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Public Employee
Press
Four Local 2627 members at HHC win
arbitrations
Three Local 2627 members at the Health and Hospitals Corp.
recently won arbitration cases because they were assigned to supervisory
responsibilities without the proper pay. The impartial arbitrator also
concluded that HHC was not paying a fourth member correctly.
The separate arbitration decisions issued Sept. 19 call for the four members
of Electronic Data Processing Employees Local 2627 to receive awards such
as a title change, additional compensation for working out of title and
the salary adjustment.
The grievance winners were computer workers James Gerst and Les Hurd of
Jacobi Medical Center in the Bronx and Donald Gregory and Rudolph Francis
of Metropolitan Hospital in Manhattan.
“Our members worked closely with the union to document their experiences
so we could develop strong arguments to back their cases,” Local
2627 President Edward W. Hysyk said.
“Their persistence paid off,” said Rep Marianela Santana, who
crafted the members’ grievances. Assistant General Counsel Alan Brown
argued the cases.
Gregory said his arbitration decision, which changes his title from Computer
Associate Level 2 (Software) to Computer Associate Level 2 (Operations),
means a pay increase of about $7,000. He expects to receive about $15,000
in back pay, including a night differential, to cover nearly two years
of out-of-title work. Francis, will have his salary corrected to over
$50,000, his proper minimum as a Computer Associate Level 2 (Operations),
retroactive to Dec. 31, 2003.
The arbitrator ordered HHC to pay Hurd the difference between Computer
Associate Level 2 (Operations), and Level 3 from Dec. 1, 2003, through
Oct. 12, 2004. Hurd estimates the amount at $10,000. Gerst was awarded
the difference between the two titles from Dec. 1, 2003, to the present.
In interviews, the members expressed their frustration about management’s
failure to recognize the importance of their work. They felt that only
through the grievance process could they vindicate their contention that
the complexity of their computer work deserved better compensation.
“If it wasn’t for the union, we wouldn’t have been able
to do this,” Gregory said. “Without the union, a lot of employees
would be exploited.”
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