PDF - Ironworkers
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PDF - Ironworkers
NOVEMBER 2015 Ironworkers Serve with Dignity Our Ironworker Veterans 4 Primaries 2015 15 A Helmets to Hardhats Success 19 1750 New York Avenue, NW, Suite 400 Washington, DC 20006 p (202) 383-4800 · iwmagazine@iwintl.org ironworkers.org Volume 115 | NOVEMBER 2015 | Number 10 FEATURES 4 12 13 15 18 Our Ironworker Veterans Active Iron Worker Military Members Felony Disenfranchisement Primaries 2015 A Helmets to Hardhats Success DEPARTMENTS 20 Departmental Articles 28IMPACT 29 Lifetime Honorary Members 30 Official Monthly Record THE SKY’S THE LIMIT On the Cover Rogelio “Carlos” Aldana, Dennis Knitz, Harvey McDaniel and Edward Warner were the four union ironworker military veterans selected to win a weekend trip to Washington, D.C. and participate in a wreath laying ceremony at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier at Arlington National Cemetery in Arlington, Virginia. The contest was organized by the Ironworkers Political Action League (IPAL) and No Greater Love, a non-profit organization dedicated to honoring America’s fallen. EDITOR: Scott Malley, 1750 New York Ave., NW, Washington, DC 20006 | ASSISTANT to the EDITOR: Nancy Folks THE IRONWORKER ISSN:0021163X Published monthly, except for a combined June/July issue, for $15.00 per year by the International Association of Bridge, Structural, Ornamental and Reinforcing Iron Workers, 1750 New York Ave., NW, Washington, DC 20006. Preferred periodicals postage paid at Washington, DC and additional mailing offices. Printed on union-made paper. Postmasters: Send change of address to Ironworker, 1750 New York Ave., NW, Washington, DC 20006. Canada Agreement Number 40009549. International Association of Bridge, Structural, Ornamental and Reinforcing Iron Workers OFFICIAL PUBLICATION OF THE INTERNATIONAL OFFICERS ERIC DEAN General President 1750 New York Avenue, NW Suite 400 Washington, DC 20006 p (202) 383-4810 · f (202) 638-4856 KENNETH “BILL” DEAN Fourth General Vice President 1445 Washington Road Suite 1100 Washington, PA 15301 p (724) 229-1110 · f (724) 229-1119 JOSEPH HUNT General President Emeritus 1750 New York Avenue, NW Suite 400 Washington, DC 20006 p (202) 383-4845 · f (202) 638-4856 STEPHEN SWEENEY Fifth General Vice President P.O. Box 49 Westville, NJ 08093 p (856) 456-1156 · f (856) 456-1159 WALTER WISE General President Emeritus 1750 New York Avenue, NW Suite 400 Washington, DC 20006 p (703) 627-0401 KEVIN BRYENTON Sixth General Vice President 1434 Chemong Road North Unit 12-13 Peterborough, Ontario K9J 6X2 Canada p (705) 748-3099 · f (705) 748-3028 RON PIKSA General Secretary 1750 New York Avenue, NW Suite 400 Washington, DC 20006 p (202) 383-4820 · f (202) 347-2319 ROBERT BOSKOVICH Seventh General Vice President 2700 South River Road Suite 118 Des Plaines, IL 60018 p (847) 795-1710 · f (847) 795-1713 BERNARD EVERS JR. General Treasurer 1750 New York Avenue, NW Suite 400 Washington, DC 20006 p (202) 383-4830 · f (202) 383-6483 DON ZAMPA Eighth General Vice President 1660 San Pablo Avenue Suite C Pinole, CA 94564 p (510) 724-9277 · f (510) 724-1345 JAY HURLEY First General Vice President 191 Old Colony Avenue P.O. Box 96 S. Boston, MA 02127 p (617) 268-2382 · f (617) 268-1394 JAMES MAHONEY Ninth General Vice President 22 West 46th Street 4th Floor New York, NY 10036 p (212) 302-1868 · f (212) 302-1914 MARVIN RAGSDALE Second General Vice President 3003 Dawn Drive Suite 104 Georgetown, TX 78628 p (512) 868-5596 · f (512) 868-0823 RONALD C. GLADNEY General Counsel Hartnett Gladney Hetterman, LLC 4399 Laclede Avenue St. Louis, MO 63108 p (314) 531-1054 · f (314) 531-1131 DARRELL LABOUCAN Third General Vice President #8-205 Chatelain Drive St. Albert, Alberta T8N 5A4 Canada p (780) 459-3389 · f (780) 459-3308 HEADQUARTERS OFFICE p (202) 383-4868 · f (202) 638-4856 INTERNATIONAL DEPARTMENTS Apprenticeship and Training p (202) 383-4870 f (202) 347-5256 Computer Department p (202) 383-4886 f (202) 383-4895 Davis Bacon Office p (202) 834-9855 f (202) 393-0273 Department of Canadian Affairs p (780) 459-3389 f (780) 459-3308 Department of Ornamental, Architectural & Miscellaneous Metals (DOAMM) p (847) 795-1710 f (847) 795-1713 Department of Reinforcing Ironworkers p (866) 336-9163 f (386) 736-9618 Ironworkers Political Action League p (202) 383-4805 f (202) 347-3569 LU/DC Staff Retirement and Shopmen’s Pension Fund p (202) 383-4874 f (202) 628-6469 Magazine p (202) 383-4842 Mailroom p (202) 383-4855 f (202) 638-1038 Maintenance and Jurisdiction p (202) 383-4860 f (202) 347-1496 Organizing p (202) 383-4851 f (202) 347-1496 Safety p (202) 383-4829 f (202) 383-6490 Shop Department p (202) 383-4846 f (202) 783-3230 Veterans Deserve Our Thanks and Appreciation E In an effort to meet our workforce demands, I appointed Executive Director of Apprenticeship Lee Worley and General Vice President Kevin Bryenton to co-chair a committee to establish best practices to improve our ability to recruit more veterans, women, inner city residents, minorities, welders, rodmen and open shop ironworkers. The recruitment committee will also look at best practices for graduation rates to increase the return on the investment of our training dollars. The higher the graduation rate, the less money wasted on those who do not attain journeyman status. Our union needs to replace those retiring but also needs to meet the rising demand for workers as the construction economy increases. The committee will explore apprentice selection procedures and methods of locals and look at the most effective way to deliver instruction to achieve the best outcome. Our training programs are vital to our future to provide the best workers in the industry. The committee will give its first report at our bi-annual apprentice competition in Houston in September 2016, hosted by Local Union 84 (Houston) and the Texas and Mid-South States District Council. To our ironworker veterans, who we honor this November and every future November, know your service is appreciated. Those members fortunate enough to enjoy a collectively bargained day off, remember the intention of the day: To honor veterans for their patriotism, love of country, and willingness to serve and sacrifice for the common good. And if you are privileged to work alongside a veteran, show them your gratitude with a simple yet meaningful thank you. Our debt to them is great. Eric Dean, 1051885 General President ERIC DEAN General President NOVEMBER 2015 | very November we recognize the service of our U.S. and Canadian veterans on Veterans Day and Remembrance Day. I did not serve in the military, but my father served two different times in the Army. In my office, I have a picture of him in his uniform and his flag to remind me of his service to our country. When I was initiated in my local union, many of the members had served in the military. I personally worked with and met members who served in World War II, Korea and Vietnam, as well as many who served in peacetime. Since then, I have also met members who served on peacekeeping missions to Kosovo, Grenada, Iraq and Afghanistan. We owe those who served a great deal of respect and a debt of gratitude. We found a way to show our appreciation for those who served. The building trades developed the Helmets to Hardhats Program in the U.S. and Canada, which assists honorably discharged veterans with direct entry into any trade by having a specific skill related to the trade or simply giving them extra points in their selection criteria when applying for apprentice programs for having served. As the military continues its downsizing, I am asking all JATCs, TICs, TIPs, employers and local unions to consider increasing the number of veterans who are selected into our ranks through our apprentice programs and as probationary members. It is a debt we owe them and we will greatly benefit from their skills and abilities. With so many baby boomers retiring and apprenticeship programs competing with universities for high school graduates, why not lean towards men and women who served and are in need of employment. These veterans have already chosen something other than secondary education. 3 IRONWORKERS POLITICAL ACTION LEAGUE WOULD LIKE TO RECOGNIZE OUR VETERANS FOR THEIR DEDICATION, COURAGE, SACRIFICE AND SERVICE. All ironworkers listed below have shared their names per our request in The Ironworker. If you are a veteran and would like to be mentioned in the next update of the Union Veterans Council list, please complete the form on our website: www.ironworkers.org. Click the Get Involved tab and select Union Veterans Council. Complete the form and click submit. 4 Local 1 Local 3 Local 6 Henry Adamic, Robert Aikens, Dale Allen, Michael Andruch III, Albert Bass, Paul Basselen, Ladell Bonds, Stephen Borozan, Thomas Breeden, James Breslin, Lawrence Bubser, Cliff Bura, Fred Burkamp Jr. , Lloyd Burtch, Hector Caballero, George Canary, Victor Cancialosi, Thomas Carmody II, Bohdan Chalus, Elmer Christian, Donald Christian, Joseph Coluzzi, Eugene Comparin, Richard Connolley, John Conway, Wayne Cook, Kenneth Dado, William Dahlborn Jr., William Davis, Gary DeMark, Marc Dosen, Gordon Driscoll, Richard Driscoll, William Edmonds III, Carl Erickson, Joel Espinosa, Mark Essary, Larry Ferris, Michael Flood, William Flynn, Raymond Gaik, Thomas Gardiner, Robert Gattermeir Jr., William Gibbons, Patrick Gluchman, Anthony Gradle Jr., Joseph Grahovac, Dominic Graziano, Joseph Greco, William Gregory, Phillip Grisaffe, Ernest Gruszkowski, Frank Grzemski, Greg Hansen, Sven Hanson, Wally Hathaway, Dan Henderson, Maurice “Spike” Hennessey, William Henning, Michael Heraty, Eric Hysing, John Ivancich, Steven Jamison, Leonard Jarmuz, Nicholas Johnson, Thomas Kalvaitis, William Keegan, Steven Kost, Robert Kowalski, Nicholas Krajac, Jeffrey Kraus, James Letten, Williams Linares, Thomas Lofgren, Charles Mabry, Carl Malinowski, Robert Mallo, William Marema, James Maynard Jr., Joseph Mazzorana, Keith McCoy, Kevin McDonell, Phillip McMullen, Franklin Miezio, Thomas Miezio, Gene Miller, James Miller, Ernest Miller Jr., Emory Mockbee, R. Henry Mohr, John Mooncotch, Victor Mugica, James Nance, Ralph Nelson, Donald Nettnin, Michael Ninkovich, Michael O’Hara, Frank Pauley, Thomas Pepper, Norb Piorek, Joseph Pongetti, Joseph Popovich, James Quintanilla, Thomas Rambo, James Reilly, Johnny Ridgley, Milorod Ristich, Basil Robertson, John Rosa, Philip Rosenbach, Donald Roszak, Michael Rotkvich, Kenneth Rudnicki, James Russell, Billy Russell, Leonard Rybarski, Richard Rzonca, Carl Sabin, Samuel Sandilla, Marcel Satalic, Wayne Scott, Brian Seidling, Ronald Shong, Frank Shukstor, Robin Snyder, Timothy Szorc, Larry Tillman, Edward Tisza, Ted Trzaskowski, Robert Uhlar, Richard Urnezis, Donald Vander Voort, Herman VanWerven, Kenneth Varga, Peter Vrdolyak, Walter Vukadinovich, Daniel Wajerski, Edward Wendling, Carl Willaby, Donald Williams, Steven Wolff, Michael Wood, George Yaksic, John Yarbrough, Michael Zubeck Paul Adams Jr., Brian Anderson, William Anderson, James Bauduin, Kenneth Berliner, Joseph Bernarding, Sean Bernarding, Raymond Betteridge, John Blick, Justin Boarts, James Bouduin, Stephen Bretz, William Buhl, James Burkhart, Frederick Capers, Patrick Cleary, Larry Collins, Frederick Crisp, Brad Cumberland, David Czapiewski, Charles Davis, David DeCarolis, August Doehre, Bryan Englert, Daniel Englert, Lee Fetterman, Michael Flanagan, Henry Foley, David Fox, Gordon Grivas, James Grivas, Bill Grzybowski, Patrick Guidice, Wayne Gunderson, Kyle Gustin, Michael Hale, Edward Harmon, Donald Harris, Richard Immekus, Joseph Jackanic, Robert Jackanic, John Jessen, Gordon Kidd Jr., Frederick Koppenhaver, Eugene Krise, Fred Kumm, Michael Lis, Charles Lonick, Daniel Mace, Gary Majeski, Robert Malley Jr., Richard Manko, Dale Margus, Vincent Marsili, Patrick McGurk, Paul McMahon, Cornelius McMillen, Charles Medley, Frank Milliron, Rick Miros, Albert Munsick, Daniel Pacich, Chad Pedigo, Ralph Prasnikar, Leo Puma, Derek Sauer, Kenneth Schlichtkrull, Henry Smith, Jeffrey Smith, Glenn Stolitza, Sean Storey, William Sullivan, Adam Tack, William Thomas, Richard Travers, James Ujevich, Paul Valdiserri, Steven Walker, David Werwie John Campbell, John Clemens, Ernest Colern, Michael Colern, Joseph Curtin, David “Red” Dahn, Robert Dunlap, David Dutton, Duane Euscher, Bill Ford, Patrick George, John Gibson, Michael Gusek, Michael Gzyl, Jerry Halligan Jr., Brian Hart, James Hayes, Joseph Heintz, James Held, Michael Hubbard, Ronnie Johnson, Ronald Kinn, Wayne Kinney, Henry Kwandrans, Ron Macneil, Timothy Murphy, Robert Pavlovic, Leonard Potts Jr., Fred Russo, Earl Schuster, Gary Seitz, Ronald Seneca, James Stewart, Carlton Swetland, Keith Turner Local 5 Dennis Blakeman, James Brothers, Mark Coles, George Decatur III, Fred Fernald, Mark Hale, Steven Harty, Robert Hawkins, Joe Higgs, Christopher Jamison, Jason Kidwell, Donald Lambert, Charles McKenzie, Joseph Pesti, Lloyd Quinn, Dirk Shipley, Robert Taylor, Thomas Washington Sr. Local 7 James Anderson, Richard Augustine, Ronald Baika, Patrick Beckwith, George Bennett, Ronald Bernardos, Fred Boomhower, Thomas Broderick, Michael Cain, William Cain, Carmen Caterino, Joseph Chittick, Charles Cinto, John Coakley Sr., Kevin Collins, John Collins, Lawrence Connery, Richard Connolly, Joseph Cooper, James Costello, Vinny Coyle Sr., Thomas Driscoll, Michael Durant, Elde Dutter, David Dwyer, Paul Frazier, Eugene Gabel, Patrick Gibbons, Robert Godino, Norman Guertin, Joseph Halpin, Jack Hurley, Erick Irizarry, William Jack, Robert Lind Sr., Alfred Lisby, Terrance Logan, Paul Lynch, Dan Mac Issac, Francis MacNeil, Thomas Manley, Robert Maxwell, Keith McEachern, Brian McGillicuddy, Neal McKelligan, Robert McKenzie, Stephen Monahan, James Morrissey, Jack Morton, Charles Mosher, Stephen Moulton, Forrest Nies, James O’Connor, Michael Pariseau, Raymond Pelletier, Russell Phillips, Ronald Pioggia, William Ross, Edward Saksa, John Sampson Jr., John Skane , Thomas Skowron, William Solberg, Howard Stumpf, James Tamulen, Thomas Targett, William Townsend, Anthony Trinchini, Charles Turcotte, Thomas Vear Sr., Moe Villeneuve, Richard Vogel, Michael Walker, David Walmsley, Edward White, Francis Whitty, Michael Williams, Frank Wirtz IRONWORKER VETERANS Local 8 Local 