Listen: Discrimination Inside the FDNY; NYSNA Looks For Another Contract Win
By Bob Hennelly
On this episode of the Stuck Nation Labor Radio Hour FDNY firefighter Regina Wilson — president of the Vulcan Society, the fraternal organization that represents Black firefighters, EMS, fire inspectors and civilian employees — discusses what’s been accomplished and what’s left to do after the City of New York’s 2014 settlement of a federal racial discrimination lawsuit.
The Worst Thing Biden Could Do: Replace Labor Sec. Walsh with a ‘Political Hack’ or ‘Absolute Loser’
By Bob Hennelly
Speculation in the New York Post that former Mayor Bill de Blasio and former Rep. Sean Patrick Maloney were both angling to succeed outgoing U.S. Secretary Marty Walsh was received with a mix of laughter and outright disdain during an informal survey of several New York City union leaders.
Will New York Protect Working People From Freezing Cold & Stifling Heat?
By Steve Wishnia
State Sen. Jessica Ramos (D-Queens) and Assemblymember Latoya Joyner (D-Bronx), the chairs of the labor committees in their houses of the Legislature, have introduced a bill to require employers to take measures to protect their workers against extreme heat and cold.
Bosses Profit while New York’s Nursing Home Nightmares Continue…
By Steve Wishnia
SALAMANCA, N.Y.— Sandra Lamacchia, a licensed practical nurse at a nursing home in Salamanca, about 60 miles south of Buffalo, says she wishes her employer would hire temporary laundry workers.
NYC Has Retirees’ Best Interests At Heart - So, Where’s The Blue Ribbon Panel On Healthcare?
By Joe Maniscalco
New York City Mayor Eric Adams, when he announced his support of a plan to push municipal retirees into a privatized Medicare Advantage program last year, said “the city has had, and will continue to have, your best interests at heart.”
Why then does convening a Blue Ribbon Panel where those interests would be directly represented by retirees themselves appear to be the last thing Hizzoner wants to talk about?
MLC Leader On Medicare Advantage: ‘We’ve Got The Contract Written Up’
By Bob Hennelly
The deadline for the City Council to change its Administrative code that covers how the city provides healthcare insurance for its active-duty workforce and retirees came and went last month without the Council opting to act after a marathon Jan. 9 public hearing where scores of city retirees blasted the proposal.
Thanks, NYC Retirees! You’re Uplifting The Entire Labor Movement
By Joe Maniscalco
Their chief antagonists may happen to be some of the most influential union leaders in New York City — but municipal retirees refusing to be stripped of their traditional Medicare health insurance and pushed into a scandalous for-profit Medicare Advantage program are exercising as much labor power as any Amazon warehouse worker or Starbucks barista — and that’s how they ought to be celebrated this week.
‘A Tremendous Victory’: NYC Council Members Refuse to Change Code Safeguarding Retiree Healthcare
By Bob Hennelly
The City Council will not advance a controversial bill being pushed hard by Mayor Adams and the Municipal Labor Committee to change the city’s Administrative Code 12-126 that covers how the city covers its 300,000 active-duty employees and 250,000 retirees.
Mayor’s ‘Expert’ Panel Stumped At NYC Council Hearing On Retiree Healthcare
By Bob Hennelly
Several New York City Council members at the Jan. 9 Civil Service and Labor Committee hearing on the future of healthcare for the city’s active and retired civil servants appeared to stump the expert panel sent by the Adams administration who repeatedly had to commit to following up later with their answers.
‘No More Hallway Beds’: NYC Nurses End Strike For Safe Staffing Ratios
By Bob Hennelly
The tentative agreements reached between the New York State Nurses Association, Mt. Sinai and Montefiore Hospitals include a 19.2 percent pay raise over three years as well as groundbreaking and enforceable patient nursing staffing ratio requirements. The 7,000 union nurses, on strike since Monday, headed back to work today as details on the deals, that still need to be ratified, continued to emerge.
FDNY Retirees: ‘It’s A Disgrace What The City Is Doing To Us’
By Joe Maniscalco
FDNY retiree Ken Dolan’s wife suffers from Parkinson’s and the 80-year-old knew he really should be at home looking after her, but here he was standing outside City Hall on Jan. 9 with hundreds of other senior citizens trying to convince members of the New York City Council not to touch their traditional Medicare health insurance plan.
Listen: Striking NYC Nurses Need You On The Picket Line Today!
By Bob Hennelly with Joe Maniscalco
Were you one of those New Yorkers who were banging on pots and pans or hanging out your window applauding overworked nurses and doctors at the height of the Covid-19 pandemic? Well, striking nurses at Montefiore Medical Center in the Bronx and Mount Sinai Hospital in Manhattan need you on the picket line today.
In NYC, They’re Lining Up Left & Right To Defeat Medicare Advantage
By Joe Maniscalco
You know your for-profit, privatized Medicare Advantage health insurance plan really sucks when right-wing Republicans and left-wing Democrats actually unite to defeat its imposition on municipal retirees.
‘Overworked, Underpaid, And Knocked Out’: 7,000 Nurses Go On Strike At NYC Hospitals
By Steve Wishnia
More than 7,000 nurses went on strike at 6 a.m. Jan. 9 after failing to reach a contract agreement with Mount Sinai Hospital in East Harlem and Montefiore Medical Center in the Bronx, two of the largest privately owned hospitals in New York City.
NY Nurses: ‘We Want Safe Staffing In Reality, Not On Paper’
By Steve Wishnia
Three New York City private hospitals have reached tentative contract deals with nurses, but more than 10,000 nurses at five others are still scheduled to strike on Jan. 9.
Voices of NYC Retirees: ‘People Are Gonna Leave As A Result Of This’
By Joe Maniscalco
After nearly 40 years working for the City of New York retired municipal employee Roberta Gonzalez expected to be traveling the world right about now.
“I always wanted to go to Israel,” the 70-year-old Sheepshead Bay resident told Work-Bites this week.
City Council Cool To ‘Callous Attempt To Strip Existing Healthcare Coverage From Thousands’
By Bob Hennelly
No members of the City Council spoke in favor of a controversial bill introduced Jan. 4 that would alter the city’s Administrative Code that covers the provision of health insurance for its employees that’s being advanced by the Adams administration and the Municipal Labor Committee.
New York City Municipal Retirees Standing Tall In An ‘Upside-Down World’
By Joe Maniscalco
New York City Retirees opposing ongoing efforts to push them into a disastrous privatized health insurance plan aren’t buying Speaker Adrienne Adams’ sudden rationale for attempting to scrap the law that’s protected municipal healthcare for decades.
NYC Speaker Says Medicare Advantage ‘Moving Forward’ — Retirees Jeer ‘Scare Tactics’ And Press Alternatives
By Bob Hennelly
On the eve of the introduction of controversial legislation to alter the city’s Administrative Code that covers the provision of health insurance for active and retired civil servants, the City Council’s Democratic leadership issued a statement asserting that no matter how they act on the legislation, Mayor Adams and the Municipal Labor Committee will be “moving forward to implement Medicare Advantage.”
NYC Retiree Voices: Medicare Advantage ‘Breaches’ Covenant With Workers
By Joe Maniscalco
There are a lot of things about the campaign to push New York City municipal retirees into a scandal-plagued, for-profit Medicare Advantage insurance plan that stinks to workers who’ve risked everything — from 9/11 to Covid-19 — to help keep their city running.