News from TWU Local 100

Train Operator Reinaldo Lopez and his wife.
Train Operator Reinaldo Lopez and his wife.

Union Wins Fight as NYCT Reverses Stance on Tragic Birth

FEBRUARY 27 -- CBS News is reporting that New York City Transit, which initially denied contractual two weeks' paternity leave for Train Operator Reinaldo Lopez after his son was stillborn, has reversed course after the union intervened. See the story here.

Here's the video transcript:

NEW YORK (CBSNewYork) — A devastated Metropolitan Transportation Authority worker says the agency denied him paternity leave after his partner had a stillbirth. The union fought on his behalf for a month, and on Wednesday afternoon the agency announced a change.

They have already disassembled the crib, but still have not made the time to properly let go of their stillborn son’s ashes. Elyse Ortiz had a stillbirth on Feb. 2, eight months into her pregnancy. She is on maternity leave from a private sector job, but her domestic partner, train operator Reinaldo Lopez, said the MTA told him, “You get three days bereavement and we’ll take it from there.” “One of those days was spent with me in the hospital all day,” Ortiz told CBS2’s Lisa Rozner.

Lopez contacted Transport Workers Union Local 100. The union contract reads “upon the birth of a child” a worker is “entitled to two weeks fully paid maternity/paternity leave.” “They told him that because the baby was dead he wasn’t entitled to paternal leave,” Ortiz said. TWU rep Eric Loegel said MTA Labor Relations told him the time was meant for bonding with a baby. Attorney Rania Sedhom has represented employers and explained. “While the law doesn’t discuss stillborn babies … but sometimes you do have to make exceptions for horrible scenarios,” Sedhom said.

In this case, the union helped reorganize Lopez’s vacation and sick time to get him two weeks off, but still pleaded with the MTA to reconsider. “It’s hands down the hardest thing I’ve ever been through,” Lopez said. “If your mind is not in the right place, you know, you shouldn’t be operating a train.” Former MTA Chairman Peter Kalikow told CBS2 he even called current chairman Pat Foye.

“Have a heart for a couple weeks. What’s the difference? It was cruel and he’s not a cruel guy,” Kalikow said. On Wednesday afternoon, Foye said the MTA changed course. “He’s going to get parental leave. I think everybody on our side was moved by our colleague’s situation,” Foye said.

Moving forward, the MTA said others in this unfortunate situation will get the same benefit. The union said it’s meeting with the MTA in the next few months to also incorporate the state’s paid family leave law into its contract.

Tuskegee Airmen Honored at Namesake Depot

FEBRUARY 17, 2020 – The Tuskegee Airmen – a now legendary group of African-American pilots who served in WWII with the 332nd Fighter Group and the 477th Bombardment Group and then became TWU Local 100 members after joining NYCT, were honored in a ceremony at the Bus Depot named for them in Harlem.
The ceremony was set up by the NYC Transit Veterans Employee Resource Group.

Also on hand were TWU Local 100 Veterans Committee Vice Chair Ron Gregory and Recording Secretary Joe DiPaola. The Black History Month event also featured former Congressman Charlie Rangel, whose good friend and former Manhattan Borough President Percy Sutton was one of the Airmen. Formerly known as the 100th Street Bus Depot, the facility was renamed the Tuskegee Airmen Bus Depot in 2012.

Here are the Airmen who subsequently worked for transit:
Reginald T. Brewster – Joined the NYCBOT as a clerk in 1948 while attending law school.
Victor A. Collymore – Worked for NYCBOT from 1947 to 1952.
Conrad A. DeSandies – Worked for NYC Transit in 1959 as a maintainer’s helper.
Harry R. Dickenson – Worked for NYC Transit from 1984 to 1989 as deputy chief engineer.
John R. Freeman – Retired as a manager, Operating Authority (OA) Surface.
Noel R. Harris – Began his career at NYCBOT in 1948 as an auditor for the Staten Island Depot.
Oscar W. Hawkins – Joined NYCBOT in 1949, holding titles of towerman, train dispatcher, train master, superintendent of Operations and Transportation before moving to Labor Relations in 1971. He retired from NYC Transit in 1987.
Austin D. McKenzie – Retired as an assistant train dispatcher in 1970.
Maury M. Reid, Jr. – Joined NYCBOT in 1948 as a railroad clerk. He transferred to Rapid Transit Operations and became the director of the RTO Training School, retiring as an assistant director, Office of Labor Relations.
Percy E. Sutton – Worked for NYCBOT from 1948 to 1953 as a subway conductor, token clerk, and waiter while attending law school.
Victor W. Terrelonge – Joined NYCBOT as a trolley motorman out of Coney Island. He advanced through the ranks of NYC Transit, retiring in 1984 as a safety coordinator. From 1984 to 2003, he served as a safety consultant to the Legal Department.
Fred O. Wilson – Joined NYCBOT in 1945 as a street car operator and retired as a bus operator from the Jamaica Bus Depot in 1

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Your Retro Pay and Deferred Compensation

Management is in the process of distributing a Memorandum  to all TA, OA and MTA Bus members covered by the recent 4-year contract with the MTA.  The Memorandum explains options for your deferred compensation plan (if you have one) on your retroactive pay.
 