12 Local 21 Joseph Barfoot, Joseph Bazile, William Beckstrom, Donald Bennett, Gregory Benning, Jerry Boll, Kenneth Bradshaw, Dave Brockman, Randall Bryce, Cecil Cameron, Patrick Cramer, Ernest Demmon, George Dobron, Edwin Ellefson, Chet Genzmer, Gil Gonzalez, Michael Hablewitz, Michael Hammer, Richard Hanson, Michael Harju, Harold Harper, Ryon Hasse, Dylan Heinonen, Edward Hinc, Raymond Huberty, Douglas Jaeckel, Josh Janis, David Johnson, Kurt Johnston, James Jorgensen, Randy Jose, Joseph Kangas, Thomas Kelley Jr., Randy Klemm, Michael Kluetzman, Joe Kolins, Russell Korpi, Kenneth Kozikowski, Jan LaCount, Dennis Leist, Allan Leurquin, Patrick Lyman II, Scott Marietti, Wade Martzahl, Anthony Mayrhofer, Todd Miller, Terry Miller, William Miske, John Montgomery, Richard Moreno, Timothy Morrissey, John Ney, Edgar Olivares, Karl Paisley, Roger Papesh, Michael Pascoe, David Pickard, Dale Saeger, Anthony Schafer, Terrance Schuster, John Seeley, Frederick Senechal, Leonard Seranskas, Randal Smith, Kurt Sommers, Michael Soppa, Ronald Spranger, Duane Sweere, Dennis Techlin, Craig Thompson, James Van Brocklin, Adam Vieau, Brian Vroman, Thomas Wachtler, William Walter, Michael Wheeler, Myron Williquette, Jeffrey Winegarner, Frank Zammuto Dennis Brough, Thomas Canfora, James Egan, James Franklin, Jere Gaul Sr., Jerry Marshall, Dennis McClintock, Al Staley Gary Ackerberg, Gary Andersen, Jerry Andersen, Roger Beargeon, William Biede, Arnold Brannan, Franklin Briggs, Dannie Caskey, Gary Cass, Frank Clark Jr., John Croy, Terry Drake, Harold Dutcher, Jason Fox, Jason Friedberg, Harley Goings Sr., Carl Green, Arthur Hansen, Robert Harris, Paul Hartigan, Cliff Henry, Frank Hodge, Dave Holman, Jerry Kelley, Richard Kowal, Darrell Kunkel, James Lambing, Keith Laue, Kevin Laue, Kaj Laursen, Greg Lunn, Douglas Lyons, George Macht, Roy Malchow, Rodney Mather, Gordon McDonald, William McDonald, Edmund Micheels, Alfred Newsom, John Nun, Darrell Nurton, Robert Oates, David Oldenburg, Larry Osburn, Robert Peck, David Price, Tait Rowley, Troy Sannford, Dennis Schissel, Benjamin Smith, Stu Steffens, Richard Steinauer, Frank Urzendowski, Roger VanFossen, Nathaniel Vesely, Joseph Whisler, Jeff Woodward Local 14 Albert Allan, James Anderson, William Burns, Ed Haven, Ellan Hinsz, Gary Hundeby, Glenis Johnson, Ethan LeGrand, Scott Miesler, Ryan Moyer, Donald Patterson, Eric Price, Rick Schute, Jack Young Local 15 Harry Berard, John Croff, Frank Harvey, Donald Hill, Thomas Hill, Michael Kessler Jr., Jason LaGamba, Scott Letts, Barry Printup, Jason Reddecliff, Albert WatsonHarvey, Duane Williams, Duke Williams Elena Alvarez, Tor Augustinsen, Bruce Babcock, Carl Barone, Bernhard Biederman, Dale Bodman, George Bodman, Nicholas Bonadies, Lawrence Bresnahan, John Broughal Jr., Walter Brown, Lamar Burt, Wayne Camp, Fabien Castonguay, Denis Christianson, Richard Crabb, Jacob Danis, Robert Dearden, Ignazio Fragione, Ronald Freeman, Patrick Fries, Gerald Guthrie, Robert Hoops, Joel Junokas, Robert Lajoie, Wilmot Lee Jr., Paul LeTendre, James Levesque, Charles Loredo, David Lynch, Richard MacCartney, Andre Martin, Roger Martin, John Meegan, Bernard McGloin, Joseph McGloin, John McGuinness, Lawrence Montgomery Sr., Sydney Mundell, Exequiel Murallo, Paul Noel, Michael O’Connor, Daniel O’Shea, Donald Ouellette, Anthony Piscottano, Joseph Pozzato, Parrish Rarrick, Martin Reynholds, James Sansone, David Scanlon, Richard Schall, Robert Sherman, William Stevens, Richard Swan, Joseph Warzecha, Albert Wells , James Wyatt Local 10 Local 16 Local 25 Ian Carr, William Groh, Tyler Haanpaa, Roger Henderson, Joseph Madrigal, William Murkin, Brian Paulsen, Larry Scott, Tim Webb, Scott Yount Kenneth Baldwin, J.P. “Buddy” Cefalu, Hubert “Hoot” Fuller Jr., Graham Henry Jr., Joseph Hollar Jr., Mark McHugh, Daniel Parker, Frank Piccione, Timothy Ritmiller, Frank Russo, Robert Sides, Edward Staylor Jr., Jack Whitt, Dennis Williams Martin Adrian, Dennis Aguirre, Michael Babcock, Billy Bagley, John Baldwin, Paul Bartley, Paul Becigneul, John Bell, Murney Bell, Terry Biggs, Robert Bliss, Robert Boorsma, Curtis Dane Bowers, Edward Brie, Gary Broad, Curtis Butcher, Donald Byrnes, Edward Chance, Thomas Chavis, Oscar Cheatham, Ronald Cooper, Willie Cooper, Marc Crance, Glenn DeLorey, Frank DeLucia, Jeff Dillon, Todd Docken, Albert Dubey, Ken Dumas, James Duncan, Michael Fay, William Fern, Jason Friedberg, Alan Friend, Gerald Garrison, Timothy Gering, Richard Gotham, Keith Gretzler, Steven Gulick, Jason Gulley Sr., Corey Hake, Silas Harper, Cliff Henry, Fred Hetzer, Vincent Horn, Dennis Janowiak, Chris Jensen, Gerald Kerr, Glenn Klos, Terrance Kuriger, David Lucas, Raymond Manyen, Colbert Marcum, James Markham, Kevin McDonell, David McGillen, Mike Michael, Marcus Middleton, Bobby Morgan, Richard Mosher, Earl Myers, Richard Nesgoda, Herbert Nutter Jr., Roy Parker, Richard Poddig, Dale Pontzious, Matt Rajda, John Rajewski, James Rapputin, Harold Richards, David Rodriguez, Jim Rosa, Rick Rowe, Scott Rumble, Steven Paul Schumann, Nicholas Seifert, James Shepard, Charlie Smith, Dewayne Smith, Patrick Smith, Robert Smock, Larry Stults, Charles Taylor, Russell Thayer, Guillermo Trigo, Keyon Vann, Ralph Walker, Terry Whitney, Richard Wiegerink, William Wilburn, Dale Wiltse Local 9 Local 11 Local 17 Camilo Black, Paul Bozak, Christopher Cann, Patrick Check, Thomas Ciryak, John Cleary, Arthur Cross, Walter Davis Jr., James Dietz, LaMoine Dillon, James Dorsey, Curtis Ferguson, James Greene, Joseph Gulasey, Rudy Heniger, Bernie Kozak, William Lee, Lawrence Loren, Anthony Loria, Paul Marcum, Daniel Mester, Rudolph Monroy, William Palladino, Gurnie Randall, Bruce Riehl, James Svetz, Darrell Unger, John Ward, Steven Weaver, Richard Weidokal, Milburn White, Roy Whitman Michael Artman, Dennis Brown, John Brown, Raymond Bymaster, Ralph Cobbs, Larry Cornwell, David Craig, Frederick Haulk, James Hornberger III, Maurice Howery, Johnny Landers, Arnold Reid, John Taylor, Judson West Local 24 Danny Birmingham, Sam Cassady, John Conyers, Lee Flint, John Popino, Herbert Schillereff, John Schmitt, Jimmie Shasteen, Ernest Small II, David Willis NOVEMBER 2015 | Thomas “Tutone” Abelson, William Aitkens, Harold Arny, James Bergin, Richard Bucco, Bruce Cahoon, William Campbell, Ronald Caputo, Robert Carr, Brian Clark, Robert Collumb, Thomas Cox, Michael Delpaoli, Robert Dolan, Charles Donnelly, Charles Faessinger, Randall Fedon, Jayson Gassler, William Griswold, Edward Halifko, Edward Hanks, Joseph Heintz, Michael James, Daniel Julio, Robert Kolmer, Steven Lawrence, James Leslie, Kenneth Littlehales, Tom Lowe, Kenneth Lucas, Edward McGrath, Lawrence McGrath, John McGrath, Martin McInerney, John McMullen, Richard Mell, John Mooney, Eugene O’ Rourke, William F. Otersen, John Patrick, Daniel Petrych, Sergio Restrepo, Rick Ricciardelli, Brian Robison, James Sake, Thomas Smith, Steven Tarr Jr., Michael Tenore, Henry Toft, Edmund Tyndell, Charles Vuocolo, Clyde Williamson, George Woodall, Carl Wunschel, Robert Zawistowski Local 22 5 IRONWORKER VETERANS Local 27 Local 44 Local 63 Brandon Anthony, Don Anthony, Marcus Anthony, Robert Anthony, Thomas Anthony, Lyle Bothel, John Costello, Teddy Dodd, Jimmy Gallegos, William Jackson, Brian Johnson, Russell Johnson, Jay Meier, Vernon McGaugh, Sean Rasmussen, Max Sanchez, Paul Wach Earl Adams Jr., Kenneth Ashcraft, Arthur Baker, Melvin Barth, John Baugh, Johnnie Baugh, Rodger Bird, Gordon Boman, John Booth Jr., Clyde Boyce, Ron Boyce Sr., Gary Brooks, Terry Buob, Dan Chambers, Rob Colson, Ron Cotcamp, Stanley Dameron, Lonnie Evans, Ed Feilhuer, Paul Fernbach, Lee Flins, Erik Frondorf, Fred Harrell Sr., John Hoskins, Anthony Imhoff, Fred Imhoff, Joe Jones, Ryan Jones, Eugene Knasel, Dale Kries, Jerry Lee Lovitt, Al Lowe Sr., Franc Lucus, Pat Meadows, James Melzer Jr., James Melzer Sr., James Myers, Randy Myers, John New, Roger Ortlieb, Steve Osborne, Leroy Owens Sr., Robert Pangallo, Mike Pride, Clarence “Babo” Pruitt, John Pruitt Sr., William Ralston, Ted Reynolds, Tony Richardson, Bryan Rowekamp, Allen Scarber, David Schweiger, Walter Smith, Gary Solar, Ralph Spence, Theodore Stanley Jr., Stanley Steinmetz, Martin Sweeney, John Thompson, Esq., Rod Walton, Bill Warf, Mike Watson, Mike Weitz, Mike Willis, Henry Young Robert Anderson, Derrick Burkle, Terence Canniff, William Cavanaugh, John Colby, Kevin Crowe, Thomas Dombek, Gerald Ford, Richard Fredericksen, William Friel, Pete Gomez, Paul Goodrich, Jim Haddon, Mitchell Harrington, Allen Hathaway, Richard Hottinger, Philip Husarik, Lenard Japczyk Sr., Edward Jones, Daniel Koney, Gene Luptak, Harry McDonald, William McGleam, George Michalski, Douglas Mika, Robert Mohr, Robert Muff, David Murray, Charles Mussatto, Mike “Rooster” Mussatto, Alan O’Neill, Jeff O’Sullivan, Ronny Parayno, Ray Pellicore, Dennis Petrokovitch, Dennis Richardson, Helmer Ringstrom, Raymond Robertson, William Sattler, Mallory Schmeder, Richard Shivley, Anthony Soltero, William Sorice, Robert Swager, Gerald Truty, Joseph Urso, Robert Vuletich, Lester Watson, James Welter Jr., Martin Zick Local 46 (Illinois) Local 67 Benjamin Beard, Bill Brammer, David Connor Jr., John Denny, Craig Garrett, George Grimsley, E.E. Harruff, Terry House, Willard House, Allen Lane, Josh Leach, Nikolas Matthews, Scott Miller, David Norris, Earl Powell, Jim Riemer Sr., Albert Ross, James Schroeder, Joseph Schroeder, Donald Siddens, Carl Stemmons, George Whalen, Stanley Witherbee, John Yard Eugene Cosner, Richard Griglione, James Howerton, William Murphy, John Sautter, Roger Schoonover, Bill Waterhouse Local 28 Alvin Boguess Jr., Robert Hamby, Steve Gulitti, O.C. Stratton Local 29 Ray Appel, Norma Ballhorn, Rion Barrett, Dan Brenner, Travis Corbet, Mike Dubrusky, Mark Dunkle, Kenneth Galloway, Troy Garrett Sr., Robert Haapala, Kurt Harris, James Kanooth, Gary Klein, Larry Linstrom, Ronald Lowe, Ronald McCord, Edward Mintun, Robert Osborn, Merle Perrin, Charles Riggs, Robert Robison, Raymond Rush Sr., Jim Russell, Philip Samuelson, Matthew Schriber, Tanner Shupe, Kevin Soto, Robert Starke, William Starke III, Frank Stone, Bladimir Torres, Eugene Twiss, Derwin Warren, Michael Whisman, Thomas Worley Local 33 Nicholas Forgione, Basil Guererri, Peter Sweltz, Ernest “Jim” Van Sickle Local 37 James Bacon, Robert Bailey, Keith Baker, Walter Burns, James Cotta, Paul Davenport, Harvey Frank, Richard Lachance, Bill Leonard, Kenneth Lusignan, Jason Roberts, Daniel Wright Local 40 Michael Anderson, Francis Bellaran, Richard Brady, Ryan Branch, Roy Bremner, Frank Capraro, James Cronin, James Denaro, Leonard Dileo, John Doris, Thomas Eckrote, Edward Fahey, Edward Finnegan, John Forbes, Joseph Ford, Thomas Forrester, Patrick Fox, William Frisco, John Gaffney, Paul Gaulden, Lawrence Gotti, Matthew Haber, Alan Happel, Harold Hartley, Richard Hartley, Patrick Kiernan, Robert Kirkpatrick, William Kraham, John La Cour, Bob Larsen, Lindsay LeBorgne, Robert Liggio, Edward Maddock, Raymond Maddock, William Maddock, James Marsden, James McKee, Joseph McNamara, Henry Meahan, Fred Moak, Robert Montoor, Tom Mulroy, Thomas Mulvihill, Robert Nelson, Kevin O’Rourke, Yoollerr Orellana, Ronald Pauzé, Frank Pelose, Theodore Perrin, James Perrone, Richard Post, James Rhoads, William Ricketts, Benjamin Robbins, Joseph Rodriguez, Nick Rosa, Rich Ryan, Hyman Sadler, Troy Smakal, Charles Smyth, Chris Spiess, Bryan Stacy, Robert Stanton, Lauri Stenwall, William Sullivan, Robert Thompson, Joseph Ugalde, Kevin Victor, Michael Zang, James Zupan 6 Local 46L (New York) James Byrnes, Michael Casey, Patrick Connors, Howard Hohlfeld, Joseph Jirovec, Fred LeMoine, Raymond Matheson, Frederick McVicker Jr., Donald Reith Local 48 Jason Briant Local 55 Cecil Barker, Derek Bradley, David Cole, Michael Durso, Robert French, Patrick Gallagher, Kevin Garner, Albert Kalisik, Gerald Kern, Jack Kern, David Kolbe, Dennis Knitz, Randall Krieger, Ryan Lanz, Michael Maguire, Robert Mapes Jr., R. Mike Sohikian, Gary Tatro, James Townsend, Timothy Tremmel, Scott Walter, Peter Wenzler, Gale Weymer Local 58 David Cole, Theodore Cothran Sr., Howard Gonzales, Ralph Lindsey, Charles Murray Local 60 Raymond Carr, Ed Charlebois, Dick Gunsalus, Edward Harmon Sr., William Hurley, Douglas Potter, James Ryan, Marvin Sipley, Jay Tarbell, Richard Zender Local 66 Jay Jackson Local 68 Edward Robinson, Alphonse “Bud” Tallone Local 70 Steven Althoff, James Androski, Gary Broad, James Bunch, Andy Caudill, Ray Collins, James Coomer, Kelly Cooper, Charles Crabb, Jim Douglas, Larry Elam, Christopher Green, Ralph Judge, Terrance Kapfhammer, Robert Schell Local 75 Jesse Abercrombie, Ralph Arvizu, Edward Baltz, Harrison Barlow, Larry Bird, Phillip Bishop, Thomas Bride, Nick Burns, William Cole, Joe Colwell, James Davis, David Dumont Jr., Aaron Elliott, James Freshour, James Frey, Joe Genzer, Wesley Genzer, Joseph Hall, Donnie Haught, James Head, Wendell Hill, Philip Holt, Howard Horton, John Kruger, Andrew Lamorie, Frank Lopez, Raymond Masters, Kyle McDonald, Dean McElroy, Don McKee, Steve McKenna, Donald Medart, Eusebio Moreno Jr., Buzz Murphy, David Nightenhelser, Richard Pierce, Clint Quirk, Ronald Richards, Donald Richardson, Noel Rivera, Alan Ruda, Ernesto Sandoval, Larry Stewart, Robert Vigil, Travis Watson, Ian Wheale, Carol Williams Jr., Conrad Willis Jr. Local 79 Thomas Bell, Richard Birdsill, Noble Fowler Jr., Charles Gerard, Peter Godfrey, Richard Redd, Anthony Rizza, James Williamson IRONWORKER VETERANS Local 84 Local 111 Local 167 Jack Beard Sr., Claborn Callahan, Robert Cater, Anthony Daigle, Richard Davis Jr., Ronald Del Pup, Jerry Dellinger, Otto Dibala Jr., Lane Dodgen, Gladwell Fountain, Richard Goodson, Tom Hatton, Donald Henry, Gayland Higgins, Aaron Hildabrand, Joseph Houpt, Jimmy James, Dennis Lam, Charles Lowery, James Lynn, Brett Madlon, Jose Martinez, Clifton McWhorter, Raymond Navarre, John Oates, Virgil Patterson, Edward Paul, James Reeves, Howard Strahan, Cecil Strong, Henry Van Wormer, Scott Vanterpool, Wilburn Vickery, Ross Wells, Norman Wilfong Larry Atkins, John Brown, Delbert Carrier, Jay DeValkenaere, Brian Jasper, Kenneth Maner, Dennis McFate, Jim Meurs, Dean Micklewright, Jerome Montez, William Pontzius, Dave Rosauer, Kenneth Storjohann, John Weiland James Acosta, Clayton Brady, Ed Erhardt, Russell Feivou, Terry French, Johnathan Glasco, John