VSEA issued the following press release this afternoon:
Vermont State Employees’ Association (VSEA) members working for the Department for Children and Families (DCF) in the St. Albans Family Services Division office are applauding VOSHA’s decision this week to cite DCF for a “serious” health and safety violation, assessing a fine of $14,500.
The citation’s “type of violation”: Each employer shall furnish to each of his or her employees employment and a place of employment which are free from recognized hazards that are causing or are likely to cause death or significant physical harm to his or her employees; and the employer shall comply with safety and health standards promulgated under the VOSHA code.
The citation’s violation: The employer did not furnish employment and a place of employment free from recognized hazards that were causing or likely to cause death or serious physical harm, in that Family Services employees were exposed to the hazard of physical assaults by clients that could exhibit violent behavior during visitations within the employee’s office space, during client transports, and due to the lack of documented safety training.
“VSEA members working in DCF offices across Vermont have been voicing their concerns about their personal safety and health—and their colleagues’ safety—for years now, so this VOSHA DCF citation is certainly welcome and will hopefully improve protections for Family Services Division employees across the state,” explains VSEA President Aimee Towne, herself a DCF employee. “Frontline employees are performing critical public services every day across Vermont, and we all deserve to feel safe while at work.”
Our union colleagues who work at the Vermont State University (Castleton, NVU-Johnson, NVU-Lyndon, and Vermont Tech) are facing disastrous decisions that threaten staffing, enrollment, and the future of public higher education in our state.
These cuts include taking most of the books out of the libraries and cuts to athletics–which is leading to an unprecedented number of students looking to transfer, and the number of prospective students dropping precipitously.
The crisis stems from the Vermont legislature’s demand that VTSU cut $5 million / year from its budget for the next four years.
These cuts can be rescinded by the legislature–but they need to hear from you.
Click here to save our campuses for our students and our communities
VSEA video legislative update from VSEA Executive Director Steve Howard. Watch on YouTube.
Learn more about Medicare Advantage here.
Read about how you can help save the Vermont State Colleges Libraries here.
You can find your legislator’s contact information here.
VSEA is encouraging members to join this important rally, which is being sponsored by Let’s Grow Kids. Here’s what it’s all about:
Three out of five of Vermont youngest kids don’t have access to the child care they need. This affects their development, it affects their parents, and it affects employers who can’t fill open positions. But we can change that.
On April 12, Vermonters from every corner of the state will meet on the State House lawn to rally for accessible, affordable child care. Our lawmakers are currently working on a child care solution and they need your support. It’s going to take courage from all of us to get this over the finish line.
Join VSEA at the Courage to Care Rally as we support our lawmakers in passing the child care solution. RSVP today!
VSEA video legislative update from VSEA Executive Director Steve Howard. Watch on YouTube.
Learn more about Medicare Advantage here.
Read about how you can help save the Vermont State Colleges Libraries here.
You can find your legislator’s contact information here.
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