NYC school bus drivers forced to strike for safety, securityNYC school bus drivers forced to strike for safety, security
By Deirdre Griswold
January 17, 2013
Jan. 14, New York. Michael Cordiello, president
of ATU 1181-1061 tells how Mayor Bloomberg
forced the school bus strike.
photo: Mike Otto
New York — More than 8,000 school bus drivers who transport
152,000 pupils in this city every day, many of them children with special
needs, were forced to go on strike Jan. 16 to protect not only their jobs but
also the safety of the children they serve.
Mayor Michael Bloomberg, the Wall Street mogul who owns Bloomberg News, left
the drivers no choice when he and his Board of Education head, Chancellor
Dennis Walcott, refused to negotiate further with Amalgamated Transit Union
Local 1181 over the issue of seniority and job security.
The New York State AFL-CIO, in a statement supporting the bus drivers, says
that “the union’s hand has been forced by Mayor Bloomberg, who
requested bids for contracts without critical safeguards that help ensure our
children’s safety. For the first time in 30 years, the mayor has removed
a requirement that keeps the most qualified, experienced, and skilled drivers
on the job.”
Other information about pickets is available at the New York AFL-CIO’s
site, as well as a petition at nysaflcio.org/safety1st.
This is a struggle against austerity, as well. The city is trying to save
money by giving out contracts to the lowest bidder, without requiring that
drivers with experience and skill handling small children, including those with
disabilities, be kept on the job. It’s a disgrace that in the same city
where Wall Street funnels trillions of dollars into the pockets of the
superrich, the administration claims it can’t find the money to get
children safely to school.
Since this struggle started, the mayor and school board head have tried to
turn parents against the bus drivers’ union. But many parents are
expressing their support for the drivers.
One organization that has been wrestling with the school board over its
complicated bus routes and schedules that have caused children to spend
unnecessary hours en route is Parents to Improve School Transportation.
On the first day of the strike, PIST sent out the following release:
“Parents, families and New York City school children have come forward
to voice their support for the striking school bus drivers and matrons.
“‘As the parents and guardians of NYC school children, we
support the school bus union members who, to protect their careers, have been
forced to strike by the mayor and the DOE,’ said Sara Catalinotto of
Parents to Improve School Transportation.
“Referring to the city’s alternative transportation proposal,
grandparent Margaret DePaula added, ‘Many of us are shocked that our
children and grandchildren as young as 8 years old have come home with
MetroCards in hand.’
“‘The mayor would send children onto trains and buses with no
guides, no seat belts, and none of the assistance they have come to expect from
their school bus drivers and attendants,’ DePaula continued.
‘Everyone knows that most subway stations and taxis are not
wheelchair-accessible. Yet Mr. Bloomberg says he cares more about the children
than the workers do.’
“Catalinotto continued, ‘We strongly doubt the city’s
claim that it is dropping the Employee Protection Provision to raise money for
classrooms. The EPP is a seniority list, ensuring that the most experienced
drivers and matrons will be employed first to transport our children —
many of whom are students with disabilities. Including the EPP in
contracts does not cost the city any extra!’
“Johnnie Stevens, father of a bus student, added, ‘It is also
not true that a court ruling has made the EPP illegal. The ruling the city
keeps referring to applies only to pre-kindergarten companies and involved
contracts that had never before included the EPP. The contracts the city is
trying to change, on the other hand, have included the EPP for 47
years.’
“Stevens continued, ‘We agree with union leaders who have
compared the attack on ATU 1181 with the anti-union campaigns in Ohio and
Michigan. Having bought himself a third term in office, the mayor has no
business standing in the way of job security of drivers — and matrons,
mostly women of color — who transport our children. It is he and the DOE
who are hurting our children by refusing to negotiate fairly with the school
bus drivers.’
“Sharlene Figueroa, mother of three children who ride mini-wagons,
concluded, ‘Corner-cutting by the DOE under mayoral control has already
lowered busing standards. It’s not an accident that we are PIST. Strike
or no strike, we will continue to organize for a School Bus Bill of Rights to
eliminate overcrowded, long routes that are forced on our children (and their
bus crews) every September. Good busing is an aspect of our
children’s educational civil rights.’”
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