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2,929 Entries

Thomas Jodry Email
05/23/06

card number 100789

Comments:

In response to Freddie McCourt on the 18th

Thanks Freddie and congratulations to you and all the local One brothers serving as delegates this year. I look forward to seeing you all at the convention. Hey, if they don't believe you were a great helper they can call me I have a few stories to tell. Thanks again Freddie.

See you in Sept

Tommy

 


Brother Brian Link Email
05/23/06

card number 1347

Comments:

The Elevator Constructor should be required reading for members of the IUEC. This past issue once again is full of great articles filled with valuable information, regarding our industry. One article from Local 19 regarding Safety was one of the best, most educated short articles regarding safety i have read in quite a while. Its title is It takes about a month. We must continue to protect our work , work smarter , work safer . So we can all go home to our family and friends. To all the veterans who are Reading this THANK YOU for all you have done so we can afford many freedoms. Take moment or even more and extend and thank at least One veteran and THANK HIM OR HER! Most of enjoy this holiday weekend and continue to work safe . I am hearing some good suggestions regarding our national convention. How about a National safety policy that all companies MUST adhere to? We should all work under the same safety conditions , safety is every ones responsibility!!! I will always remain an educated , involved and interested and proud member of Local 1 IUEC

                     Respectfully Submitted Brother Brian Link .


Theresa Mathisen Email
05/22/06

card number 1560

Comments:

  RETIREMENT PARTY FOR BOBBY DUNBAR SR.

 

JUNE 9TH AT THE CAPTAINS KETCH 5 P.M.-8 P.M LOCATED 70 PINE STREET NY NY (ENTER ON PEARL)  $50.00 AT THE DOOR. PLEASE R.S.V.P. TO JOHN & THERESA MATHISEN BY JUNE 3RD @ 732-727-4165 OR 1-848-565-6231   

 

HOPE TO SEE YOU THERE!


Brother Tom Moore Email
05/21/06

card number 1179

Comments:
 
The above link is for the New York City Inspector Jobs.
 
Work Safe,
 
Brother Tom Moore


Brother Tom Moore Email
05/20/06

card number 1179

Comments:

ELEVATOR HORROR
IN BX. BUILDING

By JOE MCGURK and STEFANIE COHEN

May 20, 2006 -- A man's legs were severed early today as he tried to escape from inside an elevator packed with revelers leaving a party in The Bronx, police and witnesses said.

The bizarre accident occurred at 12:15 a.m. when an apartment building elevator at 2395 Tiebout Ave. in the Fordham section got stuck between the first floor and basement, police said.

That's when the man - who was not identified, but only described by cops as being in his 20s - was following two other men who had safely climbed out of the elevator to the lobby.

As he shimmied through the open doors, the elevator began to move, severing the man's legs, witnesses said.

The accident left the 14 people standing inside the elevator splattered in blood.

"Half of his body was cut in the elevator," said Carmen Valentin, 48, who lives on the second floor of the building.

"Half of his body was inside and half outside. There was blood everywhere."

Cops worked to free the man before transporting him to St. Barnabas Hospital in critical condition.

The other trapped riders were freed an hour later.


Home


Work Safe,

Brother Tom Moore


Frederick McCourt 
05/18/06

card number 14

Comments:

I would like to congratulate Brother Tom Jodry for being elected to serve his membership as a delegate at the upcoming convention. Tommy was a member of Local One for years before transferring out to Portland Oregon(Local 23). Tommy was my mechanic for about 4 years when we worked at Advance Elevator(Mainco). There are some people out there that will tell you he moved to Portland because I was the greatest helper in the world. Don't believe it. Best of luck to you, Brother Jodry.

Your Partner,

Freddie

P.S. Don't be telling any stories out there at the convention.


Lori Agnello Email
05/12/06

card number 1671

Comments:

Greetings everyone .  Hope this posting finds everyone in good health and spirits.  Just thought I would wish all the moms out there a very Happy Mothers Day.  I am looking forward to meeting my husbands friends and co-workers at the Local 1 picnic.  Are doggies allowed?...LOL (Just Kidding).  Our Rachel and Herbie would be in their glory if they were allowed.  Have a great weekend and work safe.

