News from TWU Local 100

Stay Flu Free with Free Flu Shots

TWU Local 100 is pleased to announce this season’s FREE Flu Vaccine program for all TA, OA and MTA Bus members.  The program will launch on September 14, 2015 and carry through December 17, 2015.  The vaccines will be administered to all interested members on a voluntary basis at the MAC centers, 2 Broadway and at depots, barns and transit locations throughout the system. 

Click here to review the list of dates, times and facilities for the program.

 

 

Massive Turnout Marks 9/11 Commemoration and Medal Event

SEPTEMBER 9 -- The awesome power of transit's response to the attack on America was on display at the Union Hall last night, as two hundred Local 100 members who worked at Ground Zero gathered to remember 9/11 and receive medals and commemorative pins. President John Samuelsen, himself a 9/11 responder, keynoted the evening by vowing that the union would fight to achieve the public recognition our members so clearly deserve. Medals for those with documented 9/11 injuries and participation pins for all who were part of the effort will continue to be awarded from this day forward, he said. It's the union's intent that everyone who served should be recognized as we build to a major commemoration on the 15th anniversary of 9/11 next year.

Transit's central role in the 9/11 rescue and recovery effort took center stage in a documentary produced by filmmaker Winston Mitchell, who was in the audience, as well as in a display of over 50 images from 9/11 that showed TWU Local 100 members carrying covered stretchers from the rubble, cutting beams, hauling cars and heavy debris and evaluating damage to subway tunnels at the site.

Working off a 14-year old MTA list of Ground Zero responders, the Union sent letters to over 1600 or our members who responded to 9/11. Many others were also assigned and hundreds more volunteered, serving without pay. The full complement of transit workers at Ground Zero was over 3,000. Eleven members were awarded a medal of special recognition for those who suffered injuries or illness from their work at Ground Zero and were compensated by the Victim's Compensation Fund, the City of New York, or Workers' Compensation. Three of those awards were given posthumously to friends of family members because those union members died of their 9/11-caused ailments.

IB ImageMaintenance of Way VP Tony Utano gives Participation Pins to members who served at Ground Zero.

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Largest TWU Parade in Memory Fills Eastern Parkway

With TWU Local 100 Secretary-Treasurer Earl Phillips as a Grand Marshall, the annual West Indian Day Parade, also known as Carnival, filled Brooklyn's Eastern Parkway with the beat and colors of the Caribbean. While Phillips tended to his work as a dignitary, including shaking hands with Governor Cuomo and posing for a multitude of pictures with other public figures, the Union's rank and file -- 500 strong -- marched in a joyous parade down the mile-long course. Not only did the MTA send a City bus, the TWU International sent the Union's own big tour bus, and we had a float that was the envy of many other groups with the most powerful sound system in the parade and a DJ to match. Enjoy the video -- we'll have more in the next few days.IB Image

 

At Grand Ave, Good Deeds Get Recognized

The daily paper AM New York brought an uplifting story to their readers on Friday about how TWU Local 100 is getting over 200 kids ready for school with new backpacks. As Reporter Rebecca Harshbarger writes: "Bus drivers gave away hundreds of backpacks to children at a homeless shelter near their Queens depot on Friday...About 220 children from the shelter boarded the bus, picked up a backpack with supplies, and then climbed down from the back of the bus...." Read the entire story here. Congratulations to everyone who pitched in to make this event a success!

Union Mourns Norman Jackson, CTA

The TWU Local 100 family mourns the passing of CTA Norman Jackson. Here are the arrangements: There will be a viewing on Friday, September 11th from 3pm to 8pm at Granby's Funeral Services, at 4021 White Plains Road in the Bronx. A funeral service will take place at the same location on Saturday, September 12th, at 9am. Please turn out out to pay your respects.

Press Coverage Lauds Vision Zero Settlement as "Big Victory for Bus Drivers"

WABC's Eyewitness News reporter Lucy Yang called the union's settlement with the de Blasio administration "a big victory for bus drivers."

Local 100's six-month, multi-pronged campaign to force the City of New York to recognize that the flawed Vision Zero law had to be readdressed to halt the senseless arrest of non reckless Bus Operators involved in so-called "right-of-way" accidents has produced a major TWU win.

Late on Monday afternoon, Aug. 31, 2015, U.S. District Court Judge Brian M. Cogan executed a settlement between Local 100 President John Samuelsen and the City of New York's Corporation Counsel (the municipal Department responsible for all of the City's legal affairs) that produces the needed changes in interpretation of the Vision Zero statute to protect Bus Operators and all transit workers who operate MTA vehicles.

