Weekly News From Your Union: January 15, 2016

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Weekly News From VSEA!
 

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January 15, 2016

In This Issue:

Threatened While On The Job? VSEA Wants To Know.

VSEA & State In Fact Finding Again Today

In Tough Negotiations, VSEA NMU Members Send Photo Messages To The State

Judiciary Unit Members Also In Tough Bargaining

State’s Budget Address Is January 21

The VSEA Difference: Retirement Security

Waterbury Group Welcomes Back Displaced State Employees

SCOTUS Hears Friedrich’s Case

Dr. King’s Words Resonate As SCOTUS Decides Case

Mark The Date! VSEA Lobby Day Is Thursday, February 25, 2016!

State Wellness Program Announces 2016 Incentive

See A VSEA Yard Sign? Snap A Photo And Post It To VSEA’s Facebook Page

VSEA Labor Educator Announces Winter/Spring 2016 Training Schedule

Quote Of The Week!

Previously In Week In Action:

Attention VSEA Members Whose Union Representative Is Rachael Fields

Apply Now! The 2016 VSEA Scholarship Award Application is due May 9!

Subscribe To VSEA Today!

Want Instantaneous Push Notifications From Your Union?

Legal Advice For Members Considering Providing Work-Related Testimony, Comment To The Press Or Public Speech In Other Venues

Advance Notice: Delta Dental Supplemental Plan Enrollment Forms Mailing In April 2016

 

VSEA Calendar

January 18
Dr. Martin Luther King Holiday
Most State Offices & VSEA Closed

January 20
Steward Training: Judiciary
VTrans Training Center
1716 U.S. Route 302
Berlin
9:00 a.m.

January 21
Budget Address
State House
2:00 p.m.

January 22
Chapter Presidents’ Committee Meeting
VSEA HQ
Montpelier
9:00 a.m.

January 22
Budget Committee Meeting
VSEA HQ
Montpelier
10:00 a.m.

Quote of The Week!

“I’m glad that the decision, regardless of whether you view it in a positive or negative light, will cause members of the public and state government to realize the long hours and dedication that our employees in state’s attorneys offices put into their job.”

Newly sworn Windsor County State’s Attorney David Cahill to VtDigger on the Vermont Supreme Court’s decision last week to overturn a 2014 VLRB ruling. The decision clears the way for VSEA to organize Deputy States Attorneys, Victims Advocates and Secretaries in the State’s Attorneys Offices under the Municipal Labor Relations Act (MERA). Cahill helped VSEA launch its original drive to organize the State’s Attorneys’ offices, prior to being promoted to Director of State’s Attorneys and Sheriffs and now to State’s Attorney.


Attention VSEA Members Whose Union Representative Is Rachael Fields

VSEA members working in Chapters/Units currently served by VSEA Union Representative Rachael Fields are urged to note the following, as Rachael is returning to the State House to serve in her role as an elected lawmaker, representing the citizens of Bennington.

Bennington: Rachael will continue to represent

Brattleboro (including the Rockingham PSAP): Report to David Van Deusen

White River Junction (including the Windsor facility): Report to Bob South

Vermont Psychiatric Care Hospital (VPCH): Report to Brian Morse

Addison: Report to Mike O’Day

View Union Representative Staff Contact Info Here!

Apply Now!
The 2016 VSEA Scholarship Award Application is due May 9!

Each spring, the VSEA Scholarship & Awards Committee solicits scholarship applications from VSEA members and their spouses, dependents and domestic partners. The application process is easy, requiring the applicant to write a couple of short essays as well as provide a grade history, employment history, personal references and a few other things. All applications received before the May 9, 2016 deadline are then reviewed by all committee members who debate the eligible candidates and then vote to decide a particular year’s winners. Winners will be announced at VSEA’s June Council meeting.

View and download the 2016 application here

Subscribe To VSEA Today!

 

VSEA’s Communications Department is happy to disseminate any and all communications the leadership, Chapters, Units, and others request, however, the lists the Department currently pull from are provided to the union by the State of Vermont. VSEA’s Communications Department has found the lists to be dated, incomplete and sometimes lacking key information that was entered by a VSEA staff person but later overwritten or deleted during a State data dump.

To help VSEA more effectively reach active members—and really all those members who want to know what’s going on in their union—VSEA will be working hard in the coming months to collect members’ emails on its own and begin to build contact lists that cannot be altered by a State download.

You can help us get started by clicking here and signing up for the VSEA communications you are interested in receiving.

