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Public
Employee Press Exotic
language interpreters share $68,000 award
Nearly 75 Court Interpreters could receive a
total of as much as $68,000 in overtime pay that the courts have unjustly denied
them since 2006.
The state Office of Court Administration agreed earlier
this year to settle a dispute with Court, County and Dept. of Probation Employees
Local 1070 by paying more than 70 exotic language Interpreters the
overtime they deserved. (The courts consider all languages but Spanish exotic.)
The
dispute began in 2006, when a management E-mail alerted exotic language Interpreters
that they would be paid minute for minute when they were recalled
for unscheduled weekend work.
Local 1070s contract guarantees members
at least four hours of pay when they are recalled for unscheduled overtime.
OCA
announced a new policy, apparently without checking our contract, said Local
1070 President Cliff Koppelman. This was a violation of our terms and conditions
of employment.
The Interpreters were outraged that management had
decided unilaterally to deprive them of their contractual right, and some were
so upset that they didnt make themselves available for the unscheduled overtime.
Spanish-language
Interpreters are generally always on duty in the courts, so they werent
affected by the new policy.
This was a matter of principle,
said grievant Jan Kociubinski, a Polish Interpreter. We were losing a lot
of money. It wasnt right.
With White Collar Division Assistant
Director Chris Wilgenkamp and Assistant General Counsel Alan M. Brown handling
the case, the issue was headed to arbitration. It was nice that we were
able to work out a settlement with the court administration at the eleventh hour,
which ensured that the case didnt drag out any further, Brown said.
The
union is pressing management to distribute the back pay to the affected Interpreters
this fall, Wilgenkamp said.
It was really a slam dunk, said
Local Vice President Fausto Sabatino. | |