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Public Employee Press
Local 1501 trains stewards in grievance handling The new contract, bargaining and representing
and empowering members were among the wide range of topics covered at Wildlife
Conservation Society Local 1501’s first shop steward training held March
9-11 in Rye Brook, N.Y. “We provided the training to bring our stewards
and officers up to speed and onto the same page,” said Local 1501 President
Marty Zybura. The local represents Maintainers, Attendants, Keepers, Food Service
staff and Gardeners at the Coney Island Aquarium and the zoos in Brooklyn, Queens,
Central Park and the Bronx. Zybura planned the retreat with DC 37 White
Collar Division Director Mike Riggio and the Education Fund. “At
first members just listened, but gradually they opened up and participated more,”
said Riggio. “They presented issues they encounter at work, and by the end,
everybody was ecstatic about what they learned.” DC 37 Ed Fund Coordinator
Larry Kelley taught the local’s 25 stewards and officers about the importance
of listening and communicating when investigating grievances and representing
members. Participants also learned the local’s history, and the roles AFSCME
and DC 37 play. “One highlight was learning the investigative process
of grievances,” said Marcy Farley, a Sr. Wild Animal Keeper and shop steward
at Queens Zoo. Investigating grievances
“As shop stewards and elected officials, we are on equal footing with management
when investigating a grievance,” she said. “We are responsible for empowering
our members and getting them to understand they have rights and the union will
back them up.” “It was great to get information directly from
DC 37,” Zybura said. “We benefited from their expertise,” which
reinforced union solidarity, he said. “What these guys learned
in two days took me two years of trial-and-error to figure out,” said Vice
President Bob Herkommer, a 17-year Wildlife Conservation Society veteran.
The local plans future training sessions to immerse newcomers and retrain
others. “To build on this, we’d like to plan satellite refresher courses
at the workplace,” Zybura said. “Each year management gets
more and more sophisticated, and we have to be prepared. We can’t afford
to go in as novices,” said Zybura. “There’s too much at stake.”
— Diane S. Williams | |