Page 9 - Work Force September 2021
P. 9

Herkimer 911 dispatchers fight for pay fairness
 HERKIMER — CSEA members employed as 911 dispatchers in Herkimer County often make split- second decisions on how to respond to an emergency, often while understaffed.
Yet, the dispatchers have been among the lowest paid in the surrounding area, despite covering such a geographically large county — and half of a neighboring one.
Thanks to action taken through our union, 911 dispatchers now have taken a major step toward improving their pay.
Over the years, Herkimer County 911 dispatchers have fought to improve their pay. Working long shifts, weekends, nights, holidays — and through a global pandemic with poor staffing levels, CSEA members at the dispatch center decided it was once again time to take action.
“We had tried
previously putting
a request in for
additional money
on our base pay
and basically got a
letter back saying,
‘thank you, but
not at this time,’”
said Amy Jacobs, a
CSEA member and
Herkimer County 911 dispatcher.
Jacobs, a dispatcher for more than 20 years, explained just how much the job has changed and how much more work the department has taken on, such as answering for more agencies, taking on new alarm boxes, and answering COVID-19 related
Health Department calls overnight. “It seemed to be for us, and
still does, with the ever-changing population and technology that we always take on more work and never get extra pay for it,” she said.
With all the additional work
— and dealing with the pandemic for more than a year — Jacobs and her co-workers took collective action to get an increase in pay ahead of their upcoming contract negotiations.
Working with former Herkimer County Unit President Jennifer Giaquinto and their CSEA staff labor relations specialist — CSEA and county officials began negotiating a Memorandum of Agreement to boost their base pay and shift differential.
“For [the dispatchers], it was necessary that they do something to get some more funding and make the job a little more lucrative to get more people [interested in applying for the job and staying],” Giaquinto said.
Showing the effectiveness of union action, the workers reached an agreement with county officials to boost their pay ahead of contract negotiations.
“The county [officials] didn’t really have to deal with us, but they did,” Jacobs said. “They weren’t going to do anything crazy with negotiations coming up. At least we’re starting a few thousand dollars ahead of where we would be starting from come negotiation time.”
The ‘first’ first responders
While 911 dispatchers aren’t
Herkimer County 911 dispatchers Brandan Parks, Amy Jacobs and Matthew Drake stand together in solidarity after working with unit leaders and union staff on negotiating a Memorandum of Agreement to raise their base pay and shift differentials.
  Jacobs
physically the first responders on the scene of an emergency, they’re always the first call for help.
“We’re the first people that hear what’s going on,” Jacobs said. “In a split second, you have to decipher the situation. Who needs to respond? How many need to respond? How
do we make sure everyone gets home to their families?”
Processing all of that information,
all while remaining calm, can be difficult. After more than 20 years on the job, it’s second nature to Jacobs.
“People out there
need to know that
we feel. It may not
sound like it because
we sound very
point-driven,” Jacobs said. “But the emotion after a certain call, those are things we have to take home with us. It takes a toll on you after a time ... the fear in their voice has to become the calm in our voice.”
Jacobs noted part of the reason dispatchers are underpaid is because legislative bodies don’t fully understand the scope of their job.
She said that their position is often lumped into a ’secretarial’ category. However, being a dispatcher means frequently making life-saving decisions in a split second.
“When the phone rings at 2 a.m. and it’s someone crying that their child isn’t breathing on the other
end, we have the training to walk a parent through CPR for their child to get them the help they need,” Jacobs said.
“In a serious motor vehicle accident,
(we are) able to get
a helicopter, get law enforcement, and EMS to a scene, and (we are) able to do it all in a split-second. I wish legislators could see truly what it is we do.”
Legislation to classify 911 dispatchers under the “first responder” category, supported
by CSEA, has passed through both houses at the state level and is being sent to the governor’s office. Jacobs argues that this would be a huge step for dispatchers moving forward.
— Nicholas Newcomb
“When the phone rings at 2 a.m. and it’s someone crying that their child isn’t breathing on the other end, we have the training to walk a parent through CPR for their child to get them the help they need.”
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  September 2021
The Work Force 9
 








































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