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Public Employee Press
By ALFREDO ALVARADO Los Artesanos de la Plena, a folkloric troupe led by Local 375 member Franky Velez and Local 420 member Carmelo Santos, kicked off the union's annual Puerto Rican Heritage Week celebration Nov. 17 with traditional Puerto Rican music at the ribbon-cutting ceremony. "Preserving our heritage and cultivating our future, is the theme for our celebration this week," said Latino Heritage Committee Chair and Grievance Rep Carmen Flores, as she cut the ribbon with DC 37 Executive Director Henry Garrido. At the opening Garrido pointed out the important economic ties between New York City and Puerto Rico and praised the many DC 37 volunteers who played a decisive role in the successful organizing drive in Puerto Rico by DC 37's national union, the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees. "We should be proud of the role we played in winning collective bargaining for those workers in Puerto Rico," Garrrido said. Servidores Publicos Unidos, AFSCME's Council 95, represents more than 20,000 government employees. The Latino Heritage Committee also organized a presentation by Jaime Estades, executive director of the Latino Leadership Institute. Estades spoke about the influence of Puerto Rican and Latin American political exiles who lived in New York City during the late 1800s and gathered support for the independence of Puerto Rico and against Spanish rule in Cuba. Estades told participants that those activists designed the Puerto Rican flag and that New York State's first unemployment insurance and minimum wage legislation was introduced by labor activist Oscar Garcia Rivera, the first Puerto Rican elected public official in the United States, who served in the state Assembly from 1937 to 1940.
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