Last Friday, hundreds of OCSEA members were joined by AFSCME International President Lee Saunders, U.S. Congressman Tim Ryan and other labor supporters in a Rally for Respect at the Ohio Statehouse. With growing concerns that the sacrifices of Ohio's public employees are being quickly forgotten as the pandemic shifts, OCSEA union members rallied to remind those who run the state that they are still working hard for Ohio and deserve respect and compensation. Read the Union Press Release.
Union activists from every corner of the state made their voices heard saying decision-makers throughout state and local government are turning a blind eye to their sacrifices. A recent decision by an arbitrator to side with management claiming the pandemic was not an emergency, so emergency pay wasn’t warranted for state employee union members, was a slap in the face to Ohio’s essential public employees.
“Our members showed up. They were professional and effective. Every day they walked into settings that would potentially get them sick, get their families sick or… worse,” said OCSEA President Chris Mabe to the crowd. “To say this wasn’t an emergency is absolutely ridiculous,” he said.
Impassioned, and at-times angry and emotional member activist speakers included Wilson Humphrey, a Circleville Juvenile Correction Officer, Brian Miller, a Marion Correction Officer, Sabrina Bell, an ODOT union activist, and Jeana Campolo, a DODD Therapeutic Program Worker. All told their personal, painful and heartbreaking stories of the pandemic and those of their union brothers and sisters.
The member activists and Pres. Mabe also encouraged activists to build on the momentum of the rally by taking the calls to action back to their workplaces and communities.
"This is just the beginning," said Mabe. "We made our presence known on the Statehouse stairs. We showed we are powerful and have allies that have our backs. Now we need take it to the next level by continuing to tell our stories of public service and sacrifice during the pandemic in every community in Ohio," he says.