The 2015 LegisLaTive session - Texas State Employees Union
Transcription
The 2015 LegisLaTive session - Texas State Employees Union
The 2015 Legislative Session: A chance to turn Texas around It’s bad, but it doesn’t have to be this way The issues state employees face today are the same issues we’ve been facing for years. Rising workloads and stagnant pay in most state agencies and universities are driving up turnover rates. The latest privatization and closure attempts are threatening state services in DSHS state hospitals, DADS state supported living centers and community programs, FPS foster care, TJJD, and state universities across Texas. Health care costs continue to rise and lawmakers are again discussing additional cuts to state employee and retiree pension benefits on top of earlier cuts. For years, Texas has ranked 50th (dead last) in state spending per citizen out of all 50 states, and the average state employee’s standard of living is now 36.7% behind what it was in 1987 (see the graph below). The situation we face and the conditions we find on the job are the result of ideologically driven attacks on the public sector, engineered by many politicians and corporate interests in our state. For decades, extreme right-wing politicians and big business lobbyists have worked together to undermine the social safety net and public infrastructure in our state by starving state services of needed resources and by making it harder and harder on the people who deliver those services- state employees- to make a living doing this work. “Big Government” is the Boogey Man that many elected officials rely on attacking to win primary elections. The message most commonly used by these ideologues and their wealthy supporters is that state services and state employees are too expensive and taxpayers can’t afford them. Whether trying to cut funding for state universities and thereby raise tuition on students, or when trying to gut state employee pension benefits, this tired argument is dragged out time after time. In any situation, this What are “state services” and do we really need them? argument is false. The state of Texas employs over 300,000 people who work in dozens of state agencies, such as HHSC, FPS, TDCJ, TXDOT, and all state universities, from UT and Texas A&M, to University of Houston and Texas Tech. State employees also work at all university health science centers, including UT MD Anderson, UT Health Science Centers, and UTMB Galveston. The work we do as state employees is critical for the well-being of all Texans. State workers protect children and adults from abuse and neglect, and we protect public health by tracking diseases and inspecting the quality of our food. State employees ensure public safety by helping those who have committed crimes, both juveniles and adults, to get their lives turned around so that they don’t commit more crimes. In academic universities and health science centers, state employees educate the next generation of Texans, work to develop new technologies through research, and provide quality health care. State workers are also on the front lines of care for individuals with physical and developmental disabilities or mental illness. And when Texans are unemployed, struggling to make ends meet, or have fallen on hard times state employees are there to provide needed assistance. 2. TSEU UPDATE When funding for these services or funding for those of us who provide these services are cut, it’s the Texans who depend on our work who suffer. The graph at the bottom of the preceding page shows the impact of state funding cuts in just one area of state services: higher education. The chart shows the direct relationship between the decreasing levels of state funding for higher education since 2003 and the skyrocketing increases in tuition and fees that students and their families have to pay. The bottom line is that when politicians cut, Texans suffer. Busting the myth: we CAN afford quality state services and fairly paid state employees and retirees Texas is a wealthy state with a growing population (up by 27% since 2000), but the way in which our state funds public services such as law enforcement, education, health care, and social services places the heaviest financial burden on working and middle class citizens, while large corporations are given massive tax breaks. The vast majority (68%) of the state’s revenue comes directly from consumer taxes (sales tax, motor vehicles tax, etc.). These taxes hit working and middle class Texans the hardest because we pay a higher proportion of our total income compared to the wealthiest citizens. Meanwhile, businesses only pay 20% of the state’s total tax revenue (see the chart below). Where the state’s money comes from In order for our state to provide quality services like higher education, public safety, protection and assistance for the elderly, poor, and disabled, Texas lawmakers must ensure that the responsibility of paying for these services, which all Texans benefit from, is fairly shared by wealthy