Grammer, Thomas Graves, Thomas Greer, Ronald Harbour, Mark Hartman, Gary Huffman, John Johnson, Jerry Massey, Robert Moyer, Gary Nolen, Calvin Obergfell, Charles Presley, Tommy Ross, Doyle White, Robert White, Christopher Wideman, Thomas “Slick” Williams, Larry Wilson Local 112 Danny Budke, Mark Godbey, Clint Gold, Michael Green, David Grier, Gene Harris, Harold Johnson, Chad Mason, Alex “Rusty” Reid, Harry Tarvin, Scott Trone, Jason Wallace Local 86 Local 118 Art Alton, Stephen Anderson, Aaron Babcock, Brian Bass, Thomas Biggins, Hector Canales, Cecil Cheeka, Charles Copps, James Davis, Don Devoe, Eric DeWitt, Stan Dolph, Thomas Donohue, Nathan Downey, Bill Escher, Michael Ferong, Billy Fowler, Harold Gamble, Joshua Granberg, Robert Grigg, Steven Hall, Clarence Haugen, Dallas Hogan, Ronald Howell Sr., Ronald Howell Jr., Matt Jones, Fred Kiely, George Koontz, Joshua Kunkel, Robert Miller, Harold Mitchell, Robert Murray, Phillip Nisius, Michael Parke, Derek Patches, Seth Paulson, John Pearce, Willy Perkins, Jeffrey Pierce, Steven Price, Boris Puchlov, Brian Rice, Arthur Ristow III, Jesse Sadowski, Clarance Salter, Kevin Sheneman, Glen Sherffius, Ted Sherman, Timothy Skondin, Gunnar Slothaug, Richard Smith, E. Wayne Stanton, Donald Stenson, John Stoltman, Raymond Stuart, Roger Tapper, Robert Van Bogart, Jason Van Camp, Ron Volk, Robert Wagner, Carl Walag, George Willard, Jeffrey Winegarner, Jeffery Wisely, Paul Wolschleger Cruz Alvarez, Mark Alvarez, Jesse Bouge, W. G. Breeden, Frank Broyles, Wayne Bullard, Eldon Burror, Erwin Chadwick, Delbert Cheney, Jim Cowger, Jennings Cox, Richard Davis, Dennis Davison, Robert Drake, Rick Egert, Larry Elliott, Dustin Felt, Kevin Ferreira, William Franklin, Jim Hatler, Gerald Hoefs, Larry Howell, Ronald Hummel, William Jedlicka, Larry Leno, John Long Sr., John Moody, Thomas Morgan, Patrick Olmsted, Ken Pieters, Tony Ponciano Jr., Clarence Pope, Donny Ridgley, Jesse Schotte, Andy Serfoss, Juan Servera, Douglas Stephenson, Terry Stevens, Zachary Strobridge, Eugene Thiel, Shane Trousdale, E. Vandergriff, Nolan Webb, Greg Wentworth, George Wilkinson Local 89 Donald Bailey, William Bys, Zachery Carr, Michael Curtis, Carolyn Cuvar, Duane Ewing, Raymond Goebel Jr., Tim Hahn, Alan Havlicek, James Hickey, Merton “Joe” Johnson, Craig Lekin, James Moore, Kevin Ringold, David Roberts, Floyd Sauter Jr., Neil Tibbetts, Denny Wolrab Local 92 Christopher Jones, Charles Norris Sr. Local 97 Ryan Vaudrin Local 103 Local 136 Joseph Cicero, James Cirone Local 147 Gabriel Buchman, Brent Chapel, Roger Ferguson, James Hardiek, Shane Hillman, Steve Hillman, Brent Hoffman, Jeffrey King, Mark Lesh, Bobby Lukesheay, Scott Ray, Justin Smith, Bryan Sumpter, Tracy Theurer, Dustin Thornton, Edward Whitacre Local 155 Robert Aguirre, Ernie Barnes, Richard Benson, Dana Bobbit, Russ Briglia, James Brown, Terry Burrious, James Cash, Mike Cash, Danny Gaines, Jake Gallegos, Rick Hanniford, Randall Haungs, Mike Henson, Tito Lucero, Wayne Maddox, Michael Martinez, Rey Montano, Mario Moreno, Mike Mullins, Tom Mullins, Glen Parker, Jess Reddington, George Sandoval, Perry Sellick, Paul Shucker, Don Simpson, John White, Joe Wildenauer, Ken Wilson Local 197 Thomas Humphrey, Paul Kane Jr. Local 201 Peter Arren, Aubrey Baber, Charles Ray Black, Robert Wayne Bowers, James Conaway, Kenneth Crouse, Robert Fugel, Chauncey Galloway, Emmitt Greene, Gary Greene, Danny Griffith, Cecil Higginbotham, George Hindle, Steven Izzo, Augusta Jackson Jr., Ralph Jackson, James Kreckel, Whitt Garfield Lowe, Clifton McCoy Jr., Billy McLaughlin, Thomas McLaughlin, Frank Migliaccio, Paul Morris, Cyrus Neal Jr., Mark O’Connell, David Reigle, Alphonso Sharperson, John Simms II, Ronald Spates, Ray Stublarec, Garfield Trumble, Ronald Tucker, Robert Valentine, Donald Walker, Dennis Webber, Kenneth Wilson Local 207 Larry Baker, Bradley Crist, Mark DeSalvo II, Josh Doran, Chad Drane, David Gurnak, Lance Harrison, Gary Hull, Charles Miller, Dave Muransky, Donald Parish II, Michael Sampson, Steve Sefcik, Cametrius Shelton, Michael Wilson Local 229 Alvin Allen, Jorge Almada, Armando Andrade, James Berta, George Booth, Thomas Campbell, Michael Cienfuegos, Don Deason, Gustavo Garcia, Jack Gavett, Jose Gomez, Timothy Griffen, Raymond Heron, Alfred Higgs Jr., Wayne Alan Jones, John Mavis, Dante Mendez, Jose Naranjo, Alex Pina, Richard Portillo, Daniel Rejman, Eugene Rischard, Vincent Ryan, Russell Sherwood, Ronald Wahl, Harry Whitby Jr. Local 263 James Ivan Carter, Mark Chwaliszewski, Calvin Dowlin, Rick Ivie, George Wall NOVEMBER 2015 | Jerry Arnold, Jeff Bailey, Danny Bowlds, Bryan Bredhold, Philip Brewster, Troy Burghard, Michael Charleton, Leroy Fischer, William Garrett, Andrew Harper, Victor Hill, Montie Johnson, Christopher Kassinger, William Kassinger Jr., Harold Klingle, Joseph Martin, Lee Opel, Harry Osburn, Brian Rexing, Leland Swain, Randal Thornburg, Vernon Tremper, Jerry Whalen, Phillip Wiseman Local 135 Roy Allison Sr., James Cheshire, Vernon Hendrick, James Jonas, Charles Lavelock, Lawrence Loston Jr., Homer Miller Sr., Charles Prothro, Daniel Schwertner Local 172 Cecil Bosworth, Mark Duvall, Byron Edgecomb, Frank “Gish” Galilei, Elbert Harriss Jr., Encil Hawkins, Ronald Johnson, David McCoy, Michael Middleton, Leo Naegele, William Nicholson, Carl Pickrel 7 IRONWORKER VETERANS Local 272 Local 377 Local 384 Michael Allen, Roy “Butch” Anderson, Gerald Andrews, Joseph Baldyga, John Becton, Rayburn Cramer, John Hawk, Stephen Johnson, Terry Nelson, David Partridge, Alex Rienks Dean Apger, Ronald Apple, Karyssa Ascencio, Forrest Becker, Lawrence Beste, Jaramy Canha, Clark Cole, Samuel Cowdin, Kyle Crowley, Stephen Davis, Terron Duckworth, Eric Dunn, Robert Espada, Cesar Escobar, Raymond Fassio, Louie Finley, Jason Hart, Sanford Hill, Arnold Honne, Paul Hughes, Jared Jacobson, Christian Kelleher, Justin Kroh, Stephen Lowden, Randell Oyler, Michael Pavlik, Paul Pietroski, Jorge Rivas, Christopher Russell, Virgil Tollett, Marty Whetham, Thomas Wittwer, Shuai Yuan William Adams, Cartus Adkins, Randall Armes, Billy Blackburn II, Allan Burchfield, Daniel Carmon, Michael Casler, Curtis Dykes, Benjamin East, James Foust, Leonard Hooks, Charles Hutsell, Ronald Kennedy, Kevin Lawson, Ronald Lequire, Harvey McDaniel, William Miner, Walter Mize, Wayne Pesterfield, James Robbins, William Rutherford, Alfred Seals Jr., Bobby Simmons, Harold Smith Jr., Virgil Tollett, Paul Watson, James Williams, Richard Young Local 290 Frank Anuci, James Armstrong, Tony Bettendorf, Edward Binegar, Raymond Bond, Brad Boy, Dwight Clay, Oscar Conville, Rick Cornett, Raymond Gonzalez, Larry Gonzalez, Paul Graupmann, Emerson Hillman Jr., Ron Hoffman, Ray Isaacs, Jeremy Jett, Faron Kelley, Steve Lawson, Timothy Mays, Frank McCubbin Jr., Stephen Mikalas, James Miller, Joe Pittaluga, Abel Richards, Charles Ross Jr., Jim Schweitzer, Claude Snyder, Ron Sprenkel, George Steinke, Jordan Striff, Jacob Williams, Michael Yezzi Local 292 Paul Haag, Randy Kotarek, Rod Shelburne Local 301 Eddie Cline, Teddy Dixon, Kelvin Graley, Ricky Holley, Bart Price, Robert Thornton, Chuck Young, Scott Young Local 321 Donald Glaze Local 350 Joseph Dymond, Edward Ferraro, Jack Foster, Robert Phillips Sr., John Quinn, Joseph Rahn, Michael Sciore Local 361 Steve Bartasek, Vincent Bianco, Patrick Clarkin, Edward Conklin, Laurence Conway, Teddy Crocker, Frank DeSensi, Stephen Desmidt, James Duncan, Gerard Eissing, Pete Evers, Joeseph Farrell, Christopher Fazzalare, Joseph Finamore, Joseph Fitzpatrick, Claudio Fontana, Halvor Foss, Genaro Gabbe, William Gottlieb, Frank Herbert, Darren Madoo, Earl Mark, John O’Connell, David Perron, Ivan Pierre, Walter Rasmussen, Michael Rice, Kenneth Roberts, Sean Ryan, Nick Sarubbi, John Sisto, Louis Stacey, Gregory Van Hecker, Gary Vertichio, Donald Woods Local 372 Kenneth Cochran, Anthony Davis, Harold Edwards, Robert Hardy, Lowell Glick, Norm Glick, Tony Gray, Mike Kelsch, Tim Kilgore, Mike Kroth, Tom McRoberts, Tim Middendorf, Mike Mitchell, Tommy Moore, Sean Ryan, Louie Sattler, William Seward Sr., Ray White, Kenny Williams 8 Local 378 Harry Acheson, Rodger Adelmann, Carl Anderson, Paul Anderson, Vincent Andreotti, Herbert Apiag, Richard Bazewicz, Cecil Bindrum, Chris Bowles, Herb Brabant, Bobby Brown, John Caito, Edward Campbell, Charles Cavanaugh, Theodore Channell, Mark Chapman, Wilfred Chaulkin, Thomas Clark, Steven Courtial, Joseph Cunha, Byron Dahl, Hugh Daugherty, Jerry Davis, Anthony Doria, Travis Douglas, James Duff, Richard Enderlein, Bruce Erckenbrack, Jesse Esquivel, Henry Faria, James Filstrup, William Fordyce, Erv Fowler, Chris Freese, Bob Gray, Steven Grogan, Robert Hanes, Robert Hanson, Jerome Hetzel, James Hilton, Nelson Hopper, Robert Jacques, Rod Johnson, Scott Kemper, Charles Lawrence, Robert Lux, Sean Massey, Tom McNutt, Michael Miller, Karl Muller, Jon Musgrave, Toxie Myer, Joe Salvador Naranjo Sr., Michael Newlin, Arthur Nilsen, Jimmy Osburn, William Parsons, Jim Patrick, Charles Pettigrew, David Pettigrew, Arnold Pierce, Edmond Pineo, Ben Pitts, James Pond, James Pruett, Thomas Pruett, Don Raiff, Larry Reinhard, Jan Roddick, Carl Schmitt, Bruce Scott, Larry Scott, John Silva, Billy Slankard, John Stapleton, Jonathan Starling, Charles Stone, Timothy Sullivan, Bruce Swanson, John Van DeVooren, Dean Van Pelf, Benny Venturino, Robert Viola, Richard Wagner, Larry Wheeler, Rich Wheeler, Mark White, Jordan Whitecotton, Glen Wilson, Roger Womack, Dudley Young Local 380 John Benningfield, Joseph Blazek, Mack Brown, Chester Culbertson, Dennis Fendley, Christopher Fluegge, David Frerichs, Walter Hatfield, Erik Hill, Edward Krauss, James Marshall, John Neuner, Kenneth Ohl, Stephen Shapuras, John Stultz, Richard Tabeling, Robert Taylor, Robert Tuthill Local 387 Edward Bailey, Jason Barrett, Thomas Bourque, Lewis Bryson, George Caudell, Shawn Cody, Frederick Cohran, Frederick Cook, Jonathon Corcione, Dean Dryden, Robert Duffield, Robert Eason, Kenneth English, Robert Farrell, Quinton Frost, Patrick Harlow, J. Keith Helms, James Lamb, Stacey McAfee, Richard McIvor, Robert McClendon, Terry Miller, Terrell Moody, Vincent Moore, Melvin Pinckney, Junior Rawlins, Derek Rohan, Jimmy Shelley, Tony Simmons, Lawrence Small, Michael Smith, Joe Stanton, Anthony Stevens, Jeff Stoupine, James Thompkins, Russell Vincent, Casey Waid, Benjamin Willis, Curtis Wilson, Jennifer Yeats Local 392 Pat Archer, Dan Bauer, Michael Beasley, Richard Cygan, Thomas Egan, Kyle Granger Sr., Shawn Hagarty, Hank Hunsell, Robert Kogel, Jeffery Lee, Gary Matt, Nicholas Poepping, Michael Renard, Brandon Schultz, Charles Thompson Jr., John Tourville Local 393 Andrew Allen, Barry Bacon, Aaron Benjamin, Ricardo Camacho, Brandon Campbell, Gary Carty, John Coby, Dirk Enger, Larry Farrar, William Fields, Nick Flink, Kyle Ford, Gary Foster, Al Frieders, James Goblet, Rich Gould, Larry Hammersley, Charles Hartman, Dan Heath, Jody Howard, Ed Huss, Tom Kaufmann, Karl Kayzar, Richard Kokes, Joe Lathrop, Michael Lay, Richard Long, Troy Miller, John Montavon, Scott Montavon, Jordan Mrowczynski, Dan Mullis, Steve Nestor, Anthony Nicosia, Frank Norman, Chris Parker, Leroy Poss, Ray Poss, Ted Poss, Brian Robinson, Eric Sheagren, Daniel Swanson, James Swift, Robert Wackerlin, Roy Wackerlin, Al Wheeler, Ronald Zeller, Douglas Zinzer Local 383 Local 395 Gary Akkerman, TR Becker, Curtis Bell, Dennis Bell, Richard Breyman, William Durham, Brian Falleck, Roger Foemmel, Brandon Fons, Nicklaus Grimslid, Hans Hardtke, Michael Hayek, Dean Michelsen, Tom Moore, Richard Nelson, Wayne Peplinski, Henry Puphal, James Rauls, Thomas Schewe, Gary Sirvio, Michael Skibba, Larry Springer, Roy Van Riper, Anton Weisensel, Lawrence White, Samuel Wilcox Dennis Bair Sr., Bruce Barich, Lenny Bishop, David Brightwell Jr., Robert Campbell, Jeffrey Chidester, Michael Czoschke, Cliff Darnstaedt, Christopher Fabian, John Goodpastor, Paul Hendron, Kyle Johns, Phil Kostanski, Jack Kramarzewski, Vincent Lemus, Gordon Michaels, Michael Mireles, Timothy Olson, Edward Pitrowski, George Rosich, Emil Scott, James Stemmler, Jeffrey Veach, Erwin (Gerry) Zeman IRONWORKER VETERANS Local 396 Local 420 Local 489 Douglas Ball, Jeffrey Barnett, Patrick Brown, Albert Bruton Jr., Gene Chumbler, Ron Combs, Shane Cross, William Curdt, Robert Dalba, Eugene Foster, Rick Frohock, Gary Gaylord, James Gentry, Donald Harris, Michael Hemenway, Fred Herbert, James Higgenbottom, Donald Hoffman, Michael Horton, William Klug, James Magnus, Roger Morris, Norville Naes, Charles Perkins, Philip Perkins, Kevin Quick, Donald Quinn, Michael Richardson, John Joe Schmelz, Charles Smalley, Edward Smalley, Thomas Smalley, Dennis Summerfield, Michael Thompson, Robert Wagner, Dale Westbrook, Cyril Wiechens, Ray Wilson, George Winterer, Dennis Wiott, Leroy Wright Richard Allen, Michael Allushuski Jr., Harold Althouse, John Birbeck, John Bisco, Louie Casale, Eliud Cooper, William Frost III, Vincent Gaspar, John Grandstrom II, Joshua Grubb, Richard Hause, Michael Kupec, John Lorah III, Ronald Lukenbill, Gary Martin, William McElwee, Henry Mongrain, Frederick Schultz, Wilson Stamm, Frank Vilcheck Joseph Bartol, Steven Chopyak, Leonard Groboski, Jim Kenny, Mark McDermott, Patrick Mitchell, Robert Morgans Local 397 Arthur Alves, Lawrence Aycock, Otis Bass, Al Boatright, Harry Booker, Randel DeVane, Rick Egert, James Fagan Jr., Jason Hall, Robert Harmon, Michael Hicks, Hank Labia, John Leach, Jan Lewandowski, Kenneth Shapuras, James Thomas Local 399 Brian Baldwin, Craig Cardoso, Karl Hedenberg, Richard Howery, Fhane Jones, William Miller, Jose Rodriguez Local 401 Obi Bey, Mark Clegg, Tom Creary, John Dunn, Frank Erdenski, Robert Fehre, William Fitzsimmons, Sam Gager, Phillip Gehringer, Robert Gilmore, James Graf, Harry Graham, John Grant Jr., Edward Jones, Joe Lee, Frank Nebel, Stephen Nebel, Bob O’Donnell, Harry Reitz III, Robert Segeske, Bill Siemion, James Spangler, Edward Sweeney, Robert Turner Local 402 Robert Brown, Leslie Bugay, Thomas Kelly, Edward Koenig, Ronald Pribble, Ronald Suarez, John Toal, Zeno West, Kyle Williams Local 404 D. Mark Bennett, Terry Laughman Sr., Marlin Martz Jr., Chris Reed, Joseph Smith Local 405 Rickey Arce, Ralph Carabasi, Peter Dinnella, John Taddia Local 424 Local 493 Edward Bortree, Thomas Czarkosky, Thomas Gezotis, Alfred Golis, Joseph Lanouette, Bob Lawlor, Frank