Thank you in advance for subscribing. Please urge your colleagues to do the same.

Want Instantaneous Push Notifications From Your Union?

Sign Up Today For The VSEAUnite Mobile App!

Download For iPhone

Download For Android

With the 2016 legislative session fast approaching, VSEA is excited to be employing a new push notification tool to message members faster about important hearings, meetings, testimony, events and other union matters. Any member who has already downloaded the VSEAUnite App does not to do anything, but if you haven’t downloaded the free App yet, you can do so very easily.

VSEA’s Communications team is stressing that it will not be overloading members’ phones with push notifications. Members will also have the option to easily turn off the notifications, if the volume of notifications ever becomes an issue.

“We’ll be working in the coming weeks and months to increase the number of VSEA members using the VSEAUnite App, with an emphasis on getting a few users from each work site,” explains Communications Director Doug Gibson. “We’ll be aiming to limit the notifications to just information that is important to the entire VSEA membership, as opposed to Chapter- or Unit-specific messages, which, for the time being, will continue to be sent to members via email message.”

VSEAUnite is available for most mobile devices, including I-phone and Android. Once you download the App, you simply register with your name and your VSEA bargaining unit and location. VSEAUnite then allows you to view your Unit’s contract, find contact information for your nearest VSEA steward (to report contract infractions), see a calendar of upcoming VSEA events and read the latest news about working people to hit the wires.

The download is free, so your union hopes all VSEA iPhone, Android and other mobile users will download it today!

Legal Advice For Members Considering Providing Work-Related Testimony, Comment To The Press Or Public Speech In Other Venues

Every year, VSEA is approached by lawmakers, the press, advocates and others, seeking state employee voices on a particular function of state government, the administration of state government, costs related to delivering a specific service and a host of other topics. In advance of the upcoming 2016 legislative session, VSEA General Counsel Tim Belcher offers the following advice to members who want to speak out publicly at the State House, at a press conference, or in any other venue:

Often the most powerful actions a VSEA member can take is to speak publicly about who you are, what you do, and how your work affects Vermonters. When you speak up, however, you need to know whether you are safe. Your employers often advise that any communication with the press or with legislators needs to be cleared by management. That is true, but only if you are communicating on behalf of the employer. If you are speaking as a citizen, your speech is protected, so long as you follow some simple rules:

  • Make clear that you are speaking on your own as a private citizen, and not on behalf of the employer. It’s okay to tell what your job is, but you should make clear that you are not speaking for anyone but yourself. For example: “my name is Tim, I’m a wildlife biologist for the State, but I’m speaking to you today as a private citizen”;
  • Dress as a civilian;
  • Do it on your own time, and from your own computer or own phone;
  • Don’t disclose confidential information;
  • Don’t be abusive, rude, or slanderous; and
  • Do be professional and polite.

Your speech is only protected if it relates to a matter of public concern, and you are speaking as a citizen. You do not have a protected right to tell the world about personal personnel issues, or even low-level mismanagement. In other words, wasting thousands of dollars of taxpayer money is likely a matter of public concern, but a manager’s bullying behavior is not.

Speech by public employees is not protected if it is the work that the employee is hired to do. The key case on this issue is Garcetti v. Ceballos where a district attorney wrote an internal memo criticizing the legitimacy of a warrant, and was subsequently passed up for promotion. The US Supreme Court held that the internal memo was part of his job, and was therefore not protected by the First Amendment. Some states have directed that state-employed scientists are prohibited from speaking about climate change. Similarly, if you are employed as the spokesperson for a state initiative or program, you may not have a protected right to speak publicly against that program, even on your own time.

These rules can be complicated, so please contact VSEA if you have any specific questions.

Advance Notice:

Delta Dental Supplemental Plan Enrollment Forms Mailing In April 2016

VSEA members wanting to join Delta Dental’s Supplemental Program should keep an eye open for new enrollment forms in mid-April 2016, when the forms will begin arriving in all eligible VSEA members’ home mailboxes. The deadline to return your enrollment form will be in mid-May. Premium deductions from employee paychecks will begin in early June. The Supplemental Program’s new contract year begins July 1, 2016, and ends June 20, 2017.

VSEA members who already belong to the Supplemental Program will not be required to re-enroll. VSEA members who wish to leave the Program will be able to do so, using the enrollment forms that are coming in the mail.

 

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Threatened While On The Job? VSEA Wants To Know.

