RI Hospital employees will vote on labor strike


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DSC_0545Following stalled contract negotiations between Lifespan and Rhode Island Hospital employees, members of Teamsters Local 251 can vote tomorrow on whether a work stoppage is warranted. There will be three ballot votes at the Local 251 Union Hall in East Providence at 8am, noon and 4pm, according to a Jobs With Justice press release.

“Lifespan executives have angered employees and the community by rejecting common-sense proposals, including a proposal to require the Hospital to “maintain sufficient staff and adequate supplies,” said the press release. “Lifespan even rejected a proposal that, “providing quality care to patients and their families is the top objective of the Hospital and that poor working conditions, inadequate staffing levels, inadequate supplies, and improper equipment undermine quality care.”

Rhode Island Hospital Senior Media Relations Officer Beth Bailey said, “We are committed to bargaining in good faith toward a fair labor agreement that reflects the positive contributions of our employees. Our proposals to date have included increases to wages for all three years of the contract and shift differentials, and a comprehensive plan to help union employees impacted by technology changes. We are confident in the quality of the care we provide and the investments we have made in technology, equipment and staff to support the delivery of quality care.”

Local 251 represents 2,200 employees at Rhode Island Hospital, including non-medical staff, such as secretaries, janitors and landscapers. “But they also represent the unit assistants, the folks who check on patients to make sure everything’s okay, and the CNAs,” said Strecker. He said he had no idea how many people would show up for the vote. “We hope lots!”

Tomorrow’s vote is one step in the process of calling for a labor strike, said Jess Strecker of Jobs With Justice.

“It’s an authorization vote,” he said in an email subsequent to sending the press release. “The contract negotiating committee will then make the final call about when or whether to strike. Then they would actually give a 10 day notice to Lifespan before going out on strike. The strike could last as long or as shortly as it has to.”

A FAQ sheet sent from Local 251 to the 2,200 members said, “Voting to authorize a strike notice does not mean we will issue a 10-day notice right away. We will continue to negotiate and try to reach a fair agreement. A strong Yes Vote will send a message of unity to the Hospital and give the Negotiating Committee more leverage to win a fair contract. A No Vote would send management the message that we are not united. Management would have very little reason to make a fair contract offer.”

The FAQ says, “The bottom line is there can be no strike without a second vote by members to go on strike.”

Kathy Ahlquist, says the press release, “blames understaffing for her father’s medical tragedy.” Kathy is the wife of RI Future contributor Steve Ahlquist, who has reported on some of the previous employee actions as a new contract was in negotiation.

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Material provided by union to members.

 

Security footage from Islamic School shows adult man


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Hilmy Bakri, president of the board of trustees for the Islamic School of Rhode Island, addresses the media. Security camera footage from the Islamic School of Rhode Island taken the night hate-filled anti-Islam graffiti was spray painted on the school shows at least one adult man, said West Warwick Police Major John Mageira.

“It doesn’t appear to be juveniles,” Mageira said after a press conference at the school on Tuesday.

FBI agent Elizabeth Rosato said her office is “conducting the civil rights investigation right now.” US Attorney Peter Neronha said,”if the conduct is motivated based on ethnicity or race or other protected classes it’s considered to be a hate crime.” To Nerhona’s knowledge, this is the first instance of a hate crime against the Islamic community in Rhode Island.

Law enforcement officers answered questions for the media after a group of religious and other faith leaders gave prepared comments to show solidarity with the Muslim school that was defaced by vandalism after holding a vigil for the three North Carolina Muslims who were killed last week.

“I just want this person to understand how much this hurts,” said Himly Bakri, president of the board of trustees of the Islamic School of Rhode Island, as he was flanked by faith leaders during the press conference.

“To the person who did this, I want to say this to him, or her, we have nothing but prayers for you,” said Mufti Ikram, a Muslim imam, or prayer leader, from Smithfield who works closely with the school. “If you did this to divide us, you failed miserably. If you did this to unite us, you have succeeded.”

They were joined by Rev. Nickolas Knisely, bishop of the Episcopal Church in Rhode Island, Rev. Don Anderson, of the Rhode Island Council of Churches, Steve Ahlquist, president of the Humanists of Rhode Island and Rabbi Sarah Mack, who called the vandalism a “flagrant desecration.”

Outside the school’s gymnasium in West Warwick, there was still spray-painted vandalism on the school that read, “Islam pigs”, “Allah is a pedophile”, “Fuck Muhammad” and “Now this is a hate crime.” One message said “Die pigs” and was written backwards on a window so it could be read from inside the school.” [Pictures below]

“When I was physically here seeing the graffiti on the doors, words can’t describe,” Bakri told me after the press conference. “It had a very personal impact to me. It’s one thing to be distant and seeing something in a picture. It’s another thing to be physically present and seeing the writing of someone who did this. It was just unbelievable.”