Lovello, Michael McGuire, John Oertel, John O’Shea, Nigel Teague Marty Adams, William Dale, James Greene, Steven Keosoff, Terry Wipperman Local 433 Clive Alexander, Jason Beadel, Carl Bedoni, Danny Bogner, Patrick Bolden, Stephen Brinkerhoff, Frank Carter, Louis Castillo, David Clark, Jack Colin, Robert Dixon, Mark Doherty, Walter Ehman, Carl Faz, Andrew Flores, Martin Frady, Charles Fromherz, Edmund Gerarden, John Gonzales, William Graham Jr., Leroy Grubbs, Dallas Gunnels, William Gutowski, Brett Halbmaier, Brian “Smiley” Johnston, Timothy Kincade Sr., William Kuhns, Benjamin Levy III, George Logan Jr., Benjamin Maxwell, Andrew McGurn, Lawrence Miracle, Royal Moulton, J.D. Nielsen, Edmund Page, Ely Paolinetti, Richard Patino, Milton Peterson, Henry Prejean, Adrian Priester, Dennis Rhodes, Arturo Rodriguez, James Schumaker, Robert Sharyer, Frank Volpe III, Bob Williams, Francis Wison, Larry York Local 440 Celino Morales, Phillip Perkins, Richard Peters Local 444 Frank Burke, Rick Gallagher, Tommy Holt, Derek Kula, Glenn Lemenager, William Muirhead, Simon Nauyalis, Howard Norberg, Sam Persico, Lloyd Thacker, James Ward Jr. Local 451 Arthur Carlisle, Jason Crossan, Ernest Hummell, Arthur James, John Santangelo, Wayne Stille, Robert Wheeler Local 468 Stanley Dajarnette, Bill Szabrak Local 477 Donald Gargis, Bryan Miles, Marvin Prince Erwin Antillon, Robert Burke, Daniel Cienfuegos, Rudy Govea Jr., Angel Hernandez, John Hoffman, Alan Kasparian, Steve Lee, Nicholas Ransom, Donald Reed, Jose Romero, Joseph Sena, Charles Skippen, Paul Steele, Maxwell Svader, Duane Wolf Local 482 Local 417 Joseph Banas III, Justin Barker, Derrick Bernaden, Howard Bryant Sr., Donald Chapa, Lindsay Craren, Ronald Follis, Fred Foster Jr., Floyd Gilmore, Douglas Eston Hawthorn, Christopher Knox, Hal Martin, Douglas Owen, James Underwood Local 495 Richard Meyer Local 498 William Prather, William Schlimmer, Ronald Vining Local 501 Robert Audlee Local 502 Franklin Bullock, Harry Maniscalco, Paul Svetik, Joseph Ward Local 506 Dominic Parente Local 508 Tim Andzelnik, Curt Bassett, Tyler Bowen, Bobby Brown, Ryan Brown, Jacob Dougherty, Bobby Hawkins-Britt, Tom Holt, Ryan Klein, Brian McConaha, Patrick Spackey, Jeremy Spanski Local 512 James Aakhus, Thomas Ansell, HJ “Sulo” Albright III, Bret Baldwin, Marshall Burke, David Davidson, Edward Kachinske, Charles Klein, Peter Larson, Rodney Lukins, Erving McKenzie, Chad Meyer, Gary Nelson, Charles Roberts, Christopher Rootes, Michael Schrodt, Edward Shaughnessy, Larry Smith, Frank Sramek, David Wadsworth, Daniel Wahlman. Local 516 Kirk Gossett, Daniel Leedle, Robert McVae, Randy Montoya, Sean Stephenson, Lee Wheatcroft, Kevin Wilson Local 518 Robert Coleman, Charles Marnati Local 549 Jonathan Baker, Louis Birurakis, Michael Coey, Tim Cook, Joseph Gagich, Harold Hopkins, Wayne Hoskins, Fred Jaco Jr., Ross Johnson, Paul Knight, Julius Koles, Alexander Kusich, H. Ted Langsdorf, Leland Mallett, Theron McNinch, Homer Nichols, Darrell Noland, Nicholas Opas, Cecil Raber, Darold Sutphin, Robert Travis, John Thur, David Wadsworth NOVEMBER 2015 | Local 416 Nick Corbo, John Eisgruber, Wayne Garber, Albert Hornbeck, Eugene Houck, Chris Leser, George Nilsen, John Odell, Kevin O’Shea, Curtis Spell, Dennis Wood Local 492 Frank Atkinson, Christopher Hadden, Sam McElroy Sr. 9 IRONWORKER VETERANS Local 550 Local 597 Local 782 Kenneth Ash III, James Bell, Michael Chapman, Steven Davis, Rod Herron, Victor Johnson, Curtis King, Gerald Lynch, Michael Murphy, Everett Perks, William Sherer, Michael Stephens, Arron Tharp, Ernest Weston Don Bozich, David Combs, Peter Ramirez, Scott Roy Kort Barber, James Bumpous, Ron Creecy Jr., Steve Fry, James “Jack” Garrison, Christopher Hill, Dave Hill, Marion Hill, Andrew Jeffers Jr., Rodney Knight, Kristopher Masterson, Christopher Nelson, David Robinson, Kelly Russell, Robert Sterling Local 568 Raymond Young Jr. Local 576 Michael Dunning Local 577 John Allen, Michael Cline, Douglas Crist, Robert Dowell, David Hedden, Lyle Hogan, Delbert Howe, Ervin Howe, George “Jerry” Howe, Harry Howe, Marion Howe, Arthur Kershner, John Leggett, David Miles, Ronald Mikel, Terry Mikel, Bradley Nelson, Deryl O’Daniels, Leroy Wolfmeyer Local 580 Frederick Allen, Louis Amorison, Spencer Andersen, Christopher Aronsen, Thomas Avellina, Robert Beach, Kevin Brennan, John Brown Jr., William Bryson, Michael Buckley, Daniel Butler, Luis Caamano, Anthony Cabrera, John Calbo, Kevin Campbell, Richard Carte, James Conroy, Jonathan Corcione, Lawrence Covar, Thomas Covar, John Creegan, Michael DeFilippis, Joseph Donovan, Gerard Downey, Timothy Dunn, John Edge, Michael Fazio, James Fegel, William Ferraro, Donald Flynn, George Gagnon, Juan Galarza, Julio Garcia Jr., Brian Geraghty, Eugene Gilvey Jr., Michael Gonzalez, Frank Gorglione, Mario Greco, Gary Gregory, Aniello Guido, Thomas Guigliano, John Hickey, Edward Holly, Brian Hoosack, Walter Huskisson, William Jantzen, Charles Jennings, William Keefe, John Kelleher, Joseph Kelly, Robert Knechtel, Tyrone Krause, Richard Lake, Jeffrey Leone Jr., Morton Liebman, Michael Lopez, John Mahoney, John Mangano, Boysie McAllister, Vincent McCauley, Thomas McGowan, James McHugh, Michael Meyer, Donald Milton, Terrance Molloy, George Morris, Vito Moschetti, Dennis Naughton, Floyd Nixon, Daniel O’Brien, John O’Leary, William Onorato, Isaias Ortiz, Gregory Owen, John Pellinger, Laszlo Phillip, Alfred Podnek, Nolan Portalatin, Paul Principate, Louis Puya, Thomas Rago, Alexander Rifelli, Robert Robilliard, Rafael Rodriquez, Joseph Rooney, Albert Rosen, Gustavo Saravia, Joseph Shanley, Charles Sheridan, Michael Skudin, Boris Stepich, Robert Teofrio, Carmine Testa, Edward Tierney, Thomas Taravella, Louis Urciuoli, Chris Van Leuwen, Henry Williams, John Wyberanec, Irwin Zweigbaum Local 584 James Caldwell, Steve Carter, Robert Crook, Sam Haught, James Lowder, Richard Pridemore, Harvey Swift 10 Local 623 Michael Boucher, Joseph Doucet, Stephen Evantham, Barney Fleming Jr., Stephen Grantham, Meredith Lockhart, Marius Lormand, Adolphus Mills, Hubert “Bear” Reynolds Jr., Jerry Wilson Local 790 Willie Dyess Local 625 John Kahaloa, Lovell Kaleikini, Sasa’e Lauvao, Bryson Reynolds Local 700 William Crawford, Brian Hamlin, Roy Montour Local 798 Calvin Brown, Robert Livingston, Stephen Lovelace, James Morris, Andrew Williams Local 807 John Hall Local 704 Gregory Alexander, Garry Brown, Vernon Brown, Samuel Bryant, Phillip Burney, Danny Curnutt, James Curnutt, Robin Davis, Donald Garner, David Graham, Luther Hamby, Marion Hamby, James King, Bobby Lockhart, James Lockhart, Lowell Lockhart, Billy Maddox, Joe Mason, Howard McKee, Edward McLaughlin, David Payton, Ronald Peardon, Edwin Rawlston, Jesse Reed, George Sanders, Thomas Stacy, Jack Summers, Charlie Vandergriff, Ronnie Vandergriff, Robert Ward, Kenneth Wilkins Local 709 Hugh Chrisco, William Clifton, Johnny Wright Local 720 Ronald Nilson Local 721 Gill Drane, John Gutkind, Gaber Hinterseer Herold, Gordon Ransom Local 732 Dan Hampton, Weldon Hoff, Buddy Hughes, Barry Smith, Carly Tvetene, Jerry Wellard Local 751 Robert Ball, Israel Figueroa-Arce, Jacob Franklin, Terry Gallagher, Gordon Jorgenson, John Lewis, Lance Nelson Local 759 Gordon Perry, Clifford Slowe Local 764 Joseph Crowe Local 769 Wayne Flint, Kevin Meredith, George Myers, David Ray, Edward Ray Local 808 Jason Arnold, William Milks, Ben Schmitz, Lawrence Schuler II, Jess Severinghaus Local 811 Kenneth Crowley, Anthony Walencik Local 838 Edward Warner III Local 847 Rogelio Carlos Aldana, Erwin Antillon, Lucio Gonzalez Local 848 David Allison, Jon Biddiscombe, Leonard Biggs, Rafael Brito, Glen Crosby, Elmore Dail, Charles Ely, Phillip Lindsley, Martin Smith, Eric Thomas The UNION VETERANS COUNCIL Cares About Our Veterans W healthcare delivered through a strong, fully funded and staffed VA. Yet our mission extends beyond veterans. Our advocacy will lift all working people, because the issues facing veterans and those facing working families aren’t independent of each other—a lack of good jobs and attacks on healthcare impact each one of us. We want veterans and all working people to enjoy the freedoms we fought to protect. That’s what the Union Veterans Council is all about. We fight for those who’ve fought for us, and we work together for a better life. That’s what we’re doing. And we want to do it more. That’s why we’re growing the Union Veterans Council. We need your help: Signup (unionveterans.org) and share information about the council with your sisters and brothers at work and at meetings. Join us today. Fraternally, Will Fischer Union Veterans Council, AFL-CIO NOVEMBER 2015 | henever I am asked to provide remarks somewhere—a local union meeting, a convention, an executive board meeting, you name it—I always take a moment at the beginning to ask all the veterans in the room to stand. I do this for one main reason. No, that main reason isn’t to simply say thanks—I’ll leave that for the football games. No, my reasoning is to remind all in attendance that our union ranks are chock-full of veterans. Chock-full. In fact, not once have fewer than 35 percent stood up. Sometimes it’s more like 75 percent. That should come as a surprise to no one. You see, the working class and the veterans class are one in the same. When you’re talking to people who work, you’re often also talking to people who served. When you see folks fighting for their rights on the job here at home, very often those same folks fought for our rights overseas. Every movement and organization begins with an idea. An idea can give a movement birth, nourish it through infancy and sustain it through adversity. Simply put, the idea of the Union Veterans Council is to improve the lives of veterans and working people. When someone takes off his or her uniform, we want to make sure he or she can get a good job—and have dignity and respect and the ability to bargain collectively on the job. We want him or her to have access to the healthcare they earned— 11 ACTIVE MEMBERS IN THE MILITARY LU NO. 12 MEMBER NUMBER NAME CLASS ACTIVITY EFFECTIVE DATE LU NO. MEMBER NUMBER NAME CLASS ACTIVITY EFFECTIVE DATE 3 1283748 FULMORE, MACEO M Appr to Military 1-Oct-2004 263 1448780 WILCHER, DERRICK P M Appr to Military 1-Apr-2013 3 1296730 OLEAR, EUGENE J M Appr to Military 1-May-2004 290 1473691 PICKENS, LUCAS A M Appr to Military 1-Feb-2015 1-Sep-2011 3 1265421 PEDIGO, CHAD A M Journ to Military 21-Jan-2000 377 1425069 CASTRO, JOHNNY M Journ to Military 7 1237879 BEASLEY, JASON L M Journ to Military 1-Jun-2007 377 1127713 GALLEGOS, JOHN R M Journ to Military 1-Jul-2008 7 1325572 BLAIS, MARK M Journ to Military 1-Apr-2006 378 1361321 MALONE, MICHAEL A M Appr to Military 1-Dec-2006 7 1237817 CESAITIS, JEFFREY E M Journ to Military 1-Jan-2004 378 1398823 ROLLER, CHRISTIAN D M Appr to Military 1-Oct-2008 7 1353295 CUMMINGS, EDWARD M Appr to Military 1-Jan-2007 395 1446153 CAMPLAN, TROY A M Appr to Military 1-Jun-2014 7 1323079 PAIGE, GORDON E M Appr to Military 1-May-2005 395 1446157 PAULEY, DOUGLAS S M Appr to Military 1-Jul-2012 7 1336222 ROCHE, DANIEL M Appr to Military 1-Mar-2005 395 1344041 WOODEN, ELISA S M Appr to Military 1-Jan-2008 7 986730 SHEA, DANIEL F M Journ to Military 1-Jan-2015 396 1250792 BUTERA, BRIAN D M Journ to Military 1-Nov-2001 7 1080838 SHEA, THOMAS M M Journ to Military 1-Apr-2015 396 1348952 ENGLISH, CRAIG L M Appr to Military 1-May-2007 10 1393142 HEATHMAN, BRADLEY J M Appr to Military 1-Jan-2009 396 1380050 KENNISON, DANIEL E M Journ to Military 1-Dec-2011 10 1424952 SCHUMAN, TRENTON K M Proby to Military 1-Aug-2010 396 1380069 MERCURIO, JACOB L M Appr to Military 1-Jun-2010 16 1343730 CRAFTON, LANCE E M Journ to Military 1-May-2008 396 1379625 STANGE, WILLIAM D M Appr to Military 1-Mar-2008 22 1422345 BEYER, JARED M M Appr to Military 1-May-2011 401 1348833 MC MONAGLE, DANIEL W M Appr to Military 1-Jun-2006 22 1204076 DAVIDSON, BOBBY J M Journ to Military 1-Nov-2010 416 1381494 MASON, CORY E M Journ to Military 1-Nov-2011 22 1319851 GIBSON, DAVID L M Appr to Military 1-Feb-2003 416 1316714 TAYLOR, ANDRE M Appr to Military 1-Sep-2004 22 1472037 MC INTYRE, COREY M M Appr to Military 1-Dec-2014 420 1402772 MOLINA, LUIS A M Appr to Military 1-Oct-2008 22 1364726 PAINTER, ZACHARY A M Journ to Military 1-May-2014 433 1393529 JIMENEZ, DEREK R M Journ to Military 1-Mar-2015 22 1361950 STOWE, THOMAS R M Journ to Military 1-Nov-2010 433 1442385 MAROTTA BAXTER, CHARLES K M Appr to Military 1-Apr-2013 24 1347821 BACA, RUPERTO A M Journ to Military 1-Sep-2011 433 1264212 OZOBIA, JOHN I M Journ to Military 1-Jul-2007 24 1371356 HOY, JEFFREY M Appr to Military 1-Nov-2007 433 1419946 RASK, VIRGIL M M Appr to Military 1-Jan-2013 25 1411752 COHEN, JOSEPH M M Appr to Military 1-Mar-2010 440 1384121 KOZAK, JESSIE J M Appr to Military 1-Mar-2009 25 1313732 MACHCINSKI, ANDREW A M Appr to Military 1-Mar-2004 440 1292381 WILKINSON, WADE M Appr to Military 1-Mar-2003 25 1386889 PERRY, RANDY R M Proby to Military 1-Nov-2008 469 1293076 BOWEN, CHARLES E M Journ to Military 1-Jan-2004 25 1220736 RUMBLE, SCOTT T M Journ to Military 1-Jan-2014 477 1424110 SHARP, BRENDAN S M Appr to Military 1-Oct-2010 27 1257351 EVANS, TODD M Journ to Military 1-Mar-2002 482 1349558 BANAS, JOSEPH R M Journ to Military 1-Nov-2010 44 1342448 DICKENS, TIMOTHY R M Journ to Military 1-Aug-2012 489 1297976 BROWN, ALLAN M M Journ to Military 1-Feb-2003 44 1409626 FELDKAMP, JAY R M Appr to Military 1-Oct-2009 492 1254463 JACKSON, JEREMY C M Journ to Military 1-Jun-2009 44 1406693 VILLANI, DAVID J M Appr to Military 1-Aug-2010 492 1436271 JOHNSON, ROBERT K M Appr to Military 1-Jan-2012 46 1325617 EVRLEY, MICHAEL R M Journ to Military 6-Aug-2008 492 1440721 SAMARTINO, CHARLES A M Appr to Military 1-May-2012 46 1411462 GALLOGLY, JONATHAN M Appr to Military 1-Mar-2010 495 1337298 WHITE, JONATHAN R M Journ to Military 1-Oct-2012 55 1443683 STONER, MICHAEL M Appr to Military 1-Dec-2013 508 1451945 BOWEN, TYLER M Journ to Military 1-Apr-2013 70 1432854 HOOPER, MATTHEW T M Appr to Military 1-Nov-2012 508 1455510 DOUGHERTY, JACOB E M Journ to Military 1-Dec-2013 86 1346461 HUEHNERHOFF, GARY M M Journ to Military 1-May-2011 508 1447219 MC CONAHA, BRIAN J M Journ to Military 1-Dec-2013 86 1481029 KENNEDY, BEAU J M Appr to Military 1-Jun-2015 508 1397005 SPANSKI, JEREMY H M Journ to