corporations. Currently, the biggest part of that burden is being borne by the Texans least able to afford it. This is why TSEU is working with our allies in the Texas Forward Coalition to push state leaders to implement a regular sunset review of all tax exemptions. This would give the public a chance to weigh in on which tax breaks make sense, and which ones don’t so that we can make sure everyone is fairly sharing the responsibility of paying their taxes. TSEU UPDATE Tax giveaways that don’t make sense and should be ended: • $1.2 billion each year for the natural gas “fracking” industry, despite the Texas natural gas industry being the biggest of all 50 states • $200 million/year for companies who pay their taxes on time • Country clubs are given millions in tax exemptions because they claim golf courses are “recreational green spaces” And even without eliminating any of these tax giveaways, Texas has a significant amount of money that it is not spending: an extra $6 billion in revenue above what was budgeted for the 2013-2014 biennium and $8 billion in the state’s Rainy Day Fund. Texas should spend OUR tax money on the vital state services that have been underfunded for decades and on the dedicated state employees who provide those services for our communities. Another place where Texas lawmakers are wasting taxpayer money is by not expanding Medicaid to the 1.1 million Texans who now qualify for it under the Affordable Care Act. Every year, Texas politicians are turning down $27.2 billion in federal funding because they don’t want to invest an additional $1.3 billion in state funding in providing health care for uninsured Texans. What’s worse, Texas taxpayers are already paying $5 billion annually for hospital visits by uninsured Texans. Economists have estimated that expanding Medicaid in Texas would create 230,000-300,000 new jobs in our state. Medicaid expansion would also drastically reduce the costs of uncompensated care that gets passed on to insured patients. This is why TSEU along with business groups, hospitals, advocacy groups, civil rights organizations, community organizations, and local governments are all calling on state lawmakers to make it happen this legislative session. The ideological lies and attacks will continue this legislative session as some lawmakers are already making plans to tie state spending to population growth, cut taxes even further for businesses, and cut our pension benefits even more. But TSEU members and our allies will be there to fight. The organized voice of state workers can turn these attacks around, and build a state where every Texan has the chance to succeed. It’s going to take all of us, state workers and retirees from across Texas, fighting together in the union for our common cause to turn Texas around. What to do now: 1. Use the membership form in this Update to sign up a coworker. The more state employees who join our union, the more powerful we all are. 2. Buy your Lobby Day ticket and make plans to be there in Austin April 8th (USE THE TICKET ON PAGE 9). We need thousands of state workers, retirees, family, and friends to make their voices heard at the capitol. 3. Join COPE, TSEU’s political action committee. State employees and retirees must be engaged in the political process, so we can elect leaders who will fight for our issues. Download the COPE form at our website www.cwa-tseu.org. 3. Agency moves to give control of state hospital to prison company with history of abuse and mismanagement - TSEU members vow to fight to the end! I n October 2014, the Dept. of State Health Services (DSHS) announced it would enter contract negotiations with Correct Care Solutions, parent company of Geo Care which had been a branch of Geo Group (formerly Wackenhut, a private prison company). The agency made this move without any prior legislative approval or public input. DSHS signaled that it intended to transfer over all or part of the mental health care services provided at the Terrell State Hospital to the private company. This move not only threatens the jobs and livelihoods of the more than 900 state employees who work at the Terrell State Hospital, it also threatens the care that hundreds of patients currently receive at the facility. What’s more, if the state begins privatization of Terrell, every other state hospital around Texas will be at risk of the same fate. The companies behind the move, Correct Care Solutions (CCS) and Geo Care, have a long, sordid history of mismanaging the mental health facilities it is charged with operating both in Texas and around the country. At Geo’s South Florida State hospital, a patient died in a scalding bathtub, according to the Associated Press in a string of three deaths over a few weeks’ time in 2012. In Texas, the Austin American Statesman reported that the Geo run forensic facility in Montgomery County had been fined $55,000 for problems including “unauthorized restraint and seclusion of patients, incomplete medical records, failure to show patient consent for medications and failure to