 

Lori

 

As always the PROUD wife of Paul


Brother Tom Moore Email
05/12/06

card number 1179

Comments:

Construction / Construction Services
MAINTENANCE AND SERVICE FOR TWENTY-EIGHT (28) HYDRAULIC ELEVATORS AT VARIOUS DEVELOPMENTS- ALL FIVE (5) BOROUGHS - Competitive Sealed Bids - PIN# 6006357 - DUE 6-2-2006 AT 10:05 AM
Due Date
6/2/2006

Published
5/12/2006

  Solicitation
Competitive Sealed Bids
  Agency
NYCHA
  Contact
Steven Vetrano
(718) 707-7778
  Address
23-02 49th Avenue, 4th Floor, Long Island City, NY 11101

Brothers & Sisters: Hopefully our companies will get into the game and get this work for our Union.

Work Safe,

Brother Tom Moore,

tmlocalone@aol.com


Alan R Rothfuss Jr. Email
05/10/06

card number 97615

Comments:

Great site and keep up the good work


mike duffy Email
05/09/06

card number 1613

Comments:

Brothers & Sisters,

 

I am sorry to inform you that retired Brother William P. Carroll, Sr. has passed away. Services are as follows:

 

Ruggiero & Sons Funeral Home

732 Yonkers Ave

Yonkers, NY 10704

914-375-1400

 

Viewing:

Tuesday, May 9, 2006 -  2-5 & 7-9:30

Wednesday, May 10, 2006 -  2-5 & 7-9:30

 

Mass will be held on Thursday May 11, 2006

Saint John the Baptist Church

670 Yonkers Ave

Yonkers, NY

914-963-1484 

Call the Funeral home for time and directions.


Brother Tom Moore Email
05/09/06

card number 1179

Comments:

Labor War in Chelsea
For the first time, non-union immigrants are building Manhattan's high-rise towers
by Tom Robbins
May 9th, 2006 11:34 AM






Carpenters' union organizer Tommy Costello: "Our fight's not with the workers."
photo: Giuletta Verdon-Roe
There's a nasty little chapter in the national immigration debate playing out along the side streets in the West Twenties in Manhattan these days. There, construction union members, many of them first- and second-generation immigrants themselves, are squared off against a contractor using just-off-the-boat employees willing to work long hours at substandard wages with no benefits.

The protests have already produced seven arrests and at least one badly bloodied head. But those wounds are minor compared to the issues at stake here, which include the increasing success of non-union builders in the city, fed by a seemingly boundless supply of immigrant workers—most of them undocumented—willing to work for much less than their union brethren.

While non-union builders have long nibbled at the peripheries of the city's construction trade, they've generally been confined to smaller jobs in the outer boroughs. But in the past few years, such contractors and developers have grown increasingly bold, venturing into Manhattan to do bigger and bigger jobs, including some of the huge high-rise projects that have traditionally been the bread and butter of the union construction trades.

The buildings now rising in this corner of the old garment district in Chelsea appear to be the largest non-union developments yet. On West 26th, West 28th, and West 29th streets, a trio of soaring 24-story towers is being constructed by a Queens-based developer named Sam Chang, who has carved out a local niche as a builder of moderately priced hotels. Chang's McSam LLC, city records show, has spent more than $100 million in the past 18 months to acquire these and other development sites around the city. The three multimillion-dollar projects on the West Side (one is expected to be a Hampton Inn) are aimed at out-of-town businesspeople and budget-minded tourists.

To build them, Chang turned to a non-union general contractor named Tritel Construction, which in turn subcontracted much of the work to a firm based in upstate Pearl River called EMC Contracting. EMC, records show, only recently shifted from building one- and two-family homes to constructing multi-story projects.

The key ingredient that makes such projects feasible is an abundance of cheap immigrant labor, and that's what's building the three towers on the West Side. Without a union card in their pockets, or much else in the way of either job-training certification or documentation, immigrant workers are constructing wooden frames, bending steel bars, and pouring concrete. They can be seen shinnying up newly poured concrete columns, most of them without the safety belts required by federal safety and health regulations.

In addition to the job hazards, their pay, according to union organizers and workers who agreed to talk about their employment under a guarantee of anonymity, is less than half the roughly $40-an-hour-plus-benefits package that a union carpenter or laborer would receive.

The immigrants say they are also being treated to a curious two-tier wage system under which young Irish men on the job are being paid $20 to $25 an hour, while Brazilians—bused in daily from Newark's Ironbound section—are paid less, between $15 to $20 an hour.