VSEA President Dave Bellini is asking all state employees who are threatened while performing your job duties to provide an account of the threat not only to your supervisor or the State, but also to VSEA.

“VSEA wants to begin to compile its own record of threats against frontline state employees, no matter your occupation,” explains Bellini. “I’m asking all employees who are threatened, especially those working in AHS, to take a few minutes to fill out an online form VSEA made to collect your report. The information will help us provide a firsthand account of the number of threats being made and where they are being made, in addition to some other things.”

If you are a state employee who is threatened on the job, please click here to find the online report form, which will remain confidential, unless otherwise approved by you.

VSEA On-The-Job Threat Report Form

VSEA & State In Fact Finding Again Today

VSEA Bargaining Team members, representing the Non-Management, Corrections and Supervisory Units, joined with staff negotiators on Monday to present extensive economic analysis to a fact finder; data supporting state employees’ position that money does exist, or could exist, to support many of the contract proposals being put forward by the VSEA Teams. The State, as expected, used its time to try to refute a lot of the union’s data, while using its own economic analysis to try and cast the state’s financial situation as more dire than VSEA members believe it is.

Today, the VSEA Teams and State negotiators returned to the fact finder to discuss a host of specific contract proposals from both sides (multiple Units), employees working to convince the fact finder why their proposals are valid, needed or desired, and management pleading its case. Both entities also arguing why a certain proposal(s) by one side or the other is possible or not possible.

Following today’s fact-finding session, the fact finder will take everything she has heard, read and collected and issue a report within 30 days. VSEA teams and the State will then have 20 days to try and work out any differences in the fact finder’s report. If no agreement can be reached, the process moves to a “last-best-offer” stage.

Your Bargaining Team members can provide you with updates on today’s specific discussions. Also if you have immediate questions or comments, please contact one of your Team representatives.

In Tough Negotiations, VSEA NMU Members Send Photo Messages To
The State

Click above to watch the teaser video
Watch the full video here!
VSEA members belonging to the Non-Management Unit have been sending in pictures of themselves all week. In the photos, members are holding signs of many sizes and shapes, each with a message for State contract negotiators. The NMU members were responding to a request from Unit leaders to demonstrate their solidarity by wearing green and snapping a photo-of-support on Monday, which was the NMU Bargaining Team’s first day of fact finding.

The response was terrific. So much so, in fact, the Communications Department has produced videos that feature some and all and all of the photos submitted. Because the number of photos from AOT workers was so great, a special video featuring just them is also part of the mix.

To view the Facebook page, featuring the videos and photos, click here!

Judiciary Unit Members Also In Tough Bargaining


VSEA members belonging to the Judiciary Unit recently began negotiations on a successor agreement, and the initial non-financial proposals from Judiciary management on January 8 were very troubling to the Unit’s Bargaining Team members. “Draconian” is how one member labeled the proposals to WIA. The two sides met again today in a follow-up session, and the Team is expected to publish a summary for members afterwards.

State’s Budget Address Is
January 21

VSEA members will learn more about how the State intends to fill a $50 million-plus budget deficit on January 21 at 2:00 p.m., when the State’s top official delivers his final budget address. It’s been widely acknowledged that Medicaid expenses are the primary cause for this year’s deficit. The State has already said that its budget proposal will include money to hire 35 new positions in DCF. VSEA members continue to hope that service and position cuts are not part of the budget resolution equation this year.

The VSEA Difference: Retirement Security

Last week, VPR aired a piece about how 45 percent of Vermonters working in the private sector do not have any retirement benefit whatsoever. The scary finding was released by the AARP, and it was cited in a recent hearing at the State House, where a committee of lawmakers is exploring ways for workers without any retirement plan to save some money, including looking at if it’s feasible to create a pension system for private-sector workers—possibly modeled on existing plans for state employees, teachers or others.

In addition to Vermont, 19 other states are currently working to address a similar lack of retirement security for their state’s private-sector workers, and VPR reports that Oregon recently formed a public, state-run pension program for its private-sector workers without any coverage.

“This is something for VSEA members to remember, especially with the United States Supreme Court weighing a decision right now that could be pretty damaging to public-sector unions across America,” VSEA President Dave Bellini tells WIA. “Your VSEA membership provides you with decades of state employee-negotiated—and sometimes hard-won—benefits, including a pension plan and retirement security that a lot of workers don’t have now.” He continued, “I don’t apologize for having a good retirement plan because I personally know it didn’t come easy, and I like that VSEA has negotiated to have representatives on the State Pension Board, so we’re involved in the decision-making process. That’s part of the VSEA difference. Believe me, If some have their way, your union protection and advocacy will go away and our retirement security could go with it, and then we’ll all be in this same sinking boat.”