Military 1-May-2008 86 1344164 LANGILLE, HEATH W M Journ to Military 1-Dec-2010 512 1330613 MURRAY, ALEX J M Journ to Military 1-Sep-2007 86 1345158 SCALICI, ANTHONY G M Journ to Military 1-Apr-2009 550 1233105 CHAPMAN, MICHAEL P M Journ to Military 1-Feb-2015 86 1459479 WATE, TANNER M M Appr to Military 1-Oct-2013 568 1287921 BROADWATER, JUSTIN D M Appr to Military 30-Apr-2002 86 1358006 WISELY, JEFFERY M Journ to Military 1-Feb-2012 580 1426758 RAMOS, MICHAEL A M Journ to Military 1-Jun-2014 92 1425184 CAMERON, MICHAEL J M Appr to Military 1-Sep-2011 584 1282392 GRANTHAM, COLE E M Journ to Military 1-Nov-2009 92 1406676 PALMER, BRANDEN R M Appr to Military 1-Jul-2009 584 1388070 LEE, ANTHONY C M Appr to Military 1-Jun-2008 103 1389248 CHARLETON, MICHAEL D M Appr to Military 1-Dec-2010 709 1285387 BRENNAN, LANCE M M Journ to Military 1-Sep-2009 118 1299066 HARRISON, CHRISTOPHER S M Journ to Military 1-Jul-2006 709 1106420 WRIGHT, KENNETH W M Journ to Military 1-Oct-2004 118 1257109 LEWIS, LARRY L M Journ to Military 1-Aug-2009 728 1395696 TSANOV, TSANKO D M Appr to Military 1-Feb-2009 1-Mar-2009 118 1251476 WRIGHT, BRIAN L M Journ to Military 1-May-2004 732 1347848 DONOVAN, JOHN R M Journ to Military 147 1388961 BARRETT, RICHARD M Appr to Military 1-May-2008 751 1479620 CLARK, CHRISTOPHER M Appr to Military 1-Feb-2015 207 1406548 MICHALEC, JAMES D M Appr to Military 1-Nov-2009 751 1345707 FELTON, CASEY D M Appr to Military 1-Aug-2006 207 1308726 PERSING, BRIAN W M Journ to Military 1-Sep-2006 808 1387732 MIRABAL, DARYEN M Journ to Military 1-Jun-2014 229 1428967 GALINDO, DAVID M Appr to Military 1-Nov-2011 808 1369490 PEAKE, DAWN M M Journ to Military 1-Apr-2010 229 1282944 LASK, MICHAEL M Journ to Military 1-Feb-2012 847 1465141 HAMILTON, JOSHUA M Appr to Military 1-Apr-2015 229 1266372 TILT, JEREMY R M Journ to Military 1-Jul-2006 Yet Another Form of Voter Suppression V SIX MILLION AMERICANS ARE DEPRIVED OF THIS FUNDAMENTAL RIGHT through a legal practice of voter suppression known as felony disenfranchisement. NOVEMBER 2015 | oting is the cornerstone of our democracy and the fundamental right of all adult American citizens. Yet, 6 million Americans are banned from participating in the democratic process. Six million Americans – 2.5 percent of our nation’s voting age population – are deprived of this fundamental right through a legal practice of voter suppression known as felony disenfranchisement. Felony disenfranchisement is the legal term for revoking the right to vote because of a person’s unlawful past. If a person has committed a felonious crime, it is extremely likely that person’s right to vote has been rescinded. What constitutes a felony offense differs from state to state with some states imposing strict penalties even for non-violent acts; e.g., writing a bad check, disorderly conduct, or DUIs. Felony disenfranchisement is not a federal law, and therefore is a power reserved for each state to enact and enforce. All but two states have enacted some form of felony disenfranchisement, and each law is written and interpreted differently. Because these laws vary state by state, knowing and understanding who is legally eligible to vote is confusing. Many of these laws are intentionally complex, and information on these practices is not easily attainable by the public. Forty-eight states practice some form of felony disenfranchisement. Twelve states restrict the right to vote to all currently incarcerated persons. Four states disenfranchise those currently incarcerated and released on parole. Nineteen states disenfranchise those currently incarcerated, released on parole and still on probation. Twelve states disenfranchise even those who have completed all terms and conditions of their sentencing. (See map on next page for more information). Within the 12 states that disenfranchise offenders post sentence, the conditions of restoring voting rights vary greatly. For example, Delaware, Florida, and Virginia require a five-year waiting period before rights are 13 restored – though restoration is subject to the nature of the crime committed. Nebraska requires a two-year waiting period, and Arizona only disenfranchises after a second felonious conviction. Many states do not have rules in place for automatic restoration – instead voting rights may only be restored on a case-by-case basis by personally petitioning the state’s governor, a burdensome, complex and timeconsuming process with a success rate that varies 1–16 percent state by state. Rates of incarceration have been steadily increasing for decades. Today, 2.2 million people are imprisoned. This year, 600,000 of them will be released, and the majority of them will have been forced to forfeit their right to vote. Since 1980, the number of U.S. citizens that have been disenfranchised has increased by 500 percent. These are not insignificant numbers. Of the 6 million disenfranchised, only 25 percent of them are currently incarcerated. There are 4.5 million people living and working in communities throughout our country alienated from participating in our democracy. Voter suppression laws have become more prevalent in recent years. Seventeen states now require all voters to show a state-issued identification card when casting a ballot. Some states have tightened requirements on absentee ballots and limited early voting. Factor in the millions affected by felony disenfranchisement, and it is not surprising voter turnout rates have been on the decline for 50 years. In fact, 2014 had the lowest turnout in modern history. If all adult citizens were afforded equal voting rights and protection under the law, the nature of electoral politics would change. In many elections, the number of disenfranchised in the state is often greater than the margin of victory. Infamously, if the hundreds of thousands of disenfranchised Floridians were able to vote in the 2000 presidential election, the winner could have been decidedly different. A career in construction is a path that many with a blemished record choose because the construction industry typically does not require background checks or ask about a person’s past. As such, our industry and trade may be disproportionately more affected by felony disenfranchisement than others. Felony disenfranchisement undermines the open, participatory nature of the democratic process. To extend punishment beyond the confines of prison is to further marginalize and alienate millions of our neighbors from our communities. For more information on felony disenfranchisement laws and restoration of voting rights in your state, contact the Ironworkers Political Action League at ipal@iwintl.org. In many elections, the number of disenfranchised in the state is OFTEN GREATER THAN THE MARGIN OF VICTORY. DISENFRANCHISED RATES AMONG POST-SENTENCING STATES ■ N O RESTRICTION ■ PRISON ■ PRISON & PAROLE 14 ■ PRISON, PAROLE & PROBATION ■ PRISON, PAROLE, PROBATION & POST-SENTENCE STATE NUMBER DISENFRANCHISED (IN THOUSANDS) POPULATION PERCENTAGE FLORIDA 1,542 10.4 MISSISSIPPI 182 8.3 KENTUCKY 244 7.4 VIRGINIA 451 7.3 ALABAMA 262 7.2 TENNESSEE 342 7.1 WYOMING 25 6 ARIZONA 199 4.2 NEVADA 86 4.2 DELAWARE 7 1.6 NEBRASKA 17 1.3 IOWA 21 .9 PRIMARIES 2015 W e’re in the final months of 2015. In the United States, that means the presidential election is about to kick into high gear. Get ready for non-stop ads and news coverage of the race all the way through next November. ✪ WHY PRIMARIES? The primaries weren’t always the way major U.S. political parties nominated their candidates. Power used to rest entirely with party insiders who chose candidates at conventions, away from the public eye. Backroom deals were common and the nominee was indebted to the party elites who chose him. People voted in primaries, but the results were only used to prove to party bigwigs their favored candidate could win votes. Everyday people didn’t have much voice in the process. That changed in 1968. Television news coverage had brought the formerly-secret action of party conventions into light. The incumbent Democratic President, Lyndon Johnson, had decided not to run again, and the candidate who had performed best in the primaries, Robert Kennedy, had been assassinated. Democratic Party bosses strong-armed their favored candidate, Hubert Humphrey, to the nomination, even though Humphrey hadn’t received any primary votes. Convention floor fights and massive protests were an embarrassment to the party, and Humphrey lost badly in the general election to Richard Nixon. After the 1968 convention, both parties realized that the old way of nominating candidates had to go. Party reforms increased the power of voters, leading to the primary system we have today. NOVEMBER 2015 | Unlike in Canada, where the campaign for federal Parliament lasts only a few weeks or months, the election for the presidency of the United States is a drawn-out slog to the finish line. Part of this is due to the outsized role of money in U.S. politics. With unlimited corporate money, campaigns can afford to keep ads running and canvassers knocking as long as they want. Largely, though, the long campaign is due to a unique feature of U.S. presidential politics: The presidential primary elections. Primaries are the elections American political parties use to select their presidential candidates. At the beginning of the campaign, many different people all compete to be the Republican or Democratic Parties’ standard bearers. Primaries serve to test these candidates and winnow away the ones who can’t take the heat of the national campaign trail. In the end, only one candidate is left standing in each party, and these two candidates compete for the presidency in the general election. 15 PRIMARIES 2015 ✪ HOW IT WORKS The primaries are a series of elections from January to July, one for each state and U.S. territory. Voters choose between the various candidates fighting for each party’s nomination. Candidates compete in small states like Iowa, New Hampshire and Nevada first, where grassroots campaigns can get out and talk to voters directly. Large states, and large groups of states, have their elections next. Voters in later states watch the results of early primaries to see if their favorite candidate can compete. Weak candidates drop out throughout the process. Usually one candidate is the clear winner by the end of the primary season. Since the point of primary elections is to choose a party’s standard bearer, Republicans and Democrats usually have separate primaries. The rules for these elections vary from state to state. Some states have “closed primaries” requiring voters to register as members of a party beforehand to vote. Other states have “open primaries,” and voters can vote in whichever party’s election they like. Either way, people can only vote in one party’s primary each year – no double dipping! Unlike in presidential general elections, where only two candidates have a real chance at winning, primaries usually offer many candidates in each party to choose from. This is good for voters, since we have a better chance of finding a candidate who represents us. If you want to make your voice heard in the political process, voting in your state’s primary is a great place to start. This system isn’t perfect. One of the biggest problems is that the first two states to vote, Iowa and New Hampshire, don’t represent the American population very well. Voters in larger, more diverse states don’t have their voices heard until later in the campaign. By that time, many candidates may have dropped out. That doesn’t make late state voters meaningless, but it does give early state voters an outsized influence over the nomination process. The Republican and Democratic Parties had not published their official primary calendars by the time this article went to press. Contact your business manager to find out when your party’s primary will happen in your state, and where the candidates stand on issues that matter to us as ironworkers. HOW DOES A PRIMARY WORK? · S how up. · G et ballot. · Vote. · G o home. · O PEN PRIMARY: party affiliation not required. · C LOSED PRIMARY: party affiliation required. · M IXED PRIMARY: rules vary by state and party. OPEN PRIMARY CLOSED PRIMARY MIXED PRIMARY DEM CAUCUS, GOP PRIMARY HOW DOES A CAUCUS WORK? · S how up. · P rove party registration. WHAT KIND OF PRIMARY DOES MY STATE HAVE? ▲ DOES MY STATE USE A CAUCUS? ▼ CAUCUS DEM CAUCUS, GOP PRIMARY POSSIBLE CAUCUS PRIMARY 16 · H ave meeting. · D iscuss issues. · C AUCUSES ARE CLOSED – every participant must choose a political party affiliation. Some states require party registration before caucus dates, others allow same-day registration. · C ount supporters to determine which candidates are viable. · V IABILITY: A candidate must have a set percentage of support determined by total number of participants in order to be viable. If not viable, supporters of that candidate switch to a candidate that is viable until everyone in room is supporting a viable candidate. · Switch allegiance if your candidate is not viable. · Every caucus is conducted differently in accordance with state and party rules. · D etermine winners. · K ENTUCKY currently has a mixed party system. This may change to a caucus in 2016 to accommodate Rand Paul, who is running for both his U.S. Senate seat and the Republican nomination for president. · C hoose candidate. · C onvince others to support your candidate. · S elect delegates for next party convention. · G o home. PRIMARIES 2015 LEFT: CORNELL UNIVERSITY LIBRARY; RIGHT: QQQQQQ Party conventions have evolved from closed meetings of party bosses… …to carefully managed media events. ✪ DELEGATES ✪ THE CONVENTION The primary season ends with the party national conventions. Delegates from the states and territories gather to officially nominate their party’s candidate for president of the United States. In 2016, Republicans will hold their convention in Cleveland and Democrats will hold theirs in Philadelphia. The last convention in which the nominee wasn’t known beforehand was the 1976 Republican convention, when Ronald Reagan came close to beating unpopular President Gerald Ford in the primaries. These days, primaries are more of a publicity event for parties to advertise their nominees. Delegates also use the convention as a chance to