In mid April, members of the carpenters' and laborers' unions began picketing the sites and trying to talk to the workers about job conditions. They've sprinkled the projects with flyers urging workers to contact the union. "Union carpenters get what they're worth! Do you?" reads a flyer detailing the health, pension, training, and job placement benefits for union members. To reach the workers, organizers have waited on street corners in the early morning to snag workers on their way to the job sites, and even tossed the flyers from adjoining buildings onto the projects.

Contractors have responded by beefing up security with private guards. They have also hired retired police detectives for protection, and according to union organizers, off-duty cops as well.

Twice so far, tensions on the blocks have spilled over into brawls. On April 21, a fracas broke out after union members allegedly blocked the path of a truck delivering supplies to the West 26th Street site. According to the union, plainclothes security guards tumbled out from behind the gates of the job site wielding long blackjacks. When police arrived on the scene and began grabbing at security guards and union members alike, one guard allegedly yelled, "Stop, I'm a cop," while holding up a shield. Police eventually arrested five men, all of them members of carpenters' union Local 608, who were charged with resisting arrest and inciting to riot.

A week later, on April 28, another fight broke out on West 28th Street after someone tossed a smoke bomb at the work site. In the melee that followed, a union member, Anthony Mercado, was sliced on the back of the head with a utility knife, a wound that left a long, ugly gash that took several staples to close. Police initially arrested a 28-year-old Irish immigrant worker named Mark Wynne, who gave an address in the Woodlawn section of the Bronx. But Wynne was later released after he was not identified in a lineup.

Tensions at the sites were ramped up even more when concrete trucks making deliveries from a Brooklyn plant were accompanied by carloads of young black men, several of whom allegedly flashed guns at the union pickets, most of whom are white. "I'm gonna put a cap in your ass," one of the men allegedly threatened an organizer.

All of the incidents at the job sites are currently being investigated by the labor racketeering unit of the office of Manhattan District Attorney Robert Morgenthau, a spokeswoman confirmed.

Sam Chang, the projects' developer, failed to return several calls to his office in Floral Park. A secretary suggested that he might respond to an e-mail message, but those also went unanswered. Also playing nonspeaking roles in the drama were Jimmy Wu, owner of the contracting firm Tritel, and Michael Mahoney of EMC, both of whom did not respond to messages.



Carpenters' union official Tommy Costello: "Our fight's not with the workers."
photo: Giulietta Verdon-Roe
Union organizers are careful to emphasize that their beef is with the employers, not the workers.

"What they've got going here is an underground economy," said Tom Costello of the New York District Council of Carpenters, who has been monitoring the West Side non-union sites. "There's no taxes being paid, there's no workers' compensation, no health protections."

Costello's father was a carpenter who emigrated from Ireland and found work through the union after his arrival. A carpenter for more than 30 years, Costello has worked as a foreman on major construction projects, and also as an instructor in the union's apprentice training program. He said he had watched in amazement at the risks being taken by the non-union workers as the building has taken shape. "You're sending a kid from São Paolo, Brazil, and another from County Donegal, and neither one of them has ever worked on more than a two- or three-story job, and making them a high-rise construction worker. It's not that easy," he said.

He said that standard procedures for testing the strength of the concrete and the durability of the steel reinforcement bars were not being conducted. "Someone's going to get hurt on the job," he said, "and the public should also be worried."

Another union organizer, Andres Puerta, whose family came from Ecuador, said that he had persuaded several individual workers to sign up with the union. "They talk about how scared they are," said Puerta. "They're scared of being hurt at work, and they're scared of losing the job. Most of them are sending money to family members at home."

The union organizers said that most of the young immigrants had brushed off suggestions that they needed health insurance in case of illness or injury. "They think, 'What do I need that for?' " said Costello. "Most of these guys are making $25 an hour cash, and they are putting in 60 hours a week. So maybe they're making $1,500 a week, not paying any taxes. They see it as the best deal of their lives."

John Greaney, the president of the carpenters' Local 608, which has 7,500 members and whose jurisdiction covers Manhattan's West Side, said the union was trying to appeal to both employers and workers alike. "Our fight is not with the workers," said Greaney. "We welcome them. We are not going to do the job of the government. We are not INS agents. What we're up against here is the corporate greed of these developers and construction companies."