This boat is not a good place to be. In November 2015, Center for Retirement Initiatives’ Director Angela Antonelli testified to Vermont lawmakers that in addition to pensions disappearing, workers’ savings rates are also dropping and social security is not covering retirement expenses.

The State Treasurer’s Office is leading the effort to identify ways private-sector retirees without a plan can save money.

Waterbury Group Welcomes Back Displaced State Employees

Several news outlets have recently published stories about how groups of state employees displaced by Tropical Storm Irene have begun returning to new office space in Waterbury. All the workers returning are expected to be moved in by April 2016. Greeting each group of employees as they arrive back is “Revitalizing Watebury” Representative Karen Nevin, who explains to the Stowe Reporter that she is there to “welcome the employees to Waterbury personally, encouraging them to get out and explore our fabulous town.”

The story explains that just 50 percent of the workers returning to Waterbury come from the pool of 1,200 workers originally displaced after Irene, hence the need to educate those workers who have never worked in Waterbury about the town.

In addition, Revitalizing Waterbury, in partnership with PC Construction prepared a “Warm Waterbury Welcome” to state employees. Together, the organizations put up welcome banners and prepared a comprehensive online directory of Waterbury businesses for employee use. Local businesses are extending the grand welcome by creating shopping incentives for state employees.

SCOTUS Hears Friedrich’s Case

On Monday, the U.S. Supreme Court heard arguments on a high-profile legal challenge (Friedrichs v. California Teachers Association) that could severely impact the ability of VSEA and other public-sector unions to effectively represent members. The initial reports from the Court are not positive, but VSEA members continue to hold out hope the Court will vote to uphold its decades-old decision that allowed public-sector unions to collect “fair-share” payments.

Here’s some of the stories about the arguments delivered at the SCOTUS on January 11:

Supreme Court Seems Poised to Deal Unions a Major SetbackNYT

SCOTUS looks at labor unions. Unions are worried. Here’s why.Washington Post

Conservative justices skeptical of union position in big labor caseCNN

 

Background Piece:

A Guide to ‘Friedrichs,’ the SCOTUS Case That Could Decimate Public Sector UnionsIn These Times

Vermont Senate Leader Pens Op-Ed, Favoring VSEA Position On Friedrich’s Case


Photo: VPR

VSEA members concerned about the ramifications of an adverse SCOTUS decision on Friedrich’s were heartened this week to read an op-ed penned by Sen. Kevin Mullin (R-Rutland) that takes VSEA’s position. It was titled, “Supreme Court Education Case Threatens Local Control.” Here’s an excerpt:

“I happen to think that these fair-share arrangements make a lot of sense for the people of my state. They guard against the temptation for some employees to free-ride — in other words, to receive the benefits of union bargaining but pass the buck on to their fellow employees. That’s why I sponsored legislation in 2013 that ensures public employee unions can collect them. My colleagues and I in Vermont are not alone: Nearly half of states use a fair-share arrangement.”

Read Sen. Mullin’s entire op-ed here!

Dr. King’s Words Resonate As SCOTUS Decides Case

Dr. Martin Luther King said the following during a December 1961 speech to the AFL-CIO. His words seem prophetic, as they could apply to the mentality behind the Friedrich’s case currently being decided by SCOTUS.

“In our glorious fight for civil rights, we must guard against being fooled by false slogans, such as ‘right to work.’ It is a law to rob us of our civil rights and our job rights. It is supported by Southern segregationists who are trying to keep us from achieving our civil rights and our right of equal opportunity. Its purpose is to destroy labor unions and the freedom of collective bargaining by which unions have improved wages and working conditions of everyone. Wherever these laws have been passed, wages are lower, job opportunities are fewer and there are no civil rights. We do not intend to let them do this to us.”

Mark The Date!

VSEA State House Day Is
Thursday, February 25, 2016! 



VSEA’s annual State House Day will be Thursday, February 25, 2016.

This is the perfect venue for frontline state employees to meet face to face with their local lawmakers to talk about the service you provide and the challenges that confront you daily, especially when it comes to safety.

Register to attend VSEA’s State House Day by clicking here!