vote on policies in the national party platform. Ironworkers and other unions go to party conventions to speak out for policies benefitting working families. After this long process, the nominee is only halfway done. He or she still has to face the other party’s nominee in the general presidential election. With such a long and difficult series of primary elections, only the most determined candidates make it to this stage. Our union will be engaged throughout the primaries and the general election to make sure the next president of the United States is a friend to ironworkers and all working people. NOVEMBER 2015 | Primary voters cast their ballots for presidential candidates, but the final choice of nominee comes down to delegates at the convention. Each party holds a convention at the end of the primary season, and each state sends delegates based on the size of its population. State delegates are usually pledged to support the candidate their state’s voters chose during the primary. This is opposed to the old system, when delegates were pledged to support the candidates favored by their local party bosses and political machines. How are these delegates chosen? That varies by state and political party. Sometimes delegates are chosen by caucuses after the primary or at a state convention. For example, Iron Workers Political and Legislative Director Dave Kolbe was chosen as an Ohio delegate to the Democratic conventions in 2008 and 2012 during state party caucuses. Whether you are a Democrat or a Republican, becoming a del- egate to your party’s convention is a way to represent the interests of your fellow ironworkers. If you are interested, look up the rules for your state party’s delegate selection and see if your local and central labor council can help you get elected. There is a second type of delegate: “unpledged” or “super delegates.” Super delegates are party leaders and high-profile elected officials who are automatically granted delegate status based on their office. They are outnumbered by pledged delegates from the states, but are free to support any candidate they choose. Super delegates usually don’t sway the outcome of the nomination, but can serve as a tiebreaker if primary voters are split between two or more candidates. 17 [ A HELMETS TO HARDHATS JOURNEY ] FROM soldier TO UNION IRONWORKER S taff Sergeant Ronny Parayno spent nine years in the United States Army. Sergeant Parayno learned three very important skills during his service in the Army: teamwork, resourcefulness and selfdiscipline. The Army emphasizes these three skills in order to help individuals set small goals for themselves and overcome obstacles in their way preventing them from achieving their goals. Once his enlistment ended, Ronny enrolled in college courses at the public university in Anchorage, Alaska. His next three goals were to earn a college education, find a career and start a family. But after he earned his college degree, he found it was difficult for him to find the job he really wanted. Ronny kept noticing an organization by the name of Helmets to Hardhats was continuously advertising skilled trade apprenticeships on Facebook. Twitter was providing updated news and information about construction jobs and success stories regarding military people like himself finding rewarding careers in the skilled trades after being discharged. Parayno found the right opportunity at Local 63 in Chicago where he is now an apprentice working for Industrial Fence Inc. (IFI), a signatory fence contractor with Local 63. “Ironwork is a perfect fit for my skill set,” ARE YOU LOOKING FOR A JOB, OR A CAREER? If you’re looking for a career, you’re in the right place. Helmets to Hardhats connects quality men and women from the Armed Forces with promising building and construction careers. Visit helmetstohardhats.org for more information. 18 says Ronny. “My on-the-job training exposes me to practical job applications.” Using the skill sets he learned in the Army “puts me in a position to adapt a sense of team mindedness for safety, a sense of resourcefulness to overcome the physical demands and the self-discipline to make things happen,” states Parayno. When asked to name the top three benefits of joining the Iron Workers Union, Ronny gave us this: • WAGE EQUALITY – Gaining employment though the union provides a good wage. • SOLIDARITY – As a union member, he’s part of an international organization where each person on his left and right is called a brother or sister. IFI is a signatory contractor with Local 63 in Chicago and currently employs over 50 union ironworkers. The company is owned and operated by Mike Saltijeral. Mike is a United States Marine and received high expeditionary and commendation medals for his duty in Panama and the Persian Gulf War. When he returned to Chicago after his military service, he entered the construction industry and started Industrial Fence in 1999. We thank Mike for his service to our country and his innovation to not only be a business owner but, to be a signatory employer as well. We are proud to have brother Ronny Parayno as a member of Local 63 and our great International Union. He is another outstanding success story of Helmets to Hardhats transitioning quality people from the military to union ironworker. NOVEMBER 2015 | • FRINGE BENEFITS – A unionized workforce sets higher standards for health, dental, pension and an overall quality of life. Sergeant Parayno learned three very important skills during his service in the Army: teamwork, resourcefulness and self-discipline. 19 IRONWORKERS POLITICAL ACTION LEAGUE Dave Kolbe Meet the Winners of the Ironworker Veteran Wreath Laying Contest R ogelio “Carlos”Aldana, Dennis Knitz, Harvey McDaniel and Edward Warner were the four ironworker military veterans selected to win a weekend trip to Washington, D.C. and participate in a wreath laying ceremony at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier at Arlington National Cemetery in Arlington, Virginia. The contest was organized by the Ironworkers Political Action League (IPAL) and No Greater Love, a non-profit organization dedicated to honoring America’s fallen. The contest was open to all union ironworker military veterans in the United States and Canada, and the four winners were selected at random. • Rogelio “Carlos” Aldana, Local 847, served five years in the United States Navy working as a military steelworker or “Seabee” in the Naval Mobile Construction Battalion. He served a seven-month deployment to Afghanistan in 2013 and remains on active duty today. He is a member of the Veterans of Foreign Wars (VFW). Carlos specializes in working with reinforcing steel. He traveled to Washington, D.C. with his wife Courtney and two daughters to lay the wreath. • Dennis Knitz, Local 55, served four years in the United States Army and was stationed in Berlin, Germany for 3 years. He is a member of the American Legion. Upon his return to U.S. soil, Dennis began working as an apprentice and became a journeyman in 1967. Dennis spent 42 years working in the field and retired in September 2009. He traveled to Washington, D.C. with his wife Judy. • Harvey McDaniel, Local 384, served three years in the United States Army including a one-and-a-half-year tour in Vietnam. Harvey began working as an ironworker upon his return to the United States in 1971. A third generation ironworker, Harvey retired in 2014 after working 43 years in the field and on many jobs for the Tennessee Valley Authority. He is a lifetime member of Local 384 (Knoxville, Tenn.). He was accompanied to Washington, D.C. by his wife Cynthia, two daughters, and four grandchildren. • Edward Warner III, Local 838, served 10 years in the United States Navy and has traveled throughout the world on missions to the Mediterranean Sea and South America. Edward became an ironworker in 2004. He has served as a shop steward at Supreme Steel for nine years and as president of Local 838 (Regina, Saskatchewan) for eight years. Originally from Lacrosse, Wisconsin, Edward now lives in Waldheim, Saskatchewan with his wife Maria. We would like to thank these four ironworkers, and all of our ironworker veterans, for their service. 20 ORNAMENTAL, ARCHITECTURAL & MISCELLANEOUS METALS DOAMM DEPARTMENT REPORT Ray Dean Ornamental Market on the Rise! T he ornamental market is in a bull market as we speak. Starting from the West Coast: Apple Headquarters will be our largest ornamental job in 2015/2016. Transbay Tower has broken ground and will lead the way into state-of-the-art transportation. There are 1,200 apprentices in the San Francisco/Oakland area. Heading down to Texas: The Austin market has exploded with great ornamental projects, including the Colorado Building. Heading up to Chicago: The high-rises are in full production. Local 63 has returned to strong employment and increased man-hours. New York and Boston: Markets continue to stay strong with the Hudson Yard project in New York and the Millennium Tower project in Boston coming to mind. We end with Minnesota: Local 512 has had continued success and great growth. Hats off to the leadership team! They are innovative in targeting expansion for training facilities and procuring an excellent skilled work force. Local 512 Gains Membership and Market Share A huge part of Local 512’s success is due to their commitment to training. After years of renting space at a local technical college, Local 512 developed and built their own 18,000-square-foot training center in 2001. Shortly after the merger, their commitment to training continued. It was decided to build a training center in northern Minnesota, which is now referred to as Region B. Since the training center has been built, membership, man-hours and market share has doubled in Region B. The large number of apprentices and the amount of training provided to all members necessitated a $4 million, 19,000-square-foot addition to be added to the St. Paul Training Center. With this success in mind and a grant from IMPACT, Local 512 has purchased land in Mandan, North Dakota and is working with a general contractor to develop a training center for members in North Dakota. By the time classes start in the fall of 2016, with the completion of the North Dakota Training Center, Local 512 and the JATC will have three facilities, 65,000 square feet combined, six full-time staff and 34 instructors. Local 512 feels education and training are going to be the keys to the success of the Iron Workers. If we as an indus- Ray Dean Executive Director Live, Work, Be Union! NOVEMBER 2015 | Ironworkers Local 512 (Minneapolis/St. Paul, Minn.) was chartered in 1937, with the merger of Minneapolis Local 19 (1904) and St. Paul Local 94 (1906). In 2004, St. Paul Local 512 merged with Duluth Local 563 and Bismarck, North Dakota Local 793. Today, Local 512’s jurisdiction includes all of Minnesota, North Dakota and 21 counties in western Wisconsin. This brings Local 512’s jurisdiction coverage totaling almost 175,000 square miles. Since the mergers, the membership of Local 512 has grown to 1,350 journeyman, 504 apprentices and 275 probationary members. Currently there are some extremely large jobs underway under in the jurisdiction of Local 512, including Sanford Hospital in Fargo, North Dakota; Essar Steel Plant in Northern Minnesota; Flint Hill’s Refinery; the Viking’s Stadium in Minneapolis; St. Croix Bridge in Stillwater, Minnesota; and the I-90 Bridge, which spans the Mississippi River between Minnesota and Wisconsin, near Dresbach, Minnesota. All are long-term projects employing between 100-300 ironworkers. In 2015, Local 512 provided over 3,000,000 man-hours of work. Sincerely, 21 ORNAMENTAL, ARCHITECTURAL & MISCELLANEOUS METALS DOAMM DEPARTMENT REPORT continued try are not only going to survive, but to continue to grow, education and training is a must. One area of training Local 512 has decided to make a priority is architectural and ornamental training. With seven local signatory contractors specifically bidding only on this type of work, Local 512 is developing its own curriculum to ensure the success of its contractors and members. The plan will allow the contractors to capture more and more of the market. Instruction is given in all areas, from the curtain wall mock up, to sloped walls, skylights, storefronts and entryways. Local 512 is ahead of the curve in its instruction of instrument layout training, including total station. According to Tim Ryan, a third generation ironworker, who is Local 512’s instrument and layout instruc- ORDWAY THEATER 2015 Holiday Ornament Order NOW and receive this elegant Limited Edition Iron Workers ornament in time to give for the holidays. Three and a quarter inch glass ornament with decoration on both sides, each ornament is individually gift boxed. Sure to become a collectors’ item! Call: 1(800)789-0072 Fax this order form: (703)631-4209 IW Fulfillment • P.O. Box 220690 • Chantilly, Virginia 20153 Canadian orders may be subject to GST, and all payments must be in U.S. Funds. PROCEEDS FROM THE SALE OF IRON WORKER PRODUCTS BENEFIT THE JOHN H. LYONS SR. SCHOLARSHIP FOUNDATION. Virginia residents must pay 6% sales tax Order for ornament must be accompanied by payment. Make checks payable to: K&R Industries We accept MasterCard and VISA (no Discover/AmEx). Allow 3 to 4 weeks for delivery. The John H. Lyons Sr. Scholarship Foundation honors the memory of the late Iron Workers General President John H. Lyons and helps sons and daughters of ironworkers to attend college. 