SEPTEMBER 12 -- For 31 years, Adelina “Lena” Carson-Leath called transit her home.
First Carson-Leath performed the grunt work of terminal cleaning, handling what’s left on the trains after they reach the last stop, then she got under the trains — working with equipment that was already old when she was born and needed to be pampered. She rose from CTA to Car Inspector when women in that title comprised less than one percent of the CED workforce. Understanding how unions level the playing field and contribute to positive change, she ran for the TWU Local 100 Executive Board and won, and then was voted chair of Pitkin Barn by her co-workers, holding that position for 13 years.
On her birthday, August 1, she retired at 55 with the distinction of having been a trailblazer in the transit system, hailed by co-workers for her decades of service.
During a celebration for her birthday and retirement, Carson-Leath was presented with a silver union jacket personalized with her name by Syed Husain, the new Pitkin Barn Chair. Also on hand was Local 100 Recording Secretary Shirley Martin, another trailblazer from Car Equipment, and a former VP. Longtime CED activist and officer Joe Campbell, who now works as an educator in the Union Hall, congratulated her on her transit and union career. Division Chair Roberto Ruiz and former VP Rodney Glenn were also present.
Coming to Transit in her 20s, Carson-Leath was comfortable around machines and in a sterotypically male world.
“At a young age I worked at my uncle’s maintenance shop. He taught me and my three brothers how to repair cars and other machines," she remembered.
Read more