The settlement does the following:

1.     Under this settlement, a right of way" accident unto itself is no longer considered proof a Bus Operator failed to exercise "due care" behind the wheel.  Now there must be evidence that the operator did not use "due care" in the operation of the vehicle.  The settlement describes "due care" as "that care which is exercised by reasonably prudent drivers."

2.     It instructs the New York City Police Department to issue a "Finest Message" within 45 days to instruct Police Officers  how to investigate bus-pedestrian accidents in compliance with this Vision Zero settlement. 

Local 100 President John Samuelsen said of the important triumph: "I'm truly proud of this membership and our Division Officers who so effectively organized and executed street actions to underscore the union's position that the unwarranted and humiliating arrest of our Bus Operators would not stand.  The union's Political Action efforts made our case effectively to City Hall, the City Council and to Albany, and pumped up the pressure through paid and unpaid media campaigns to score this victory.  Our entire union can celebrate this important win for transit workers throughout the City." View the five-page settlement here.

MaBSTOA Div 1 Chair Richie Davis, Tuskeegee Depot Chair Dwayne Ruffin Recognized by the City Council

Our very own MaBSTOA Division 1 Chair Richie Davis and Dwayne Ruffin, Depot Chair at Tuskeegee Airmen Depot, were recognized by City Council Speaker Melissa Mark Viverito and by the local Councilman, Ben Kallos, at the Depot's Family Day on August 29th. The politicians made it clear their high regard for our Bus Operators and Maintainers at the event. Congratulations!

In Photos: 2015 Tuskegee Airmen Depot Family Fun Day

Tuskegee Airmen Depot Family Fun Day

TWU families from the Tuskeegee Airmen Depot turned out for their fourth annual Family Day at 99th Street and Lexington Avenue. There were two beautifully restored vintage transit buses and a bouncy castle for the kids, and plenty of great food for everyone. TWU Local 100 Recording Secretary LaTonya Crisp-Sauray spent the day with our families, along with MaBSTOA Division Chair Richie Davis, who was given an award along with Depot Chair Dwayne Ruffin by City Councilman Ben Kallos. Also on hand to congratulate our two officers was City Council Speaker Melissa Mark Viverito, who represents the adjacent district. A big crowd pleaser was dunk-the-chair, during which children of our members took shots and throwing a baseball into a red switch that triggered the chair above a water-filled tank. Ruffin was doused a dozen times! Enjoy the pix.

 

Meet the Frankenbus

This is a bus that measures 13 feet, 8 inches vertically -- two inches taller than allowed by the New York City Department of Transportation. Two inches may not seem like much, but wait till you get beaned by a traffic light standing atop this double-decker, which is Bus # 302 in the Go NY Tour fleet. Just two weeks ago, it ran into an overpass. We call it a "frankenbus" because it was built by cutting the roof off of a Hertz bus, and welding the frame for the second deck atop it. TWU Local 100-represented drivers have complained to management,but it has turned a deaf ear. Drivers at Go NY Tours have also complained about broken promises on bonuses, not being allowed bathroom breaks, and being fired for advocating for a union on the property. So we're upping the pressure on Go NY, bringing the famous union rat to 8th Avenue and 46th Street where they routinely pick up passengers. Many of those customers paid $29 and up for the tour -- and have found that the buses aren't nearly as frequent as promised, that the PA systems aren't working so they can't hear the tour guides, and that the buses are grimy and dirty inside. Just take a look at what they're saying on Yelp! and Trip Advisor. TWU Local 100 wants to see Go NY Tours become a better company for riders and workers -- and we won't let up until they bargain in good faith with their workers.

West Indian Day Carnival Offering Event Tickets to TWU Members

TWU Local 100 is preparing for a major presence at the 2015 West Indian Day Parade -- and the Parade Committee is giving TWU members access to the big-ticket events surrounding the festival. The Carnival and Parade is already Brooklyn's biggest party -- and the Union will celebrate in style at our parade location at Bedford Avenue and Eastern Parkway -- a spot where we will provide great Caribbean food and refreshments to all comers. Use this exclusive link to access tickets to the Caribbean Freedom Festival on September 3, the Brass Fest on September 4, Panorama on September 5th, and Dimanche Gras on September 6th. See you there!

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