report serious injuries to the state”. In 2012, DSHS rejected a bid by Geo Care to run the Kerrville State Hospital, citing the company’s plans to achieve savings by reducing staffing levels which would threaten the quality of care for patients. Correct Care Solutions has a track record in other states that includes allegations and confirmed reports of rape, suicide, neglect, and medical malpractice. TSEU members at Terrell, with support from union members around the state, are leading the fight to stop the privatization move. At a town-hall meeting in Terrell, TSEU members were out in force, armed with signs and questions about how CCS plans to turn a profit without lowering the quality of patient care. Jorge Dominicis (seen above addressing the town hall), the President of CCS who took home over $1 million in income last year, defended his company but evaded questions about patient care as well as salaries, health care, and pension benefits for employees who might be lucky enough to keep their jobs. The TSEU Organizing Committee at Terrell State Hospital (Dwight Gentry, Virginia Gentry, Robert Holmes, Wayne Lee, and Jo Ottman) are organizing their coworkers into the union, generating hundreds of phone calls to legislators, meeting with local elected officials to ask for their opposition to the plan, and getting the word out to the media that THIS FIGHT IS NOT OVER! Texas ranks 50th in the nation in per capita expenditures for mental health care. More beds and more funding is what is vitally needed. All of the current state hospitals are needed as public facilities. Turning them over to a private operation will inevitably lead to cuts in expenditures related to patient care and treatment, either directly or indirectly, including cuts to already inadequate staffing levels, salaries that already are inadequate to keep qualified staff and cuts to employee health care and pension benefits. Maintaining rigorous standards of care and treatment must be at the core of the operation of any mental health facility. Care and treatment must not be compromised to accommodate the privatization process. This is not a done deal! What to do now: TSEU members are calling state legislators on the House Human Services Committee to slow down this process by holding public hearings to investigate this privatization move and how it will affect patients, the community of Terrell, and the dedicated state employees who work at the state hospital. Call State Rep. Richard Peña Raymond today at 512-463-0558 and ask him to hold public hearings on the privatization of Terrell State Hospital. 4. TSEU UPDATE HHSC needs to hire more staff now! Union members push agency to deal with workload crisis by hiring 1,700 additional staff T his past summer, TSEU activists in HHSC eligibility offices collected more than 1,400 signatures on our petition for increased staffing levels and an across-theboard pay raise. Since then, union members have been meeting with state legislators from across Texas, pushing them to contact HHSC leadership and ask them to immediately hire additional staff. Momentum is building in the campaign as we head into the 2015 legislative session. Average Monthly Currently, eligibility workers and support staff are having to work nights and weekends to deal with the increasing workload levels. The skyrocketing workloads are primarily due to the influx of new Medicaid applications because of the rollout of the Affordable Care Act (ACA) and the additional verification requirements put into place by the new law. The number of Texas Medicaid recipients has increased by 13% just since February of 2014. Over that same time period, total SNAP (food stamp) cases are up by 18%, largely due to a booming Texas population. The work keeps piling up for eligibility staff but the agency so far has refused to hire additional staff to keep up with the increasing workloads. This fact, combined with the stagnant pay state workers have seen over the last seven years, is driving up turnover in the agency, making the problems even worse. Agency leaders are hoping the rollout of the Business Process Reengineering plan (BPR) will solve the workload crisis. Experience shows the only thing that solves a workload crisis is the hiring of additional staff. No matter how successful BPR may or may not be, the agency must hire in order to bring down workloads. While agency leaders are putting all their eggs in the BPR basket, TSEU members across the state are organizing their coworkers into the union to make our voice stronger and bring about real change. Benefit Recipients and Filled Eligibility Determination Postions TSEU leads fight to save Austin SSLC A fter the Sunset Committee proposed closing Austin SSLC, along with five other unnamed state supported living centers by 2017, TSEU went into action with a postcard campaign. We launched the campaign at our Save Austin SSLC picnic which was planned by activist Stacy Offord. Since then, hundreds of postcards have been sent to area legislators asking for their support in keeping