State Wellness Program Announces 2016 Incentive

WIA is happy to share the following information with members about the State’s 2016 Wellness Incentive Program, which kicked off on January 1.

2016 Wellness Incentive Program

Wellness Core: 750 points/$75

Personal Health Assessment – 250 points
Health Exam – 500 points (November 2, 2015 – November 1, 2016)

Explore Wellness: 1000 points/$100

ONE Wellness Challenge – 500 points
Discover Your Wellness Workshop – 250 points
Explore Your Wellness Survey – 250 points

Please read the Incentive FAQ for complete details.

Completion requirements:

  • Access your account at: https://mybluehealth.bcbsvt.com
  • Complete all components of “Wellness Core” and/or “Explore Wellness” to earn incentive
  • Complete one or both – it’s up to you! (“Wellness Core” and “Explore Wellness”)
  • Complete components between January 1, 2016 and November 1, 2016 to be eligible for incentive (with exception of Health Exam)

Eligibility requirements:

  • Must be active permanent state employee at time of payment
  • Must use employee ID# as username to be eligible for incentives
  • Eligible for cash incentive if insured with SOV Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Vermont (BCBSVT)
  • Eligible for drawings if not insured with SOV BCBSVT

Incentive period: January 1, 2016 – November 1, 2016

  • Incentives awarded twice per year: June 23, 2016 and December 8, 2016
  • Limited to $175 per employee annually
  • Incentives available until funds/drawings depleted or by November 1, 2016
  • Cash incentives and drawings taxable under federal and state tax law
  • Accommodations available for employees with disabilities

Please update your email address in your profile on the portal to receive wellness communications

Questions?
Contact LiveWell Vermont: (802) 828-2804
or DHR.LiveWellVermont@vermont.gov

See A VSEA Yard Sign? Snap A Photo And Post It To VSEA’s Facebook Page

VSEA began distributing yard signs to Council members this week, in hopes the signs will soon start springing up in the communities where VSEA members live and work.

In the coming weeks and months, if you spot a VSEA yard sign, snap a photo and post it to VSEA’s Facebook page or send it VSEA Communications Director Doug Gibson at dgibson@vsea.org, and he’ll post it for you.

If you need signs, they are available for pickup at VSEA headquarters in Montpelier. VSEA will also be urging leaders, members and retirees visiting HQ to take some signs back to their worksites and their communities.

VSEA Labor Educator Announces Winter/Spring 2016 Training Schedule

VSEA Labor Educator Tim Lenoch asked WIA to announce a new round of trainings he has scheduled for winter/spring 2016. If you are interested in registering to attend one or more trainings, you can do so by clicking here. Please direct your training questions to Tim at tlenoch@vsea.org.

Trainings in blue are for all members.

Steward Training: Judiciary Unit
Wednesday, January 20
VTrans Training Center
1716 U.S. Route 302
Berlin

Steward Training: Chittenden & Lamoille County
Thursday, February 11
DVHA Conference Room
312 Hurricane Lane, Suite 201
Williston

Steward Training: Supervisory Unit
Wednesday, February 17
VTrans Training Center
1716 U.S. Route 302
Berlin

Steward 1: Introduction & The Basics
Friday, March 4
VTrans Training Center
1716 U.S. Route 302
Berlin

Steward Training: Health Care Facilities
Wednesday, March 9
VTrans District Office,
61 Valley View
Mendon (five miles east of Rutland)

Steward 2: Protecting The Contract & Building The Union
Friday, March 18
VTrans Training Center
1716 U.S. Route 302
Berlin

Steward Training: The “Hostile Work Environment”
Wednesday, March 23
VTrans Training Center
1716 U.S. Route 302
Berlin

Steward 3: The Contract & Challenges in the Workplace
Friday, March 25
VTrans Training Center
1716 U.S. Route 302
Berlin

Steward Training: Investigations & Working With Human Resources
Wednesday, March 30
VTrans Training Center
1716 U.S. Route 302
Berlin

Steward Training: Corrections Unit
Wednesday, April 6
VTrans Training Center
1716 U.S. Route 302
Berlin

Steward Training: The Grievance
Wednesday, April 13
VTrans Training Center
1716 U.S. Route 302
Berlin

Steward Training: The Labor/Management Committee
Friday, April 15
VTrans Training Center
1716 U.S. Route 302
Berlin

Diversity & Solidarity For Public Sector Union Members
Friday, April 22
VTrans Training Center
1716 U.S. Route 302
Berlin

Register for trainings here!

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