|
Public Employee Press
Highway Supervisors eye huge raises
Supervisor Highway Repairers are pushing for pay increases
of possibly as much as $20,000 and back pay awards of $80,000 to $100,000
as part of a struggle that began six years ago and could go on much longer.
Their heightened hopes are based on the Comptrollers finding
which was recently upheld by an administrative law judge that their
pay is significantly lower than similar private sector workers.
This is what unionism is all about, said President Mickey
McFarland of Dept. of Transportation Supervisory Employees Local 1157.
The local awaits the Comptrollers pending final determination establishing
the prevailing rate of pay for their title. The city has the right to
challenge the determination in court, a time-consuming process.
Under Section 220 of the state Labor Law, rather than accepting a negotiated
economic agreement, certain blue collar public employees through their
union can seek an order from the Comptroller requiring the city to adjust
their pay to reflect the prevailing rate for their work in the private
sector.
Falling behind
Feeling that they had fallen far behind what road building firms pay,
Local 1157 members voted to file a complaint with the Comptroller to seek
the prevailing wages for their work. McFarland praised his members for
sticking together while going without raises as their prevailing-rate
claim proceeded for several years.
It has been very hard for our members, McFarland said. We
have families. We have mortgages. Heating costs have doubled and food
is up. But the city has not been paying us what we are legally entitled
to, so we were ready to make the sacrifice.
OATH judge upholds Comptroller
In January, Administrative Law Judge Kevin F. Casey of the city Office
of Administrative Trials and Hearings rejected a city challenge and upheld
the Comptrollers preliminary finding that the pay of Local 1157
members falls short of their private-sector counterparts. As PEP went
to press, the Comptroller was readying a final determination.
We have done a lot of work on Local 1157s case, and we are
very happy we got a favorable decision from the ALJ, said DC 37
Research and Negotiations Director Dennis Sullivan. We are eager
to receive the final determination, and we will proceed from there.
The city could still go to court to overturn the Comptrollers determination
or could seek to negotiate further with the union; the union can go to
court to enforce the determination.
The dispute dates back to March 2000, when McFarland filed a labor law
complaint, formally notifying the Comptroller that the local would exercise
its right to seek a wage survey, which it did later that year. From the
beginning, Leonard Polletta of the DC 37 Legal Dept. worked closely with
McFarland at every step of the case.
This victory shows that DC 37 is very serious about enforcing our
members rights under the prevailing-rate law, said Polletta.
He helped prepare two Local 1157 members, Lou Vaccaro and Marc Reed, to
testify at the OATH hearing, and he questioned them before the ALJ to
bolster the Comptrollers findings.
We will continue to pursue prevailing-rate issues relentlessly on
behalf of our members, as we have in this case, said DC 37 General
Counsel Eddie Demmings.
Demmings noted that many of the DC 37 locals that include prevailing-rate
workers are now seeking wage surveys from the Comptroller, with the assistance
of the DC 37 Legal and Research departments.
Mickey deserves a lot of praise here, because no one was willing
to take this on before, said Local 1157s Mike Perry.
It can be tough to raise a family in New York on $50,000,
said Perry, noting that many local members have gone more than five years
without a raise. My second child is starting Catholic school next
year, and it will cost us $500 a month. One of our members has four kids,
and its difficult for him to support his family.
Perry said that although they knew that the case could take a long time,
members were committed to sticking it out because of the principle of
the matter.
This isnt just about a raise, Reed said. This
is about enforcing what we are legally entitled to.
| |