these valuable services for a very vulnerable community of Texas citizens. Offord and fellow AuSSLC member Susan Hanson met with TSEU UPDATE with Senator Kirk Watson and Representative Elliott Naishtat’s offices (whose districts include the facility) to explain why these specialized services are needed and are not available in community homes. Getting legislators to understand the medical needs, behavioral challenges and reliance on the type of care and treatment received at these facilities will be key in stopping closures. TSEU members have joined in with the Austin SSLC Parents Association in demonstrations outside the facility, protesting the evictions of residents. Saving Austin SSLC and others from the budget cutting axe which jeopardizes the health and safety of many of our most vulnerable citizens is going to be one of the biggest battles for our union this legislative session. The private group home industry and developers who would profit from the evictions and sell off this valuable property are serious and have powerful political allies. To win we must continue to build our membership, COPE fund, activism and work together with advocacy and community groups. 5. General Assembly fires up activists and sets union agenda for 2015 E very two years, the TSEU General Assembly brings together elected delegates from every part of the state to adopt our union’s political/legislative and organizing programs and make the decisions that will guide TSEU for the next two years. This year, over 150 union activists, elected by their fellow TSEU members as delegates, met together in Austin for our General Assembly September 26-28. They came from six different state universities, three university health science centers, nine state agencies, both ERS and TRS retirees, and two private employers. General Assembly always begins with an action. This year, we marched on the north steps of the state capitol building to launch our campaign for a REAL, across-the-board pay raise for all state workers and retirees, and to protect our pension benefits. On the steps of the capitol, several TSEU speakers fired up the crowd: Judy Lugo (TSEU President), Yoly Griego (TSEU activist and current ERS Board of Trustees member), Yolanda White (Lufkin SSLC), and Paula Everett (Dallas FPS-Retired). After the rally, delegates to the General Assembly heard a report on TSEU’s political program and the importance of joining COPE, as well as inspiring speeches from TSEU friend and ally, State Rep. Dawnna Dukes, and CWA Public Sector Vice President Brooks Sunkett. A major task of General Assembly is adopting the organizing and political programs that chart a course for our campaign to defend state services and state employees. The TSEU overall legislative agenda is listed below. Sector caucuses also met and adopted legislative goals specific to their issues; a summary of those is listed at right. Full goals and more information can be found on the respective caucus pages of the TSEU website (www.cwa-tseu.org). ALL State Employee Legislative Goals for 2015 • $6,000/year or $500/month acrossthe-board pay raise for state agency and university workers • Full funding for ERS and TRS and COLA’s for retirees • Adequate staffing based on need • Stop privatization in state agencies and universities • Justice on the job 6. TSEU UPDATE Delegates elected our candidate for the 2015 ERS Board of Trustees election and started planning the mobilization required to win the board seat. TSEU’s candidate will be Ilesa Daniels from Houston HHSC (pictured right). You can find more on the ERS Board of Trustees election campaign on page 11 and on our campaign page at www. cwa-tseu.org. tseu Caucus legislative goals Human Services (DADS-CCAD and HHSC): • Stop Managed Care expansion • Increased staffing levels • Career ladders for all staff Universities: • Repeal tuition deregulation to keep higher education affordable • Across-the-board raises • Stop privatization and consolidation schemes TJJD: • No closures, lay-offs or privatization • 1:8 JCO-to-youth ratio • 20-year retirement for JCO’s and Case Mgrs. SSLC’s/State Hospitals: • No closures no privatization • High risk duty pay for work with severe behaviors and dual diagnosis • Peer Support Specialist job classification On Saturday afternoon, delegates watched a short film of our last Lobby Day in 2013, created by TSEU Board Member Anne Lewis (UT Austin). DVD copies of the 20-minute video are available from your area’s delROC/Retirees: egate or organizer. Attendees • Full funding for the ERS at the General Assembly also and TRS pensions discussed our next Lobby • Cost-of-living increases Day coming up on April for all TRS, ERS retirees • No cuts to retiree health 8th, 2015, and made plans to care benefits mobilize thousands of state workers and allies to attend. You can find more on Lobby Day 2015 and your Lobby Day ticket on page nine of this Update. FPS: • Caseload standards At the Saturday night banquet, a bevy of awards were given for on-the-job • Stop privatization organizing