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Public
Employee Press Pioneer
labor organizer Vincent Scovazzo dies
As news of Vincent Scovazzos death on Sept. 5 spread
through District Council 37 and its national union, AFSCME, people took time to
recall his many contributions.
Scovazzo was a pioneer union builder in
the early days of DC 37 and in the campaigns that organized the states of Connecticut
and Ohio for the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees.
The
passing of Vincent Scovazzo reminds us of the great contributions our pioneers
made as they built this mighty union, said District Council 37 Executive
Director Lillian Roberts.
In the early 1960s, Scovazzo recruited Al Viani,
former Local 371 president and DC 37 negotiations director, into the union, encouraging
him to become active and mentoring him as he would many others.
As a staff
rep, Scovazzo represented all of the locals in the Parks Dept. and organized the
clerical-administrative employees unit at the New York City Transit Authority.
He
served as assistant director of the White Collar Division and starting in 1967,
guided the newly formed Clerical-Administrative Division through its period of
tremendous growth.
New York, Connecticut, Ohio Scovazzo
lent his extraordinary talents to organizing Connecticut and Ohio workers into
the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees.
To
know him was to love him, said former Local 1320 President and Blue Collar
Division Director John Toto, who worked closely with Scovazzo at DC 37 and in
Ohio.
Vinnie was a unique kind of guy ingenious, intuitive
and inventive and he never ran out of ideas or ways to tackle a problem
or situation, said Toto.
He called
me Lad Now AFSCME Council 31 Regional Director,
Buddy Maupin, who started as a hotheaded militant, in Ohio, recalled
Maupin.
Vinnie was my supervisor. He called me Lad. Hed
put his arm around me and say, Youre doing great. Now and then you
have to slow down a bit. I loved Vinny but never found the time to tell
him. Now hes gone. So I want to tell his family.
Scovazzo is
survived by his widow, Miriam, and daughter, Laurie, of Long Island. | |