retiree Former Local 237 President Carl Haynes Dies
Transcription
retiree Former Local 237 President Carl Haynes Dies
news & views april 2010_1 4/19/10 3:09 pM page 2 retiree news & views a publication of local 237 retiree division • vol. 15 no. 4 • april 2010 Former Local 237 President Carl Haynes Dies C arl Haynes, president of Local 237 from 1993 to 2007 and a member of the executive board that established the Retiree Division thirty years ago, died of a heart attack on April 8 at the age of 76. The funeral was April 14. “Carl Haynes was a giant of labor, yet always remained humble and compassionate during his many years of service,” Local 237 President Greg Floyd said. Floyd told the Chief newspaper that he remembered Haynes for “the calm demeanor in the face of adversity and his patience at the negotiating table. When it looked like there was no hope in sight, he kept a positive outlook,” Floyd said. Retiree Division Director Nancy True said, “Carl loved the retirees. Many of them had been his co-workers at the Housing Authority and participated with him in the 1967 strike. They will not forget how, as president, Carl stood up to repeated demands by the city during contract talks to reduce retiree benefits.” Haynes came to many Retiree Division events and spoke often of the contributions retirees made to building Local 237 and the city of New York. He encouraged the labor movement to take advantage of the experience and commitment of retirees in union drives and election campaigns. With retirees at the 2002 Labor Day parade The son of a railroad worker and a graduate of his hometown college, West Virginia State College, Haynes came to New York and found a job working in the city’s youth services agency in 1956. In 1960 he went to work for NYCHA as a housing assistant. By 1967, he had become chairman of the 600-member housing assistant chapter and was a leader of the only strike in NYCHA’s history, in 1967, which won significant gains for public housing employees. Haynes joined the union staff as a business agent in 1968 and was soon promoted to assistant director and later director of the union’s Housing Division. He became a trustee in 1978 and, in 1983, was elected vice president. He took over the presidency in 1993 after then-President Barry Feinstein was forced out by the government, was elected to a five-year term in 1994, and re-elected in 1999 and 2004. He retired in 2007. Under his leadership, Teamsters Local 237 continued to grow in numbers even as the Giuliani Administration downsized the city’s workforce and squeezed municipal labor unions for significant concessions. The union under Haynes also won significant political and legislative victories, including the defeat of attempts by the Health and Hospitals Corporation to privatize the union’s 800 hospital police officers in 1999 and passage of a state law that hospital police jobs can never be privatized. Haynes also served on the executive boards of many organizations. Haynes is survived by his wife Janice Haynes, a daughter, Leann, a son, Jay, three grandchildren, and one great-grandchild. A Retiree Division retirement reception for Carl Haynes in 2007 The Retiree Division’s annual program to honor Martin Luther King, Jr. in 2007 Haynes’s Career The Retiree Division’s Sunshine Club holiday drive for children of Teamster flood victims in the Midwest in 1997 Retiree Division meeting in Puerto Rico in 2006 Bowling at the special event preceding the annual Florida Retiree Conference in 2002 news & views april 2010_1 4/19/10 3:09 pM page 3 page 2 retiree neWs & vieWs B y now many of you know that the former president of Local 237, Carl Haynes, passed away April 8 of a heart attack. I know many of you worked with Carl at the Housing Authority, where he started out as a housing assistant in 1960, and went out on strike with him in 1967. He was a picket captain. He always spoke proudly of that strike, the only one in the Housing Authority’s history, and a strike that won important improvements for the workers.. Carl Haynes was a leader on many levels. At Local 237, after he came on staff and before he became president in 1993, he was a business agent, assistant director of the Housing Division, director of the Housing Division, and vice president. While president of our local, he served on the executive boards of the New York State AFL-CIO, the New York Central Labor Council, and the Municipal Labor Committee. He was a vice president of the Teamsters International, director of the Teamsters Public Employees Division until last December, one of two Teamsters Union representatives, and the only local president, on the national AFL-CIO Executive Council. He was also one of three union representatives on the executive board of NYCERS W e are all deeply saddened by the passing of Carl Haynes. Just the week before he died of a heart attack he was here at Local 237 to be taped for the video we are preparing for the Retiree Division’s 30th anniversary. Carl was committed to lifelong unionsm. He often said that Local 237 “not only talks the talk, but walks the walk of ‘Retired from work, not from the union.’ As vice president of Local 237, and even more as president after 1993, he was one of our greatest champions, a strong advocate for retirees. He steadfastly resisted attempts by the city to cut retiree health benefits during contract neRETIREE NEWS & VIEWS published monthly, except for July/august combined, by the retiree division of local 237, international brotherhood of teamsters (usps 013028) periodicals postage paid at new York, nY. postmaster: send address changes to retiree news & views, 216 West 14 st., nY, nY 10011 • 212807-0555 • [email protected] • www.local237.org GreGory FloyD rICHArD HeNDerSHoT president vice president rubeN TorreS secretary-treasurer Nancy b. True Managing editor PATrICIA STryker recording secretary Donna ristorucci editor A Message from the President and on the board of the United Way. Despite all these titles, he always remained humble and compassionate. And the members always came first. From the beginning of his presidency, Carl was committed to reshaping Local 237’s executive board and departments to reflect the growing diversity of the membership. He was bold and willing to try new things. He brought new, young blood from the rank and file into leadership of the union. I was a young police captain at Queens Hospital at the time— at 27, the youngest captain in HHC’s history. Less than a year into his presidency, Carl took a chance and brought me onto the staff as deputy director of the peace officer titles in the Citywide Division, and in 1999 he appointed me director of the Citywide Division. I’ll always be grateful for the confidence and faith Carl had in me. I learned a lot about leadership from Carl Haynes By Nancy B. True Director, Retiree Division gotiations. When soaring prescription drug costs compelled the trustees of the Retirees’ Benefit Fund to lower the drug cap, he worked with the trustees to raise it at the first opportunity. When the Retiree Division wanted to participate in the union’s voter registration drives and do phone banking to get out the vote, Carl said, “Go for it.” He supported the idea of retired shop stewards as mentors for new shop stewards, and invited them to them to shop steward training conferences. Carl loved the chance to talk to retirees at Retiree Division programs. I’m sure many of you remember how he spoke from the heart about his experiences as a young man at our annual tribute to Martin Luther King, Jr. several years ago. He was always happy to see retirees, many of them former co-workers, at our meetings april 2010 Carl, especially during our successful struggle to stop the privatization of hospital police and to win passage of a state law to prevent privatization of hospital police once and for all. I continued to learn from him on the Executive Board as a trustee and then secretary-treasurer. I saw his commitment to lifelong unionism and his appreciation for what retirees did to build the union during your working years and your continued support in retirement. Carl was a great labor leader and a great man. We will miss him. • Since the last issue of Retiree News & Views, the health reform bill that we campaigned so hard for has become the law of the land. While not everything we hoped for, it will extend health coverage to tens of millions of uninsured Americans, including those with pre-existing conditions, and improve coverage of millions more, including retirees. Sadly, not a single Republican voted for this law, and Republicans and other opponents have pledged to repeal health reform by defeating legislators who voted for it in mid-term elections in 2010. We will have to campaign hard to prevent this from happening. We can do it. in Florida and Puerto Rico. His advocacy for retirees didn’t stop at our local. Nationally, as a member of the Executive Board of the AFL-CIO, he spoke out for the concept of lifelong unionism and was on the committee that drew up Proposition 13, which called on the labor movement to take advantage of the contributions retirees could make to labor campaigns. In 1997, Carl was thrilled to have Local 237 host Senior Summer, the AFL-CIO pilot program to mobilize retirees for union organizing drives and workers rights campaigns. Many Local 237 retirees participated. When Carl retired in March 2007, many of you contributed recollections about Carl to a “memory book” that we gave him at a reception the Retiree Division held to welcome him membership in the Retiree Division. It was a wonderful tribute, and something he treasured. As we celebrate the 30th anniversary of the Retiree Division, we can take pride in the fact that Carl Haynes was a member of the Executive Board that created the division in 1980. He viewed that as one of the union’s great achievements. news & views april 2010_1 4/19/10 3:09 pM page 4 april 2010 retiree neWs & vieWs page 3 RETIREES MARK WOMEN’S HISTORY MONTH Author of Sisters in the Brotherhoods W Adeboye Subuloye with students at the School for Handicapped Children in Iseyin, Nigeria. Note he is wearing the Retiree Division’s “Retired from work, not from the