Here are two takeaways from the Memorandum concerning the MTA Deferred Compensation Plan (401 (k) and/or 457:
 
• If you do nothing, your normal percentage deferral election amounts will be applied to the retroactive pay.  So, for example, if you currently defer 5 percent of pay into your 401 (k) or 457, then that same 5 percent will be deferred into your plan from your retroactive pay.
 
• If you wish to defer a larger percentage (a good option for many) into your plan, you can do so by logging into the BSC Self-Service Portal at www.mymta.info.
Retroactive pay is coming in April 2020.

Local 100 Sponsors Black History Vignettes on 1010 WINS

If you are a 1010 WINS listener, you will probably hear one or more of a series of vignettes produced by the station, and sponsored by TWU Local 100, in celebration of Black History Month. Here are two of the series of spots that will be running regularly for the entire month of February. Listen to two profiles -- NYS Attorney General Tish James and Black historian Elizabeth Meaders here.

Recording Secretary LaTonya Crisp Honored in Black History Month Salute to Labor Leaders

The New York Daily News has profiled TWU Local 100 Recording Secretary LaTonya Crisp in an article celebrating Black labor union leaders. The piece, which ran on February 5, profiles her along with seven other prominent Black labor union executives in the New York area. You can read the profile here. In the article, Sister Crisp discusses her longtime advocacy for women's empowerment dating from her days as Fresh Pond Depot Chair (pictured), including fighting pregnancy discrimination and harassment on the job, obtaining new benefits for mothers, and supporting our Local 100 widows and orphans.

Lincoln’s Birthday Swap with Day After Thanksgiving

As a result of our recent contract with the MTA, the swap of Lincoln’s Birthday for the day after Thanksgiving is in effect for 2020.  See the attached Bulletin from New York City Transit.

RTO Officers (l-r) Raul Lugo, VP Eric Loegel, and Zach Arcidiacono mark the end of the "rubber room."
RTO Officers (l-r) Raul Lugo, VP Eric Loegel, and Zach Arcidiacono mark the end of the "rubber room."

"Rubber Room" is Gone for RTO and MABSTOA

FEBRUARY 6, 2020 -- The "pilot program" in RTO and MABSTOA, which consigned union members to a "rubber room" at PS 248 in Brooklyn, officially ended today at a meeting attended by RTO officers at 2 Broadway, and led by Administrative Vice President Nelson Rivera. Officially called the "differential assessment program," it was unilaterally initiated by Transit in 2016. The program required injured workers to report for two weeks of "light duty" work before they could go out on workers' compensation. If the worker did not attend, Transit would withhold contractual "differential pay."

Local 100 Members Front and Center at Superbowl Parade in Kansas City

IB ImageBelieve it or not, TWU Local 100 members are playing a key role in today's big Super Bowl Champions parade in Kansas City.  It turns out that parade organizers contracted with Big Bus Chicago for 10 open top buses to carry the victorious Kansas City Chiefs players and coaches and families.  And yes, TWU Local 100 members are the Operators, and union tour guides will ride up top with the players and families for safety purposes.  The union organized Big Bus in New York, Chicago and other big cities over the past couple of years. Here are photos of the workers gathering early in the morning for the festivities, and the buses lined up and ready to go.  Congrats to the Chiefs and to TWU Local 100 members from Chicago.

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Union to Hold Census Job Fair on Tuesday, February 11 at 10 AM

America takes a census of its people once every ten years -- and the number of people in each state counts for a lot. It is the basis for federal grants as well as political power. We are holding a Census Job Fair on February 11th in conjunction with the NYC Central Labor Council at the Union Hall at 195 Montague Street, 3rd Floor, in Brooklyn from 10 AM to 2PM. Census workers receive excellent pay, from $28 per hour, and those hours are flexible. Representatives from the US Census Bureau will be on hand to describe the job and recruit workers. This is open to all comers -- including Local 100 members and their families. For more information, click here for the flyer.

Contract Implementation Timetable

The MTA Board approved our contract on Thursday, January 23rd.
Wage increases will be effective as follows:

MABSTOA
New wage rates in effect on March 4, 2020
Retro payments will be made on April 29, 2020

Transit Authority (TA)
New wage rates in effect on March 5, 2020
Retro payments will be made on April 30, 2020

MTA Bus
New wage rates in effect on March 12, 2020
Retro payments will be made on April 23, 2020

Health Care:
New Dental Benefits effective immediately
Emergency Room co-pay in effect June 1, 2020
New Prescription Drug fee schedule in effect June 1, 2020

Miscellaneous Items
All OT Caps now lifted
Employee pass (Express Bus):
    Management in process of implementation, details forthcoming
RTO
    P.S. 248 Pilot Program (Rubber Room) will be eliminated in February 2020
Lincoln’s birthday has been swapped for the day after Thanksgiving as a regular AVA day.

We will keep you updated as implementation continues.

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