Whatever their motivation, non-union contractors are clearly taking up a bigger share of construction work. Nationally, according to research by the Cornell University School of Industrial and Labor Relations, unions' share of the construction industry has plummeted from a high of 80 percent in the years right after World War II to less than 18 percent today. Even in New York State, traditionally union-strong territory, organized labor's share slipped below 50 percent for the first time in the 1990s and is believed to be even less currently.

The notion that organized labor will be able to forever hold on to big-ticket projects has been nourished by giant, government-backed developments like the pending new Freedom Tower in Lower Manhattan and the new stadiums slated for Brooklyn, the Bronx, and Queens. In each of those cases, labor used its political muscle to help win approvals. But while labor was focusing on those mega-projects, private developers of non-union ventures like the new high-rises in the West Twenties have slipped into town.

"There's been a false sense of security," said one union labor analyst. "There's a creep factor that started in the South and the Southwest, and eventually hit upstate and the outer boroughs. Now it's right in Manhattan."

send a letter to the editor go to next article in news ->


Brother Tom Moore, Local One, IUEC

Get ready brothers & sisters.


 


Brother Moore Email
05/09/06

card number 1179

Comments:

Tom,

   I'm trying to locate a retiree, Willie Lewis. Known as Wacky Willie, he worked for Serge, helped Pat Dineen for years and my father way back in history.

   I heard he retired to Amelia, Virginia. That's next door to me. I'm in VA on 26 days leave to work on my house. I'd love to contact him while I'm down here. I return to Ft Dix May 16th.

   My father and I used to meet up with Willie at the picnic every year. Willie said he was living in Amelia, VA. ANy way I can get in touch with him? Thanks.

Bob Phelan

LTC Robert Phelan
3-311 OPFOR/COB Committee
Kelly USARC, 2nd Floor
609-562-2119/2122


Brother Brian Link Email
05/07/06

card number 1347

Comments:

Good Morning Sisters & Brothers,

First of all my thoughts & prayers are with the families of the 10 U.S. soldiers who died in Afghanistan Friday. Whether you are for or against the war " These True Heroes" , gave the ultimate sacrifice for OUR COUNTRY, their lives. May they rest in peace with the lord.

 Reading the newspapers, listening & watching the news , we need to be more involved in our lives. Stop thinking about Yourself! Reach out to others less fortunate then yourself, help them out . Always live a life of INTEGRITY! Leave this place better off then when you got here " Your family, Your community, Your Union, Your FAITH " will forever benefit all of our futures.

 Please realize the people around you are doing " the best " they can do with the knowledge they have. If you can assist someone else in any of their present situation, PLEASE DO!!!

  Anyone who has important issues regarding our International Agreement, please let our elected Delegates/Alternates know. Please understand that your families future is a direct result of our success at the National Convention, "Don't sit idly by".Think about the big picture, make our union better by getting involved. To any IUEC members outside Local 1, SAVE UP & be prepared for your contract in 2007, if you have any ?????? ask a member who was locked out. I personally would be more then glad to help you out, EMANY locked me out , I WILL NEVER FORGET. We are here for you, Strength in Numbers.

   May 14th is Mothers Day. Please take time to acknowledge ALL MOMS, whether they are yours or not. Never a day goes by that I am not grateful for my Mom , my wife Suzanne & all they have done for me and our FAMILY. I want to take this moment to wish all MOMS a Happy Mothers day next Sunday. My mother is at rest with the Lord in Heaven, but she will be with me forever, she taught me many lessons in life, for this I am truly grateful. Thanks Mom.

 Make a choice to make a positive difference! Stay involved and educated and continue to educate those around you in all aspects of your life!

                                 Respectfully Submitted

                                 Brother Brian Link

 

**** Nothing truly great can be accomplished in 1 Lifetime

       Thank you for taking the time to read this post

                         


Andrew Duggan 
05/06/06

card number 2482

Comments:

With regards to Brother Moore's post are the vacation percentages still , 4% under 5 years , 6% between 5 and 15 years , and 8% after 15 years..... or as in the post 6% under 5 years and 8% after 5 years of service and if this has changed did it come into effect with the new contract


Brother Tom Moore Sr Email
05/05/06

card number 1179

Comments:

Davis Bacon for New York, Local One, IUEC is now updated:

 
 
* ELEV0001-002 03/17/2006

                                   Rates          Fringes

  Elevator Mechanic
     Elevator Constructor........$ 43.99         22.597+a
     Modernization and Repair....$ 35.33          21.49+a

FOOTNOTE: 

  a. PAID HOLIDAYS:  New Year's Day, Lincoln's Birthday, Good
  Friday, President's Day, Memorial Day, Independence Day,
  Labor Day, Columbus Day, Veteran's Day, Thanksgiving Day,
  Friday after Thanksgiving, and Christmas Day.