excellence. Delegates, members and guests were treated to a speech • Compensation for bilinby Texas AFL-CIO President Becky gual staff and advanced Moeller, CWA District 6 Vice Presidegrees dent Claude Cummings, and strong • Job parity for CCL TSEU ally State Representative • Career ladders for all staff Roberto Alonzo. The Saturday night dance party followed the banquet and Parole: a great time was had by all. • 10% pay increase for P.O.’s & support staff On Sunday morning, after a mo• 60:1 caseload ratio ment of silence was held for all TSEU members who passed away in the last two years, delegates took care of final business and concluded the 2014 General Assembly with the singing of our union movement’s anthem, Solidarity Forever. Thanks to all members, TSEU staff, invited guests, family, hotel staff and others who came together to make this a very memorable and productive General Assembly! TSEU UPDATE 7. 2014 Election Results What it means for state workers and the services we provide T he 2014 general election was an overwhelming victory for Republicans over Democrats. But for TSEU, this wasn’t just a mere contest between two political parties. This was our opportunity to elect candidates we could count on to stand up for state employees and the services we provide. The majority of our TSEU-endorsed candidates suffered defeat. TSEU members all over the state put in a great deal of time and diligence to interview candidates to determine if they were committed to fighting for our issues. Based on the candidate responses, union members decided which candidates would be worthy of an endorsement. TSEU-endorsed and Texas Austin members Senate allies, Wendy Davis blockwalk for and Leticia Van De Putte, lost Wendy Davis. their bids for Governor and Lieutenant Governor to Attorney General Gregg Abbott and Texas Senator Dan Patrick. Abbott and Patrick won by a significant margin of 20%. Other Rep. Philip Cortez meets with San Antonio TSEU-endorsed Senate and House candidates TSEU/COPE members. also experienced defeats. In Fort Worth,TSEUsupported Libby Willis lost her election to replace Wendy Davis in her Senate seat to Tea Party-backed opponent, Konni Burton. Burton’s victory shifts the balance of power in the Senate even more in favor of extreme, anti-state services lawmakers. On the Texas House side, Republicans increased the size of their large majority over Democrats. Incumbent TSEU allies, Philip Cortez (San Antonio) and Mary Ann Perez (Houston), were both beaten in electoral upsets. The 2015 Legislative Session will now consist of 20 Republicans and 11 Democrats on the Senate side, 98 Republicans and 52 Democrats on the House side, and continued Republican control of all Houston TSEU/COPE committee with HD 23 candidate Susan Criss. statewide offices. Building TSEU’s Poltical Machine Throughout the election season, union members were out in full force, working hard to elect TSEU-endorsed candidates. TSEU knocked on over 6,800 doors, made over 2,500 phone calls, and sent 12,005 pieces of mail all in efforts to build support for our candidates. The work we did in this election cycle is a testament to our union’s dedication to political activism; a dedication that does not stem from loyalty to a particular political party or candidate, but from our daily encounters with low pay, high workloads, and insufficient resources to effectively do our jobs. If there is anything to celebrate, it is our union’s enduring commitment to justice and our growing ability to impact Texas Politics. TSEU-COPE activist Elias Cantu blockwalking in Dallas. 8. We’ve been here before and we’ve won! As a result of the election, the 2015 legislative session will be governed by a larger number of lawmakers who stand opposed to providing funding for living wages, secure health care and pension benefits, and quality state services. We’ve been in this situation before, most recently when we faced massive privatization efforts in 2003 and tens of thousands of state employee lay-offs in 2011. TSEU members will respond to the threats of today, just as we responded to the attacks of those years; by remaining true to what has carried us through the attacks on our benefits, attempts to privatize our jobs, and budget cuts to our agencies. We win on our issues year after year because we are constantly organizing more of our coworkers to build a powerful, independent voice for state employees. Legislators and election cycles will come and go, but what remains constant is TSEU’s ability to win on our issues by applying grassroots pressure on our elected officials, regardless of party affiliation. In preparation for next year’s legislative session, we should expect more attacks on our health care and pensions, attempts to close and privatize state facilities, and more resistance to a significant pay increase. That’s why the political fight for state employees starts now. We should be talking to coworkers, asking them to join TSEU and get involved now. Anti-state worker/services legislators and political groups are making plans to undermine everything TSEU stands for in the 2015 session. They feel as if the election results give them free range to gut state services and employee benefits. We cannot let this happen! State employees organizing and mobilizing has been and will continue to be the engine that allows us to navigate any political environment, no matter how difficult or challenging it may be. TSEU UPDATE Make checks payable to: Texas State Employees Union. Give completed ticket and payment to your organizer or mail to: TSEU (lobby day), 1700 South 1st St, Austin 78704 Prices: austin-area (registration lunch) . .......................................... $8.00 Outside Austin (registration, lunch, transportation)................ $15.00 Reserve your lobby day t-shirt size: ______ . ............ $12.00 _________________________________________________________________________________ name $ amount enclosed _________________________________________________________________________________ home street address city state zip _________________________________________________________________________________ phone email Lobby Day 2015 Wednesday, April 8 / Austin, TX _________________________________________________________________________________ agency/organization location tseu organizer (if applicable) house dist senate dist Use the ticket above to take a stand for the future of Texas and for our jobs! State Employee Lobby Day L obby Day is a critical part of our ongoing fight for economic and social justice for state workers and citizens. On Wednesday, April 8, we will meet on the lawn of the Capitol, march, rally, and then meet with our legislators and present them with our program. TSEU is calling for a massive show of strength to tell the legislature that we will fight to restore funding for public services, protect state employee benefits, and win a REAL, meaningful across-the-board raise. Everything is at stake; our jobs, our pensions, our health care, our pay, and the services we provide. We need you to be there. Get your ticket and get on the Lobby Day Bus! Buses will be departing from or going through almost every major Texas city. Tickets are only $15.00 and include the bus ride, lunch and registration. Members from Austin pay $8.00 for lunch and registration only. Contact any TSEU office to reserve your seat on the Lobby Day Bus! March-Rally-Lobby 9:30 Buses Arrive 10:00Meet on the SOUTH side of Capitol Lunch served 11:00Form march contingents 11:30Begin march around the Capitol 12:00Begin rally 1:00 Form lobby groups 1:30 First lobby appointment 4:00 Last appointment Take a Stand for Our Healthcare and Pensions Ilesa Daniels for ERS Board of Trustees “The ERS Board makes important decisions about our healthcare benefits and our pension plan. We need Board members that will work to ensure the stability of the plan and not go along with shifting costs to employees and retirees. I would be proud to represent the interests of frontline state employees on the Board, and would work with current Board members to protect and improve our benefits.” - Ilesa Daniels . . . keeping our ERS funds strong • Ilesa will push for increased state contributions to our health care plans and pension fund and support continued responsible investing to strengthen our pension fund. . . . fighting for what we deserve • She will oppose attempts to convert our pension plan to a 401(k) plan and will oppose Health Savings Accounts or other schemes that only serve to undermine our benefits. . . . listening to the needs of workers • Accessible to assist any state employee with health care and pension issues, Ilesa will be the voice of front-line state employees on the board. Background: Endorsed by: Election Details: • State employee with more than 24 years of state services • Texas State Employees Union • Friday, March 6, 2015: Ballots mailed to home address of all state employees and retirees • Yolanda Griego, ERS Board member • Quality Assistance Specialist at • Karen Charleston,TRS Board member E. 40th Street HHSC in Houston • Coalition of Black Trade Unionists • Proud TSEU member and activist since 1999 • Friday, April 10, 2015: ERS election voting ends TSEU Executive Board • Judy Lugo (HHSC, El Paso) President • Seth Hutchinson, (TSEU Austin) Vice President • Joanne Day (DSHS, Austin) Secretary • Anthony Brown (DADS, Houston) Treasurer • Joe Angulo (UTPA-Retired, Edinburg) Region 1 • Arthur Valdez (DSHS, San Antonio) Reg. 2 • Margaret Santillan (HHSC Alpine) Reg. 3 • Micah Haley (TDCJ, Dallas) Region 4 • Stacie Bardshar (HHSC, Tyler) Reg. 5 • Debra Coleman (DADS/Brenham) Region 6 • Samm Almaguer (TWC, Houston) Region 7 • Anne Lewis (UT-Austin) Region 8 TSEU Staff and Offices Austin 512.448-4225 1700 South 1st Street Austin, TX 78704 • Seth Hutchinson, Organizing Coordinator • Ron Day, Organizer • Albert Sloss, Organizer • Manuel Ramirez, Organizer • Georgia Marks, Organizer • Harrison Hiner, Political Organizer • Savanah King Norton, Legislative Aide • Debbie Haun, Office Manager • John Behr, Membership