union” button. “I wear it everywhere I go,” Subuloye said. Adeboye Subuloye with children on a Sunday visit to a university science laboratory A woman surrounded by neighborhood children fills her container with water at no cost at the community’s new, $2,000 water facility. A large plaque above the spigot reads in part: “Water and Walkway Facilities for the use of Humanity, Provided by Adeboye and Risikat Foundation.” Adeboye Subuloye visits an elderly woman who receives assistance from the foundation. Subuloye said, “Some of the elderly can’t do anything. We send people to visit them, clean their homes, wash their clothes. We give them beans and rice. We even have barbers come to their homes.” A Retiree Brings Hope to Nigerians A mid the turmoil in Nigeria, there is a bright spot in the town of Iseyin in the southwestern part of the country: the Adeboye & Risikat Foundation—and it was created by Local 237 retiree Adeboye Subuloye and his wife, Risikat. Subuloye is a Yoruban prince, the greatgreat grandson of a slave who was adopted into the royal family of the Yoruba tribe. He, his wife, and their three younger children came to the United States in 1998 after Subuloye won the green card lottery the year before, and settled in Ft. Green, Brooklyn. He was hired as a campus security assistant by CUNY Law School in Flushing, Queens, and joined Local 237. When he retired last May at the age of 61, he returned to Nigeria to set up the Adeboye & Risikat Foundation, traveling back and forth between the two countries. “It was my dream to come to the United States, then go back home to help physically challenged children” Subuloye told Retiree News & Views last month. He had come to the Retiree Division office for assistance with his benefits the week before, and returned with articles about him from CUNY Law School’s staff and alumni newsletters, photographs, and charts illustrating the fruits of the Adeboye & Risikat Foundation. “I got this way from my parents,” Subuloye explained. “When I was little, my father took me to markets at night and gave me money to give to the poor.” He is also motivated by his wife, who is blind. During his years as a campus security assistant, Subuloye sent money home—his own, along with donations from family, friends, and co-workers—to support programs for physically disabled children, the blind, lepers, and others. U.S. money goes much further in Nigeria,” Subuloye said. The foundation’s list of “What We Provide” includes driving children free of charge to and from school, organizing trips and excursion programs for primary and secondary school students, administration of the school for the physically challenged in Iseyin, free transportation for physically challenged children and aged people and for law enforcement personnel on the streets, cleaning the homes of senior citizens and doing their laundry, donating clothing and food to those in need, and youth counseling and mediation. Subuloye credits Local 237 with teaching him skills needed to start the foundation. “I attended retirement planning seminars in the fall and the spring. I learned how to organize myself to be able to do what I want to do. With the knowledge I got from the union, it was easy for me to start the foundation,” he said. “I wear my Teamsters button everywhere I go.” e all know about Rosie the Riveter, the symbol of women who went into the factories to do the work during World War II when the men went to war, but we know a lot less about “Rosie’s daughters,” the generation of women who have entered traditionally male jobs since the passage of the 1964 Civil Rights Act, which included clauses making discrimination against women illegal. These are the women Jane Latour writes about in her book Sisters in the Brotherhoods, which she talked about last month at the Retiree Division’s program celebrating Women’s History Month. Latour, a former Teamster—she worked in a UPS shop in New Jersey years ago—and now an associate editor at DC 37’s Public Employee Press, began interviewing women in 1989 for a simple brochure, but she soon realized that she had the makings of a book. Published in 2008, Sisters in the Brotherhoods tells about the struggles of 24 women who broke the gender barrier to get jobs as ironworkers, plumbers, stationary engineers, elevator mechanics, carpenters, electricians, firefighters, truck drivers, and other blue-collar jobs in New York City in the 1970s. One of the women interviewed was a Teamster truck driver. They told me to sit behind the wheel, then told me, “Just drive,” she said. Olivia Majette, a retired assistant housing manager, asked why women wanted those kinds of jobs. “For the money,” was Latour’s first reason. “These jobs paid well, and they needed money to support their families, especially as the number of single mothers grew. But also, after the Civil Rights and Women’s movements of the 60s, laws changed, opening new opportunities, and somebody had the walk through the door. These women were pioneers. They wanted to get out of the box, get a skill, learn a craft, take on new challenges.” Local 237 Recording