From the September-October 2005 issue of Union Democracy Review
#158
100 DC 37 pickets demand: One member, one vote!
One hundred members of AFSCME District
Council 37, from various locals, picketed their union's headquarters in
Lower Manhattan on September 27, chanting loudly in unison: One member,
one vote. They want to change the system for electing top district officers.
Currently, officers are elected by council delegates from some 50 affiliated
locals. The picket line, demonstrating for direct membership election,
is the first sign of a serious campaign within DC 37 for the change.
September 27 had been set for a vote by the council
delegates on the proposed amendment to the council bylaws, but the meeting
was postponed until October 25. Nevertheless, the demonstration went ahead.
The organizers have already announced a second picket line for October.
The present system allows the presidents of a few
big locals to select the top officers by private deals among themselves
without regard for the preferences of the union's 120,000 members. The
proposal for direct elections first became popular a few years ago after
prominent leaders of DC 37 were found guilty of stealing millions from
the union and of rigging the vote in a fraudulent contract ratification
referendum. But no one waged a campaign for its adoption, and the support
remained purely verbal. At one point, it seemed that the proposal would
coast in. In the last election for DC 37 executive director (voting by
delegates) Lillian Roberts, the successful incumbent, and Charles Ensley,
her challenger, were pledged to support the change. But Roberts, in a
turnaround, is now opposed. Ensley, president of the big Social Service
Local 371, remains on course. He was there on the line on September 27
and addressed encouraging words to the others.
The difficulty is that any change to the DC37 bylaws
requires a 2/3 vote of the council delegates, so that they are asked to
strip themselves, and the presidents of the big locals, of a cherished
power. Even if the advocates can leap that hurdle, they face the possibility
of a veto from the AFSCME national office. The proposal would never have
been submitted for a council delegate vote if not for two fortuitous facts:
Robert Schirmer, president of Museum Local 1503, heads the district Law
and Rules Committee and could press the issue before the DC37 executive
board. On the executive board, the Ensley forces hold a slim majority
and could force the issue to a delegate vote despite Roberts's opposition.
Up to now, Alonzo Meyers, a Local 154 council delegate,
has been a lone voice, sending a series of letters to council delegates
urging a vote for the change. Now however, for the first time, there seems
to be the start of an organized campaign for the change, a campaign that
is trying to rally the membership and reaches into the locals. The new
support seems to have been inspired by Dolores Bailey, a member of Ensley's
Local 371. She brought together the One Member One Vote Coalition, which
sponsored the picket line. "Hold your leadership accountable,"
read one coalition handbill. "If your local's president doesn't believe
in these rank and file demands, VOTE HIM/HER OUT OF OFFICE," urged
another.
Among the picketers, joining Bailey and Ensley, were
Lynne Taylor, president of Library Local 1930, Roy Commer, former president
of Local 375, Carol Lang who was maneuvered out of running for Local 384
president and other local officers. Larry Davis served as picket line
captain, introducing speakers and leading the picketers in loud and spirited
chants. He had run for president of Local 374 against incumbent Veronica
Montgomery Costa who was reelected with only 417 votes in this 26,000-member
local. She was elected council president under the current system and
opposes any change.
The picketers were barred from the area near the union
office and corralled into a tiny circle near the roadway because, they
were told, they were not allowed on union property. AUD's Herman Benson,
who addressed the picketers briefly, said, "The same spirit that
bars you from your own union property, would bar you from electing your
own union officers."
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