There are 160 students at the Islamic School of Rhode Island, which serves students in kindergarten through 8th grade. It’s been in Rhode Island for ten years and became accredited last year. Bakrim said this is the first time the school experienced any such issues.

“It was a complete surprise to everybody,” he said. “For our students I hope they come out of this knowing this is the kind of world that exists today unfortunately, and that they come out wiser and learn how to handle this and hopefully learn from all of us here today … that we should all work together to be on the forefront of stopping this where ever it happens.”

Governor Gina Raimondo said yesterday, “Rhode Island was founded on the tolerance of all beliefs. This hateful act at the Islamic School of Rhode Island has no place in our state. My thoughts and support are with the school and the Muslim community in RI today.”

Senator Jack Reed said, “I strongly condemn the vandalism of the Islamic School of Rhode Island.  Our state was founded on religious freedom and we are strengthened by our diversity.  There is no justification and no place for this type of intolerance and bigotry in our community.  I urge anyone with information about the incident to contact the proper authorities.”

Senator Sheldon Whitehouse said, “This shameful incident is completely at odds with our state’s founding principles, and I hope the perpetrators will soon be brought to justice. To the families and staff who were affected, please know that Rhode Island stands with you and supports you.”

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As Elorza weighs privatization, bus monitors help residents


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MicheleSchenck
Michele Schenck

On a cold day in December, bus monitor Michele Schenck may have saved the life of Bill Jiacovelli as he waited with his 10 year old daughter Giovanna for the bus.

As he does most mornings before heading off to work, East Side dad Jiacovelli drove his daughter Giovanna to her bus stop on Hope St, keeping the heat on in the car as they waited for the bus. When the bus arrived, Bill got out of the car as Giovanna got onto the bus, escorted by Schenck, a bus monitor who has been on the job for 22 years.

As Bill got out of his car on this particular day, Schenck noticed he, “trembled a little bit and needed to lean on the car a little bit.”

Schenck asked Bill if he was feeling all right, but Bill dismissed her concerns, saying, “Oh, I just got dizzy.”

Schenck wasn’t convinced. She asked asked another parent to look after Bill while she made sure all the kids were safe so that the bus could get underway. Though Bill had dismissed her concerns, Schenck couldn’t let it go. “I know how men are,” she said to me, “They brush things like this off really quick. By the time he gets home, he’s not going to even tell [his wife] Polly that anything was wrong.”

Schenck asked Giovanna if she knew her mom’s number. Schenck called Polly and expressed her concerns. “I had to make the call short and quick, because I had to look after the kids on the bus.”

School BusPolly immediately called Bill’s doctor and arranged a visit over Bill’s protestations. Doctor Rosenberg found that Bill had a previously undiagnosed AFib heart condition that put him at serious risk of a stroke. Had Bill not been admitted to the hospital that morning, he might have died.

Looking back, Bill now realizes that his condition was worse than he was willing to admit.

When Schenck returned to the bus stop to drop off Giovanna that afternoon, Polly was waiting with “a big bouquet of flowers” and a teary eyed hug. Polly told an amazed Schenck that she had saved Bill’s life.

“The bus monitors do amazing work,” Polly told me, “My daughter has a severe nut allergy, so Michele is always making sure that the kids aren’t bringing snacks on the bus that might hurt her. Other kids have asthma or other medical conditions. Michele has to break up fights between kids. Never mind that she makes sure that no kid gets left behind or run over.”

“The cars on Hope St. go way too fast,” continued Polly, “cars are always blowing past the bus, putting kids at risk. Since the incident with Bill I get misty eyed every time I see Michele look under the bus to make sure it’s clear of children.”

After 22 years on the job, Michele Schenck makes $11.44 an hour. Providence Mayor Jorge Elorza is considering privatizing the bus monitors in an effort to cut costs, but the bids from Ocean State Transit and First Student, the only two bidders for the bus monitor contract, are in the $30 range. It’s hard to know where the city intends to see any savings with that kind of math.

Meanwhile, a petition has begun circulating online asking Elorza to fulfill his “campaign promise to stand with working families” and “oppose the privatization of Providence’s bus monitors.” According to the petition, the job of bus monitor was “created after the tragic accidental death of a student in 1985. There had been at least one fatal student death each year from 1979 until monitors were mandated — and since then there hasn’t been a single one while a monitor was on duty.”

Bill Jiacovelli is out of the hospital and on medication for his heart condition. Thanks to bus monitor Michele Schenck, his daughter still has a father to bring her to the bus stop every morning.

“I’m working,” said Schenck, “but I’m paying attention. What I did I would do for all the people on my route. We see each other every day. I watch their kids. We’re like a family.”

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