22 LIMITED QUANTITIES AVAILABLE of 2015 ORNAMENT. WHEN SOLD OUT, THEY ARE GONE. tor, “The total station has helped me layout a lot of interesting buildings in the past six years, some of which I don’t know how it would have happened without it.” This commitment to training and education is what ensures that Local 512 will continue to be one of the best locals in the International, in man-hours, market share and growth. Ordway Theater (FACING PAGE) The Ordway Theater in St. Paul takes your conventional curtain wall theories and flips them upside down. This building was originally built in the 70s and the new addition needed to look like the original and perform as it should in 2015. The curtain wall consists of a lot of odd corners, mullions dead loaded at the top loaded with steel and custom copper covers. It had a total of 1,771 ironworker man-hours. The total station is a huge part of quickly and successfully laying out a complex wall like this. The contractor on the project was W.L. Hall. Local 512 is ahead of the curve in its instruction of instrument layout training, including total station. Another project where total station was a benefit is the University of Minnesota ACC building. It has large steel loaded mullions dead loaded from the top. The wall has an ellipse shape rising in elevation from right to left at the bottom horizontal. The sloped ellipse sill was built out of steel tubes cantilevered out two feet from the poured concrete wall. The project had 7,304 ironworker man-hours. W.L. Hall was the contractor. Children’s Hospital Entry & Connecting Link @ United Hospital/ Children’s Hospital (BELOW) Structural Steel: Hi Five Erectors Demo/Curtain Wall/Entries: Twin City Glass Wedged between a parking ramp on the far left and United Hospital on the far right is the unique Children’s Hospital entry. Demo started in September 2014 on the United side; soon followed by the bridge steel over the existing lower level entry. Original curtain wall on both buildings was removed after dead loading remaining wall above. This project was completed in the spring of 2015 with very little interference to normal hospital activity or parking ramp access per the contract agreement. Public safety was the number one priority. CHILDREN’S HOSPITAL NOVEMBER 2015 | UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA ACC BUILDING University of Minnesota ACC Building (BOTTOM LEFT) 23 SAFETY & HEALTH DEPARTMENT REPORT Steve Rank Does Your Workplace Make Safety a Function of Company Operations? T he Safety and Health Department reviews incident trends involving members throughout the United States and Canada to identify contributing factors and methods to prevent reoccurrence. With the continued support and resources of General President Eric Dean, the International Associations’ Zero Fatality & Incident Campaign challenges all members to SEE SOMETHING! SAY SOMETHING! and intervene to prevent unsafe conditions and unsafe acts in the workplace. Many of the fatalities and disabling injuries affecting our members continue to stem from the same common activities and hazards. There is a distinct difference in safety performance and zero injury outcomes between large industrial projects and commercial projects. This article emphasizes the primary deadly dozen activities and hazards for field and shop operations, and our focus to prevent workplace incidents. Field Operations: • Falls due to unprotected or inadequate floor opening covers. • Overloading and collapse of unsecured open web steel joists. • Lack of fall protection and inadequate use of fall arrest equipment. • Falls during installation of floor and roof decking. • Material handling during steel erection and reinforcing steel activities. • Column collapse due to anchor bolt failure and/or insufficient concrete strength. • Structural collapse of unsupported reinforcing steel columns, walls and decks. • Struck-by injuries from falling fall objects, tools and equipment. 24 • Caught-between injuries during hoisting and rigging operations. • Impalement from unprotected reinforcing dowels or other vertical projections. • Electrical hazards and injuries from high-voltage power lines. • Heat illness and toxic exposure to chemicals and airborne contaminants. Shop Operations: • Exposure to toxic welding fumes that create serious health hazards. • Striking hazards during material handling, loading and unloading trucks. • Dismemberment pertaining to machine guarding of shear presses, punch presses and other equipment. • Rigging failure and use of chains, slings, plate dogs and other rigging equipment. • Hazards pertaining to use of overhead rail cranes, gantry cranes and other cranes. • Hazards pertaining to use of forklifts and my jacks. • Exposure to toxic paints and chemicals through inhalation and skin absorption. • Exposures to airborne metals, dust and compounds during grinding and hot work operations. • Electrical hazards, de-energizing equipment and lock-out tag-out systems. • Improper signals, communication and clearances. • Exposure to heat illness and dehydration. • Lack of protective equipment. Is your Workplace Safe? In April of this year, the Safety and Health Department established a safety webcast for contractors and local unions called Establishing Safety Programs & Policies as a Function of Company Operations. This webcast highlights some of the fundamental safety functions that should be implemented in field and shop workplaces. To view this webcast, please visit our websites at ironworkers.org or impact-net.org. The following are some of the safety program initiatives that should be implemented and easily recognized in your workplace. 1.Project Planning-Developing a Job Hazard Analysis and Site Specific Safety Plan Prior to the erection process, your employer should communicate a list of site specific safety procedures that address potential hazards on the project? Working near power lines, fall hazards, hoisting and rigging considerations and maintaining structural stability are just a few examples of safety issues that should be communicated to you. 2.D esignating Qualified & Competent Ironworkers to Perform Specific Safety Functions Your employer should designate competent and qualified persons in the workplace to perform certain safety functions, such as installation of safety cables and implementing workplace inspections. It is your employer’s responsibility to designate these persons. SEE W H AT ’S NEW! 3.Employee Safety Training and Instruction These should be several safety training and instruction topics pertaining to the recognition and avoidance of hazards in the workplace. Some of these topics can be standard company policy and other topics that are specific to hazards in your workplace. 4.Workplace Inspections Your employer should designate a competent person to perform workplace inspections on a frequent and regular basis. The competent person has the authority of their employer to take corrective action to abate unsafe acts or conditions in the workplace. 5.Enforcement of Company Safety Policies and Procedures Any employer safety and health program should require enforcement of company safety policies and procedures to protect all workers on the worksite. The International Association will continue the Zero Fatality & Incident Campaign to increase safety performance and help protect our members in the field and shop. This goal challenges all members to See Something! Say Something! to help recognize and avoid the deadly dozen activities and hazards during field and shop operations. Jeff Norris, Canadian safety coordinator, and I will continue to work closely with district councils, local unions and IMPACT regional advisory boards throughout the United States and Canada to help improve safety performance. If I can provide any assistance, please contact me at the Safety and Health Department at (800) 368-0105. If you require assistance in Canada, please contact Jeff Norris at (780) 717-0071. IRONWORKERS APPAREL AND GIFTS Shop our 2015 collection of apparel and accessories! 11/ 2 015 On a budget? Check out the clearance section on the site. Whatever you’re looking for, we’ve got the gear for you! ONLINE: iwstore.org · BY PHONE: (800) 789-0072 NOVEMBER 2015 | Stay comfortable in any weather with our moisture-management polos. Or choose our long-sleeve tee, boldly imprinted on the left chest and left sleeve for maximum visibility. 25 APPRENTICESHIP DEPARTMENT REPORT Lee Worley Ironworker Apprenticeship Certification Program: Ten Years Old and Going Strong! I t is hard to believe but it has been 10 years since our first apprenticeship programs were certified under the Ironworker Apprenticeship Certification Program (IACP). Those were our regional training centers in Benicia, California, St. Louis and northern New Jersey. In December 2004, under the leadership of General President Joseph Hunt, a committee including apprenticeship coordinators, international staff, district council presidents and employers met to work on a number of important initiatives. General President Hunt charged this committee with the task of establishing a minimum core curriculum for all mixed local union apprenticeship programs across the United States and Canada. A similar minimum core curriculum was later completed for each of the specialty local unions including reinforcing, structural, and architectural and ornamental. As an incentive to implement the core curriculum and to strengthen our apprenticeship programs, the Apprenticeship and Training Department developed the Ironworker Apprenticeship Certification Program (IACP). This year we recognize the 10th anniversary of the implementation of the IACP. “The IACP is a fantastic program. The experience of becoming certified as the apprentice coordinator at Local 721 and then assisting the other five locals in the Ontario Council to achieve the same as the council president was very rewarding. It is a tremendous valueadded benefit for the local unions and their training staff. The process is very adaptable to the rubric of the Canadian curriculum and I would recommend highly that each program undertake to achieve the IACP endorsement.” Kevin Bryenton | President Ontario District Council 26 The primary purpose of the IACP is to improve and standardize the knowledge and skills of apprenticeship training. Additional reasons for the certification program include: 1.Certifies an apprenticeship program has met established minimum standards; 2.Improves the credibility of the apprenticeship program with contractors; 3.Encourages apprenticeship programs to seek higher standards; 4.Involves the apprenticeship coordinator, instructors and JATC in strengthening their program; 5.Provides the public with a positive image and validates that an apprenticeship training program meets or exceeds high standards: 6.Facilitates the process for apprentices to receive college credit and pursue a degree. The IACP process begins with an internal evaluation. Using the IACP Evaluation Guide, an internal self-evaluation is conducted. The internal evaluation team consists of the apprenticeship coordinator, instructors and the labor and management representatives from the JATC. This team is responsible for conducting a comprehensive examination of all aspects of their apprenticeship program. Contractors and apprentices are welcome additions to the internal self-evaluation team. “The IACP played a major role in my development as a coordinator. It provides a clear blueprint showing the important elements to strengthen an apprenticeship training program. If followed, the IACP enables an apprenticeship program to meet and exceed the rigorous demands of today’s ironworking trade.” Reis James | Industrial Analyst Southeastern States District Council General officers with Local 387 Apprentice Coordinator Chris Tobiasson receiving IACP certificate. The IACP self-evaluation includes eight standards the local union apprenticeship program must meet. These are reviewed by the internal evaluation team and include: 1.Standard 1: Purpose and Administration – The apprenticeship program should have clearly stated goals relating to the needs of apprentices and contractors. 2.Standard 2: Learning Resources – All training materials are consistent with the goals and objectives of the training program. 3.Standard 3: Apprentice Services – There is a systematic and fair apprentice selection process and record-keeping system. 4.Standard 4: Instruction – The recommended core curriculum and course syllabi are available for the local curriculum. 5.Standard 5: Safety and Equipment – All tools and equipment are available to support the local curriculum. 6.Standard 6: Facilities – The physical facilities at the training center are adequate to support the learning needs of all apprentices. 7.Standard 7: Instructional Staff – All instructional staff have the required technical and instructional skills to facilitate learning. 8.Standard 8: Job Training – Policies and procedures are in place to support the on-the-job training segment of the apprenticeship program. NOVEMBER 2015 | After the internal self-evaluation is complete, an external evaluation site visit is scheduled. The external evaluation site visit team generally consists of a team of one or two members from the International and one outside evaluator. The site visitation team examines the results of the self-evaluation and conducts interviews with the apprenticeship coordinator, instructors, JATC members and apprentices. Upon completion of the site visit, a final report is developed including recommendations for strengthening and improving the program. At the conclusion of the report is a recommendation to grant initial certification or re-certification of a program or, in some cases, a recommendation the program not be certified until specific changes have been made. Being an IACP certified apprenticeship program is also an expectation of the International. One of the Key Performance Indicators (KPIs) for local union performance is their apprenticeship program is certified. To date, 112 ironworker apprenticeship programs in the United States and Canada have been certified! A complete listing of certified programs can be found at http://www.ironworkers.org/training/ certified-local-union-apprenticeship-programs. To assist the local unions in building a strong apprenticeship program, one that can meet the IACP requirements, the Apprenticeship and Training Department developed curriculum materials for all courses in the required core curriculum, as well as materials for many of the supplemental courses. All curriculum materials are available from the Apprenticeship and Training Department, including reference manuals, instructor guides, student workbooks, DVDs, etc. We are confident the IACP has resulted in the strengthening of our apprenticeship programs allowing us to better meet the need of our contractors. Our goal is to have 100 percent of our local union programs certified in the coming years. For additional information on the IACP, contact Michael Sampson in the Apprenticeship and Training Department (msampson@iwintl.org). 