  PAID VACATION: Employer contributes 8% of regular basic
  hourly rate as vacation pay for employees with more than 5
  years of service, and 6% for employees with less than 5
  years of service.
----------------------------------------------------------------
 
Thomas J. Moore, Sr.
Union Organizer
Local One International Union of Elevator Constructors
47-24 27th Street
Long Island City, New York 11101
Fax (718) 767-6730
Cell (917) 567-6040
Tmlocalone@Aol.com


Brother Tom Moore Email
05/04/06

card number 1179

Comments:

 
Please click on the above link and go to Page 39 out of 106.
 
The New York City Comptroller office is sending our surveys to all of the elevator companies doing work in the city of New York.
Please answer this survey right away.
At the end of the Survey the comptroller office will add it up and I know Local One, IUEC has the numbers to get the rate changed from Local 3 EE Division to Local 1 IUEC.
 
So please keep an eye out for an envelope from the New York City Comptroller office.
 
Thanks and please call me if you have any question about this survey.
 
 
 
Thomas J. Moore, Sr.
Union Organizer
Local One International Union of Elevator Constructors
47-24 27th Street
Long Island City, New York 11101
Fax (718) 767-6730
Cell (917) 567-6040
Tmlocalone@Aol.com


Al Krause Email
05/01/06

card number 646

Comments:

Hey Greg-I'm pretty sure my Uncle Richie worked on pre-built in its own shaft units for Otis out of Local 5 when it was slow in the 70's.  Listen bro, it's a different elevator world when you get out of our jurisdiction.  I worked in the Otis test tower in Bristol with an escalator guy out of San Diego.  He told me about having 2 days to put in escalators in Guam.  Hang tough or the end is near!!!


danbo Email
04/30/06

card number 1899

Comments:
UTC REPORTS FIRST QUARTER GROWTH: United Technologies Corp. (UTC) has reported that its consolidated revenue for the first quarter of 2006 was US$10.6 billion, an increase of 13% compared to that of the first quarter of last year. The company also reported an increase of operating profit to US$1.3 billion, compared with US$1.1 billion in the first quarter of 2005. Its Otis Elevator Co. reported first-quarter revenue of US$2.3 billion and an operating profit of US$439 million, both of which were also increases from the same period in 2005. [B]So when you treat your employees like they and their families don't matter, you make huge profits.[/B]


Brother Brian Link Email
04/30/06

card number 1347

Comments:

First of all, I want to thank brother Greg Sisko for his previous post regarding complete PREFAB jobs being sent out . We must PROTECT our work, our trade, we are an extremely talented trade . EDUCATION is key , we need to communicate, we need to be INVOLVED.

  Please continue to be involved in your Union, your families and your communities and your choice of faith!

   I am really looking forward to Local Ones 2006 Family Picnic, more so this year then any other year since I have been in the trade. I want us here in Local 1 , to start to bond more and more. I feel this great fun filled day is a great place to come together, as a very diversified group of VERY talented proud union members. All retired Brothers who wish to attend , as guests of Local One, are welcome.

 I will always be grateful for what I have, I want to reach out to anyone who has ideas they would like to have submitted to the International Convention bring them to our elected delegates/ alternates , MOST OF ALL make a decision to be involved.

  Once again thanks for reading, for all the members who I met for the 1st time at the past Election, who said " Oh your Brian Link?" , thanks for coming out to vote!!! Regardless of how you voted, YOU came out and made a choice!

I will continue to be involved, concerned and educated union member of Local 1 IUEC.

                         See everyone at the next UNION meeting

                          Respectfully Submitted

                           Brother Brian LInk


Greg Sisko Email
04/29/06

card number 2601

Comments:

I was look at the list of signatory co. And came to the Handi Lift page.Looking at the sight I saw something that I found vary wrong.This companies offers a  MODULAR ELEVATOR.....is a unit that is a premade shaft with rails and a car all ready built lifted by crane and.. pluged in job done.... Is our union ready for that.. do we support companies that bring the whole job allready done on a truck to be picked by the OPP ENG. And pluged in by the IBEW. Look out IUEC.....

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