Our History:
The staff union of the Public Employees Federation was born shortly
after PEF became certified in 1979. At the time, about 30 administrative
staff and field representatives were working without any standards
for salary, travel allowances or benefits. There was a definite
need to deal with those discrepancies. In October of 1979, the field
staff met at the Tarrytown Conference Center in Westchester County
and, after much discussion, the staff union formed. The union, the
United Field Representatives and Staff Union (U.F.R.S.U.) immediately
entered into negotiations with PEF. Shortly after forming, the members
of UFRSU voted for a 1 percent dues structure, demonstrating the
staffs commitment to the union.
With PEF's steady growth, there was also growth within UFRSU. The
service's PEF offered expanded and the creation of many new departments
meant increased numbers to UFRSU. The positions in Research, Legal,
Membership Benefits, Legislative, and Organizing, just to name a
few, plus the growth in Field Services has added many administrative
and professional titles to the staff union.
Since its inception, one of the goals of the staff union was to
affiliate or merge, with either other independent unions or a larger
International Union. After several unsuccessful attempts over the
years, this goal became a reality in 1989. After almost a year of
meetings, discussions and negotiations the staff union merged with
the United Steelworkers of America (USWA).
The USWA originally grew out of the mass production organizing
efforts initiated in 1935 by United Mine Workers' President John
L. Lewis and a group of other AFL Leaders. They formed the Committee
for Industrial Organization, later the Congress of Industrial Organizations
(CIO). Under an agreement with the Amalgamated Association of Iron,
Steel and Tin Workers (organized in 1876), Philip Murray established
the Steel Workers Organizing Committee (SWOC) and launched a massive
organizing drive throughout the industry in 1936. Within six years,
membership growth and collective bargaining progress led to the
formation of an autonomous International Union at a constitutional
convention held on May 222, 1942. At the time, SWOC was disbanded
and the Union became the United Steelworkers of America, CIO. Upon
the merge of the CIO with the AFL in 1955, the USWA became an AFL-CIO
affiliate. In Canada, the Union is affiliated with the Canadian
Labour Congress (CLC).
The USWA is a large Union with enormous resources available to
its membership. There are currently about 700,000 members and over
5,000 collective bargaining agreements under their name. With a
majority of the membership now outside the basic steel industry,
the USWA is indeed a union of many faces. The rank and file membership
now includes tens of thousands of administrative technical and professional
employees in both the public and private sectors. The Union serves
its members in the United States, Canada, Puerto Rico and the Virgin
Islands. For service and representation purposes, this territory
is divided into 25 Districts. District 4 encompasses the entire
State of New York.
The structure, service and reputation of the United Steelworkers
of America all played an important role with the staff unions decision
to merge. While the International sets dues at 1.3 percent of gross
salary, the needs of the staff union required dues to be set at
1.8 percent. The membership voted overwhelmingly to merge with the
USWA and in November 1989, UFRSU became USWA, Local 9265.
There are currently about 100 members of USWA Local 9265. The goals
today are essentially the same as they were in 1979; to deliver
better wages, benefits and working conditions to each and every
member.
Home - Contact
Us - News |