Office Manager • Rachel Telles, Membership Office • Chris Knapp, Publications San Antonio 210.354-2900 454 Soledad, Suite R-200 San Antonio, TX 78205 • Santos Hernandez, Organizer • Arthur Valdez, Organizer • Linda Wilson, Organizer • Gabriel Morales, Organizer • Andrea Roelofs, Organizer Southeast Texas 713.661-9030 9247 South Main Houston, TX 77025 • Myko Gedutis, Asst. Organizing Coordinator • Ashira Adwoa, Organizer • Michael Young, Organizer • Mark Gurrola, Organizer • Cheryl Sanders, Organizer North Texas 214.942-4305 737 S. RL Thornton Frwy, Ste B Dallas, TX 75203 • Joe Montemayor, Lead Organizer • Anitra Patterson, Organizer • Keith Stenson, Organizer • Celia Morgan, Organizer Valley 956.428-0251 801 N. 13th Street, Ste 13 Harlingen, TX 78550 • Seth Hutchinson, Organizing Coordinator • Missy Benavidez, Organizer • Gabriel Morales, Organizer West Texas 806.741-0044 2002 Avenue J Lubbock, TX 79405 • Joe Montemayor, Lead Organizer • Santos Hernandez, Organizer • Albert Sloss, Organizer • Georgia Marks • Manuel Ramirez ERS Board elections matter - don’t throw away your vote! T he six member ERS Board of Trustees has three members appointed by elected officials and three elected by state employees and retirees. The board makes important decisions about our healthcare and pensions. We must elect a board member who represents the interests of frontline state employees. Asking employees and retirees to pay more and more while our TSEU UPDATE pay has been stagnant is NOT fair. Only TSEU members elected to the ERS Board are willing to say “enough is enough!” We need another voice on the board to stand up and fight back. Do your part to protect and improve our benefits by helping elect Ilesa Daniels to the ERS Board. Sign the petition to get Ilesa on the ballot, then vote and make sure your coworkers are doing the same! 11. Texas State Employees Union Communications Workers of America, Local 6186 1700 South 1st Street Austin, TX 78704 NON PROFIT ORG. US POSTAGE PAID PERMIT NO 1025 AUSTIN, TX TSEU members win improvement in TJJD grievance procedure In meeting with agency head, union activists address key concerns I n December, TSEU activists Cora Bennett (Case Manager- Mart), Demetrius Waples (JCO VI- Mart), and Mary Henry (Hearings Officer- Giddings) met with the new Executive Director of the Texas Juvenile Justice Department David Reilly and other agency leaders. The three union leaders addressed a range of key issues with the incoming agency head. Top among those issues were ways to address the high turnover, staff shortages, high rates of injury, and the threat of closures within the agency. Reilly indicated that there were currently no plans underway to close any additional facilities in the agency. On the issue of turnover and staffing, the union delegation emphasized the need for an across-the-board pay raise for all TJJD staff, moving to a 1:8 JCOto-youth ratio, and inclusion of all JCO’s and Case Managers in the 20-year LECOS Retirement Fund. Mr. Reilly recognized the need to increase pay and staffing levels in the agency in order to bring down turnover rates and increase safety, but said that would depend on whether lawmakers approved those measures this upcoming session. Union members also pushed Mr. Reilly to reconsider the use of contract placements for youths committed to TJJD. The group highlighted the history of abuse and neglect in privately run facilities and suggested that the agency look at expanding the number of halfway houses in order to meet placement needs for youths. The TSEU members there also raised some ideas and issues that TJJD could address internally. Union members stressed that the agency needed to immediately change the employee grievance procedure to mirror TDCJ’s grievance procedure, which allows for employees to present evidence and hear witnesses in a face-to-face grievance hearing with supervisors up the chain of command. This was a piece of legislation that TSEU was able TJJD activists Mary Henry, Cora Bennett, to win in the last session, and would allow employees to grieve and Demetrius Waples (not pictured) met with TJJD leadership. TSEU Legislative terminations and other workOrganizer Harrison Hiner, center related issues in face-to-face hearings instead of just filling out a form and waiting for a response. Decisions would also be subject to appeal, a big improvement over the current grievance procedure. TJJD agency leaders promised the policy would be changed by January 1st to comply with the law. In response to suggestions by the union delegation, Reilly and his staff also promised to look into: • moving JCO’s to a four ten-hour shift per week pattern which has proven successful at Giddings • paying employees twice a month instead of once a month • providing regular behavior management training modules for staff The meeting was extremely productive and Mr. Reilly and his staff promised to continue listening to the needs and concerns of TSEU members on the front lines of TJJD.
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