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Public
Employee Press DC
37 speaks out on workplace violence rules
When rage erupts in city workplaces, public sector
employees become targets. Too many DC 37 members in too many job titles have their
personal horror stories about the violence visited upon them while they did their
jobs.
At a Nov. 20 state Labor Dept. hearing, unionists spoke out on the
merits and demerits of a standard proposed for implementing the new workplace
violence legislation that state lawmakers passed after a lengthy union campaign.
We
appreciate that threatening behavior and verbal abuse are included in the definition
of violence, said DC 37 Safety and Health Director Lee Clarke.However,
we are concerned that it does not specifically include domestic violence, which
is a significant factor in injury and death on the job, particularly for female
workers.
The standard is designed to solicit input about workplace
practices from both labor and management. New YorkCity Safety Chief Sylvia Pryce
argued that the standard would impose an undue burden on management.
She
said the law already establishes an appropriate level of employee and union
participation and pointed out that employees can file complaints.
The
new standard for subway track safety has been cited as a successful model for
preventing workplace injury and death precisely because the union lends its expertise
to the mutual effort to save lives. The citys opposition to the workplace
violence standard seems to center on a reluctance to share power, said union safety
experts.
Local 1549 Workplace Violence Coordinator Kenneth Mulligan testified
against requiring workers to submit a written notification to management regarding
imminent danger. Mulligans extensive files document in gruesome detail the
many attacks that have resulted in serious injuries to clerical-administrative
employees at HRA work sites.
Juvenile Center Employees Local 1457 President
Alex Parker testified on behalf of his members. When you work in a juvenile
residential incarceration facility, violence is a constant threat and all too
often a reality, he said. Both residents and staff get hurt in almost daily
clashes.
Standard falls short Clarke
commended the Labor Dept. for drafting the standard, but she voiced her disappointment
that it does not cover Dept. of Education employees.
Our school aides,
cafeteria workers, and others often complain of a system that does little to protect
them from assault, said Clarke. A comprehensive, effective standard,
she said, could help our members feel that day-to-day violence and threats
of violence are no longer an accepted part of city jobs. | |