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Public
Employee Press Profile in
Public Service Sallie Robertson leaves her
corner after 30 years
By ALFREDO ALVARADO
The corner of Nostrand
Avenue and Maple Street in Crown Heights is one of the busiest intersections in
Brooklyn. Fire trucks with their sirens blaring use Maple as their designated
street to cut across Nostrand.
School Crossing Guard Sallie Robertson has
been doing her job on that corner crossing children in front of St. Francis of
Assisi Elementary School for 30 years. Despite the danger, parents like Veronica
Martin feel safe when the Local 372 member is on the job. When shes
here we dont worry, said Martin, a mother of three children.
Its
not just Martin who feels that way, but most of the community as well. And they
showed their appreciation for Robertsons dedication on June 14 when the
Midwood Block Association held a farewell party for her. Robertson was retiring
the following week.
You have to be a people person to do this job,
said Robertsons colleague, Fay Mathurin, who works the next street. Sallie
has that. And shes always telling me about the union meetings, she
said.
For Robertson, who has commuted from her home in Hollis, Queens,
for most of the three decades, the satisfaction she feels on the job is deep.
I love my work, she said. Even in the cold weather.
What
does Robertson look forward to during her retirement years?
I plan
on working with the unions Retirees Association, said the proud member
of Dept. of Education Employees Local 372, who was also a shop steward for 20
years and is still a member of several committees.
Sallie Robertson
is one of the hardest-working union activists in the 21st century, said
Local 372 and DC 37 President Veronica-Montgomery Costa. She will be sorely
missed, but Im sure that a dedicated activist like Sallie never fully retires
from union service.
After 35 years on the job (she worked at another
school before coming to St. Francis of Assisi Elementary School), Robertson has
plenty of advice for rookies. You have to have your own style, and keep
your eyes on the kids, she said.
Attached to the schools fence,
the children that Robertson kept her eye on created a big sign with farewell messages
to the woman who made one of the busiest streets in the neighborhood into one
of the safest.
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