27 IMPACT Regional Director Recognized by Helmets to Hardhats Commitment to Recruiting Veterans Showcased by Continued Helmets to Hardhats Initiative I MPACT Canadian Regional Director Bert Royer was recognized in June by Helmets to Hardhats Canada for his dedication to helping veterans transition into the skilled trades. According to the Office of the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, 550 veterans leave military service each day who are potentially looking to start new, quality careers and successfully transition back into civilian life. The commitment to safety, excellence and working as a team are just a few of the qualities the Iron Workers hold in high regard and that make excellent ironworkers. As deployments end and drawdowns continue, Helmets to Hardhats and the Iron Workers will move forward in their mission to help transitioning veterans find career opportunities in the U.S. and Canadian construction industries. “I am honored to be recognized by Helmets to Hardhats,” Royer said when he accepted the award June 10, 2015. “The Iron Workers and our employers value the diligence and perseverance of veterans, and those qualities are in line with the Iron Workers mentality. We are working diligently to recruit, train and deliver the best ironworkers in the world. We’re starting by recruiting the bravest men and women around: veterans.” Helmets to Hardhats is a building trades initiative to provide career opportunities to men and women who are veterans of the armed forces. Royer, working at the request of Iron Workers Director of Canadian Affairs Darrell LaBoucan, serves as the liaison between the Canadian ironworkers and Helmets to Hardhats to recruit veterans into the ironworking trade. He continues to assist Canadian veterans with their transition into the ironworking industry. “Through the history of the Iron Workers, membership has swelled with proud veterans,” says Iron Workers General President Eric Dean. “Their service has not only protected nations – it has helped to build them.” “Veterans did not serve just one day a year – they laid their lives on the line. We remain unwavering in our support of the men and women in uniform, as well as in our commitment to provide quality career options to build our great nations,” says Dean. “Our program offers men and women wanting to join the building and construction industry the chance for good, fair wages with benefits while they learn. The program plays an important role in the growth and development of a safe and productive workforce.” JOHN H. LYONS SR. SCHOLARSHIP REMINDER John H. Lyons Sr. Scholarship applications must be filed electronically. Information regarding scholarship rules, eligibility, selection criteria, etc. is located on our website at www.ironworkers.org. Click on the tab marked “JHL SCHOLARSHIP” and follow the instructions listed. Once an application has been received, reviewed and approved, students will receive an email with the Secondary School Report, which must be completed and submitted by the principal, guidance counselor or academic advisor of the student’s school. If there are any questions, please do not hesitate to contact the scholarship office at jhlscholarship@iwintl.org or by phone at (800) 368-0105, Ext. 899. 28 MONTHLY R EPORT OF LIFETIME HONOR A RY MEMBERS Lifetime Honorary members are published in the magazine according to the application approval date. Members previously classified as Old Age or Disability Pensioners that were converted to Lifetime Honorary membership effective January 1, 2007, will not be reprinted in the magazine. AUGUST 2015 LOCAL NAME LOCAL NAME LOCAL NAME 1 MARTENS, JOHN A 97 WILLIAMS, GRANT P 512 SANDBERG, JAMES C 1 MARTIN, LAURICE W 118 HOOK, RICK 512 SANDBERG, MERLIN L 6 MC CABE, ROBERT J 118 SPENCLEY, LEWIS J 512 STOVER, DENNIS E 7 DETORE, RUSSELL R 172 ZIMMERMAN, WILLIAM G 550 CAMPBELL, BRUCE E 8 ERICKSON, WAYNE H 201 ALLRED, GEORGE W 580 ACKLEY, RICHARD H 8 GMIREK, MICHAEL J 350 TRACY, ROBERT E 580 SAUMELL, ANDREW I 8 GOLDI, WILLIAM C 361 NAGLE, RAYMOND P 623 FONTE, JOE F 8 IMMEL, DALE A 361 PIERRE, IVAN C 623 HARRINGTON, BILLY G 8 MAUER, JAMES J 378 BROWN, HENRY 625 ARZAGA, JULIO M 8 MEHLING, CHARLES H 378 RUIZ, RAY A 625 COLLIER, THOMAS 14 RIEF, HOWARD R 395 CORTEZ, MICHAEL 625 DE RAMOS, WALTER 16 HEISLER, JOSEPH F 395 GOODPASTER, ROBERT J 625 DELA CRUZ, CONSTANCIO 16 KLEIN, HARRY W 395 MEANS, DANNY H 625 FAAFITI, TOFI 17 JELOVAC, IVAN 395 VALENTINO, JOSEPH 625 MAIKA, SALEVAO 17 MARTSOLF, CLYDE L 396 HALLEY, THOMAS G 625 NAKAMOTO, EARL H 17 VARGA, JAMES A 396 PERRENOUD, JAMES P 625 NAKI, PAUL J 22 BLACKBURN, JAMES L 424 FITZMAURICE, DANIEL M 625 ULEP, RAYMUNDO 22 CARTER, WILLIE F 433 SALAS, GEORGE 625 YASUDA, BRIAN Y 25 DILGER, THOMAS J 433 SHILTS, EDWARD K 721 ARAUJO, DUARTE C 25 MACKEZYK, ARNOLD F 444 STARCEVICH, MICHAEL T 721 KEELING, SAMUEL 25 MC GILLEN, DAVID D 444 ZIER, RONALD C 725 STUCKLESS, GEORGE 25 RALL, MATTHEW T 512 GAMER, JEROME 725 THACKER, RONALD 33 DODSWORTH, WILLIAM 512 HOFF, DONAVON A 736 HILL, BRYAN P 33 HUGELMAIER, DAVID F 512 JONES, GREGORY M 736 MARACLE, HAROLD 55 ELTON, DARRYL W 512 KENDALL, RONNIE D 764 WILLIAMS, ROLAND G 55 HARRIS, MARVIN L 512 OLSON, WAYNE G 798 NICHELSON, BILLY W 84 BUTLER, REIDIS D 512 PETERSON, ALAN B 798 PERRY, RICHARD E 92 WISKI, MICHAEL S 512 ROSTEN, BYRON P IRONWORKERS’ JOBLINE IRONWORKERS’ JOBLINE C ONN ECT IN G WORLD -C LAS S U N I O N I RO N WO RK E RS W I T H U N I O N E M P LOY E RS FIND OUT WHICH LOCALS NEED WORKERS, TYPE OF WORK, AND WHO TO CONTACT: www.ironworkers.org FIND OUT WHICH LOCALS NEED 11/ 2 015 11/ 2 015 Union employers for the best and safest workers. WORKERS, TYPElooking OF WORK, AND www.ironworkers.org WHO TO CONTACT: Visit our new expanded jobline, including Shop Department job listings. NOVEMBER 2015 | C O NN ECT IN G WO R LD - C LASS U NI ON I RONWORKE RS WI TH U NI ON E MP LOYE R S 29 OF F ICI A L MON T HLY R ECOR D APPROVED DEATH CLAIMS FOR AUGUST 2015 L.U. NO. 1 1 1 3 3 3 3 3 3 5 5 8 8 8 9 10 14 16 17 21 22 22 22 25 25 25 25 28 28 29 29 29 29 MEMBER NUMBER 624950 653313 851370 568049 1222010 484675 981517 941352 735853 1119271 630002 1356234 1388273 418895 583615 546311 1252154 853237 1403736 644065 1219966 380141 826044 745269 715387 460611 725672 790956 1385840 735280 1140763 778019 612469 NAME DIXON, MICHAEL J. GRIFFIN, BENJAMIN M. RUEL, JOHN T. COSTANTINO, NICHOLAS T. ESTEB, SCOTT MOHNEY, ROBERT G. PUCHACZ, MICHAEL F. SHUMAKER, FRED P. SKANDER, ROBERT A. BRASKEY, BILLY G. TRUITT, JABE A. GREGOVICH, STEVE PAYNTER, JONATHAN SCHULD, JOHN R. MANCUSO, DONALD R. JORDAN, ALVIN C. KLEIN, DALAS W. WARREN, LUCIUS A. LAUX, CHRISTOPHER D. DIETZ, MARVIN L. GOODWIN, DALE G. HAGEMIER, JOHN L. HOLLAND, SAMUEL R. FITING, GERALD J. MACZIK, GERALD R. MC DONELL, JOHN C. WALKER, DAVID R. CONNER, MAYNARD E. HUNT, JOSEPH R. DE HAVEN, MARSHALL A. FOSTER, TIM G. HARTELOO, ROGER R. NESMITH, DON L. CLAIM NUMBER 106513 106512 106544 106546 106515 106562 106547 106545 106514 106516 106548 106517 106518 106563 106549 106519 106578 106550 106520 106564 106521 106551 106552 106581 106580 106594 106595 106523 106522 106582 106553 106565 106583 L.U. NO. 48 55 60 60 63 70 70 84 92 92 97 97 97 103 103 111 118 229 272 272 290 290 321 321 387 395 395 396 396 397 401 416 420 AMOUNT 2,200.00 2,200.00 2,200.00 2,200.00 1,750.00 2,200.00 2,000.00 2,200.00 2,200.00 2,000.00 2,200.00 2,200.00 1,750.00 2,200.00 2,200.00 2,200.00 1,750.00 2,000.00 1,750.00 2,200.00 1,750.00 2,200.00 2,200.00 2,200.00 2,200.00 2,200.00 2,200.00 2,200.00 1,750.00 2,200.00 2,000.00 2,200.00 2,200.00 MEMBER NUMBER 442472 211489 1137846 1083903 1023913 898770 1197015 603883 679537 427236 1076362 663124 1080234 612116 620441 776311 619325 730225 1319156 1461559 1424895 927807 397263 1125267 705013 574526 461780 826415 374197 706075 934532 841021 620500 NAME EDWARDS, WILBERT E. JACOBS, JACK A. HENDERSON, RICHARD F. ZARACH, DAVID A. GALINDO, JUAN A. CHADWELL, HAROLD G. MILLER, RONALD E. MORONES, JAKE EDGEWORTH, BOYD F. WALKER, ELBERT G. DEWALT, DAN W. KELLER, FRED F. MARSHALL, KENNETH G. HULL, JIMMIE D. RICE, TRUMAN C. ERICKSON, PETE R. STEVENS, TERRY A. ARCE, HENRY BERNSTEIN, RICHARD M. LANHAM, JOHN DAVIS, SHANNON K. JONES, DENNIS E. GATLIN, ALBERT T. MC NEELY, WILLIAM C. LOCKHART, CLARENCE G. BROWN, BRUCE F. PICTOR, ROBERT G. ASHFORD, DOUGLAS M. BAY, JOHN E. HUGHES, JAMES D. NELSON, JOHN E. MORENO, JOSE A. CORLEY, MARTIN J. One of the most informative conferences in our industry is almost here... THE 2016 NORTH AMERICAN IRON WORKERS/ IMPACT LABOR-MANAGEMENT CONFERENCE February 28 - March 2, 2016 Disney’s Coronado Springs, Orlando FL. Eric Dean General President Iron Workers Bill Brown Chairman Ben Hur Construction Kevin Hilton CEO IMPACT “FOCUS ON SAFETY AND DRIVING RESULTS” THE 2016 BREAKOUTS • A Frank Discussion with Iron Workers and IMPACT Leadership (Contractors Only) • Driving Compliance Strategies: Defending the Level Playing Field • The Canadian Branding Initiative • Marketing and Branding…One Year Later • Recruiting Top Notch Candidates: Civilians and Veterans • Reinforcing Industry • Leveraging the 3D Model for Steel Erection • What Should Your Insurance Broker Do for You? • Driving Safety and Results in Your Fab Shops • AISC: Erector Certification Update • Risks and Rewards of Running a Construction Business • Quality Control and Safety: A Case Study • Lean Construction Fundamentals: A Pathway to More Efficient Project Performance • Metal Building Markets and Opportunity • Planning Your Exit Strategy: Will You Transition Your Company by Design…or by Default? • Risk-Based Planning Focusing on Crane Assembly & Disassembly • The IMPACT of Cash Flow and Working Capital on Company Operations • Legislative Efforts for IW Jobs • Understanding Contract Terms & Conditions that Can IMPACT Your Risk • Tools for the Field: Adapting to Technology CLAIM NUMBER 106596 106524 106555 106554 106525 106527 106526 106584 106574 106528 106591 106590 106589 106597 106575 106529 106566 106598 106567 106530 106599 106600 106531 106585 106532 106533 106534 106576 106556 106535 106586 106587 106536 AMOUNT 2,200.00 2,200.00 2,000.00 2,000.00 2,200.00 2,200.00 1,750.00 2,200.00 2,200.00 2,200.00 2,000.00 2,200.00 2,000.00 2,200.00 2,200.00 2,200.00 2,200.00 2,000.00 500.00 500.00 1,400.00 2,200.00 2,200.00 2,200.00 2,200.00 2,200.00 2,200.00 2,200.00 2,200.00 2,200.00 2,200.00 2,200.00 2,200.00 30 MEMBER NUMBER 1109644 1063170 731121 493180 459524 1137889 643648 769653 844727 679404 1419821 334714 746272 637727 869523 1194029 1197985 701296 1101756 1460689 1451396 1288047 1461538 1461535 754613 845495 CLAIM NUMBER O LEARY, LAWRENCE P. 106568 TURNER, ERNEST A. 106537 BELL, VAUDIE 106569 ATKINSON, CHARLES D. 106602 ELLIS, ROBERT H. 106557 PATTERSON, THOMAS 106538 REPARD, MANFORD A. 106558 HORNE, WILLIAM J. 106559 NOURSE, LAVERNE E. 106560 BOIUSO, SANTI J. 106539 GRASMAN, DARIEN 106570 LATHAM, GORDON L. 106572 ST ROMAIN, JAMES R. 106571 MOORE, JAMES H. 106542 LEA, C J. 106603 WILSON, LEONARD W. 106543 CAPACCHIONE, DOMENICO 106592 SPROUSE, DALTON E. 106577 FLUD, WILLIAM O. 106588 ESCOBAR, CRISTINO L. 106561 HARRIS, JACKIE B. 106604 FLORES, DANIEL 106605 VAZQUEZ QUINTANA, CARLOS 106541 VAZQUEZ QUINTANA, PEDRO 106540 BENTON, JOHN D. 106573 CAGLE, NORMAN 106606 NAME TOTAL DEATH BENEFITS PAID: AMOUNT 8,000.00 2,000.00 2,000.00 2,200.00 2,200.00 2,000.00 2,000.00 2,000.00 2,200.00 2,200.00 1,400.00 2,200.00 2,200.00 2,200.00 2,200.00 1,750.00 2,000.00 2,000.00 2,000.00 500.00 800.00 1,750.00 500.00 500.00 2,200.00 2,200.00 189,250.00 DISAPPROVED DEATH CL AIMS FOR AUGUST 2015: 24 24S Dear Brothers and Sisters, 1470200 1189033 KAVY, MARK HETHERINGTON, DAVID 106579 IN ARREARS 106593 IN ARREARS November 2015 Subject: 2015 National AFL-CIO United Way Endorsement and Renewed Partnership The United Way has been one of the AFL-CIO’s national partners for almost 75 years. Throughout those years, the AFL-CIO has worked through their differences with United Way and created a stronger relationship that will continue to improve. The AFLCIO and the International Association of Bridge, Structural, Ornamental and Reinforcing Iron Workers are opening a new chapter with United Way, by taking a fresh look at our relationship, building on our strengths and addressing concerns of our organizations. We value our United Way partnership and we still believe that giving to United Way is the best way for working families to have an impact in communities across the United States. Local United Way chapters continue to fund and support AFL-CIO labor liaisons and labor agencies that provide staffing to advocate for programs supporting education, financial stability and health for working families. We, along with United Way Worldwide, continue to focus on creating a strong partnership supporting the goals for the common good. I endorse and support the 2015 United Way campaign and encourage you to do the same. Fraternally yours, Reserve Your Spot Today! bit.ly/labor_management2016 L.U. NO. 424 433 468 492 492 495 509 527 550 580 580 623 623 700 704 712 721 769 790 808 808 811 846 846 848 848 Eric Dean General President EFFICIENCY-BOOSTING PRODUCTS • 100+ EDUCATION SEMINARS • LIVE DEMOS • EXCITING COMPETITIONS Everything starts at World of Concrete. It’s the industry’s only annual international event dedicated to the commercial concrete and masonry industries. And, it jumpstarts each new year by supplying you with the latest innovations, expert know-how and best new products to finish your work faster, better and more profitably. From the start of each job to its successful completion—we’ve got you covered. START NOW. www.worldofconcrete.com FEBRUARY 2-5, 2016 SEMINARS: FEBRUARY 1-5 LAS VEGAS CONVENTION CENTER LAS VEGAS, NV, USA A selected participant in the International Buyer Program 1750 New York Avenue, N.W. Suite 400 Washington, D.C. 20006 Quality Careers for Military Veterans Our military forces are the best trained and most highly skilled in the world. And those values and skills are now in great demand. Helmets to Hardhats is the fastest way for Military, Reservists & Guardsman to transition from active duty to a quality career in the construction industry. Keeping the promise... from one mission to another! 866-741-6210 www.helmetstohardhats.org
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