor Council. She currently serves as executive vice president of the Central New York Area Labor Federation.
Along the way, she built an impressive resume, graduating from CSEA’s first Leadership Education
And Development (LEAD) Program class in 2005, the New York State AFL- CIO Cornell University Labor Institute in 2006 and the Harvard University Trade Union Program in 2011.
She was also honored for her union activism, being presented
with CSEA’s highest honor, the State Division Mission Achievement Award in 2004, and a proclamation from State Comptroller Tom DiNapoli in 2016.
During her years as Central Region president, she focused on keeping the region innovating, living up to the region’s motto, “Leading the
way in CSEA,” as well as maintaining teamwork between union officers and our professional staff to advance union goals.
Those approaches led to many successes for the Central Region, including repeatedly being honored with the President’s Polar Cap Award for the highest fundraising totals for the Special Olympics Polar Plunge, as well as the PEOPLE Cup Award.
She also led our union through multiple successful fights to stop correctional and mental health facility closures throughout Central New York, as well as many local budget, contract and layoff fights.
“Colleen Wheaton has been a
CSEA members and their families join CSEA President Danny Donohue, CSEA Central Region President Colleen Wheaton and Central Region officers in leading our union’s delegation at the 2018 Syracuse Labor Day Parade at the New York State Fairgrounds. From left, front row, region Treasurer Nicole Meeks, Executive Vice President and incoming Central Region President Ken Greenleaf, Wheaton, 1st Vice President Casey Walpole and 2nd Vice President John Brown.
    Wheaton takes the Polar Plunge into Oneida Lake in Brewerton in December 2008 to benefit the Special Olympics. To date, the union’s Central Region has raised more than $180,000 for the athletes of Special Olympics over the past 10 years. Pictured right of Wheaton is incoming Region President Ken Greenleaf.
CSEA President Danny Donohue presents Wheaton with the State Division Mission Achievement Award in 2004.
Wheaton joins the informational picket line in Cooperstown outside the Otsego County Office Building in 2008 as county workers rally for a fair contract.
8 The Work Force
November 2018
leading voice not only for working people in Central New York, but for all workers across the state,” CSEA President Danny Dohohue said. “She doesn’t back down and uses her voice to help our union stay strong. We will miss her, but Colleen is always a member of our CSEA family.”
Wheaton said she will miss regularly interacting with our union family.
“I will miss the fights, and all the friends I’ve made, and I’d like to thank everyone for their support over the years,” she said. “Just because I’m retiring, I am not leaving CSEA. I will remain union strong forever.”
— Mark M. Kotzin
In 2016, State Comptroller Tom DiNapoli presents Wheaton with an award proclamation for her years of dedicated union activism.
  







































































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