Secretary Patricia Stryker also spoke, and recalled experiences she encountered with sexism as a lobbyist. “Women have to speak up,” Stryker said. ”No one wants to share power, so we have to grab it.” Author Jane Latour signs copies of her book sisters in the brotherhood for retirees Bernice Judge and Olivia Majette. Every copy was sold. news & views april 2010_1 4/19/10 3:09 pM page 1 page 4 Local 237 on Radio, TV Local 237 has taken its mission to the airwaves. Tune in to hear President Greg Floyd discuss issues of importance to working families and retirees with top newsmakers. Reaching Out with Greg Floyd, a half-hour radio show on WWRL–AM 1600, is broadcast every second and fourth Saturday of the month at 3 p.m. Past guests have included Comptroller John Liu, Public Advocate Bill de Blasio. NYC Police Commissioner Ray Kelly, U.S. Senator Kirsten Gillibrand, NYCHA Chairman John Rhea, and Teamsters President James P. Hoffa. Video highlights are available on Local 237’s web site, www.local237.org. LOCAL 237: On the Air is our new cable– TV series, available to all New York City cable–TV subscribers. Several shows have already been broadcast. Remaining air times and channels are: Staten Island Community Television (CTV) Time Warner Ch.34 and Verizon Ch. 34: Monday, April 19, at 8 p.m.; Tuesday, April 27, at 10 p.m. Bronxnet Cablevision Ch. 67 and Verizon Ch. 33 Tuesdays at 7 p.m.; Thursdays at 8 p.m.; Fridays at 7 p.m. Manhattan Neighborhood Network (MNN) Tuesday, May 4, at 6:30 p.m. on Time Warner Ch. 34, RCN Ch. 82 and Verizon Ch. 33, Friday, April 16, at 9:30 p.m. on Time Warner Ch. 34, Verizon Ch. 34 and RCN Ch. 82 Brooklyn Community Access (BCAT): Time Warner Ch. 35, Cablevision Ch. 68, Verizon Ch. 43 and RCN Ch. 83 Tuesday, April 20, at 6:30 p.m. For more information, check www.local237.org. Check Out Medicare’s Redesigned Web Site www.medicare.gov It’s clean and readable. The home page has links to the most frequently used services, plus five dropdown menus that lead to anything you need to know from Medicare. retiree neWs & vieWs april 2010 Retiree Personal Notes Congratulations to Joseph Hayes on becoming a great-grandfather for the second time. The newest addition, a boy, Naseem Zyair Kader, was born March 17 to Hayes’s granddaughter, Naquesya, who is also the mother of his first great-grandchild, a girl, and the daughter of his son, Joseph, Jr. . . . Birthday wishes and special greetings to Manny Kamaiko, who turned 98 last month . . . Happy 65th birthday to retired SSA Isabella Foster. She will soon be moving to Birmingham, Alabama, her hometown. * * * The multitalented Pauline Rosenbaum recited poetry in a program sponsored by her downtown Manhattan neighborhood association last month. She chose mostly women poets, in honor of Women’s History Month, but she threw in a bit of Ogden Nash, as well . . . NYCHA retiree Elvira Rivera proudly attended the graduation of her son, Juan Carret, from NYCHA’s and the union’s joint heating plant technician training program Floyd Addresses NYC Alliance for Retired Americans L ocal 237 President Greg Floyd was a special guest speaker at the March membership meeting of the New York City Alliance for Retired Americans. Floyd noted that government leaders want to strip away health coverage from retirees to solve budget deficits and balance the budget. “Union leaders who would bargain away your coverage and benefits for a few additional dollars for working members are shortsighted, “ he said. “They don’t realize that the active workers, all of us, will be retirees someday.” Referring to elections, Floyd warned the audience, “When a candidate campaigns on taxcuts, ask, ‘How are they going to pay for it?’ As you in this room know, it could be by cutting your health coverage.” Local 237 President Greg Floyd addresses the New York City Alliance for Retired Americans. Seated up front, l-r, are NYCARA treasurer JayCee Holden, co-chair George Altomare, and chairperson Stuart Leibowitz Local 237 retiree Doris Welch, a member of the NYCARA executive board, introduced Floyd. How to Continue Receiving Teamsters National Magazine T he Teamsters International in Washington, DC announced in the March issue of the Teamsters magazine that it will no longer automatically mail the magazine to retirees, because of the expense involved. It said that Teamster retirees who would like to receive future issues should contact their locals. Write, call, or e-mail the Retiree Division with your name and address at Teamsters Local 237, 216 West 14th Street, New York, NY 10011; 212-807-0555; [email protected]. RETIREE NEWS & VIEWS 216 West 14 Street New York, NY 10011 Periodicals postage paid at New York, NY All kinds of information is available, including a Physician and Other Health Care Providers database searchable by state and city, comparison of hospitals and nursing equipment, and other health information. You can easily register for “My Medicare,” which pulls all your personal information related to claims, health and drug plans, providers, and more. AFFILIATE OF THE Alliance for Retired Americans april 2010