Friday, July 22, 2005

IBEW Local 139 (Elmira NY) Assistant Appointed to United Way Board

  • APPOINTMENTS
  • Fifteen people were appointed three-year terms for United Way of the Southern Tier.

    They include: Jim Bacalles, New York state legislator; Dr. Raymond Bryant, Elmira schools superintendent; Robert Colucci, vice president, Maple City Savings Bank; Ernest Hartman, assistant business manager, IBEW Local 139; Carl Hilsdorf, director-human resources, Alstom Transportation; Shawn Hogan, mayor of Hornell; James Jenkins, Bath VA Medical Center; Terry Kelly, vice president, Steuben Trust Co. in Bath.

    Also, Robert Pichette, assistant vice president, Chemung Canal Trust Co.; Claire Rhodes, IT manager, Dresser Rand; Phil Roche, Yorio & Roche; Judith Rowe, human resource manager, Schweizer Aircraft Corp.; Randy Simpson, general manager, Schweizer Aircraft Corp.; Richard Swartz, manager, employee benefits, Hardinge Inc.; Dr. Mark Vaughn, research associate, Corning Inc.
  • IBEW Members in Tampa Begin Contract Talks with Verizon

    Published Tuesday, July 19, 2005
    LAKELAND
    Verizon Begins Labor Talks

    Labor negotiations between Verizon Communications Inc. and the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers (IBEW) began Monday and are expected to conclude by the end of the month. Earlier this month, about 150 Verizon employees protested against the telecommunications company in a picket organized by the IBEW Tampa office. The workers protested against company's policies on employee schedules, retirement benefits and health insurance costs. These items will be discussed in the coming weeks. Verizon has about 300,000 business and residential customers in Polk County and about 500 local employees. Verizon has more than 2 million customers in its Central Florida region, which includes Polk, Pasco, Pinellas, Sarasota, Manatee and Hillsborough counties. A 24-hour call center opened in 2004 in Lakeland.

    Donna Ross, IBEW Local 48 (Portland OR) Steward, Leaves Radio for Thailand and New Life

    Donna Ross takes another big step
    The former Ron Ross leaves her hometown, readies for sex change

    Kansas City, Kansas City, here she comes.
    A Portlander most of her life, Donna Ross has moved from her hometown to follow spouse Christy, who has taken a job with the National Weather Service in metropolitan Kansas City, Mo.
    Ross, 51, leaves behind a radio career that included broadcasting 811 consecutive Portland Winter Hawks home hockey games alongside play-by-play announcer Dean Vrooman, and several years working in various capacities at KBPS (89.9 FM).
    And, of course, she leaves behind the fact, that until recently, she was a man.
    “It’s hard to say goodbye to a lot of people, especially the ones who stuck with me,” she says. “Much like when I left hockey, I won’t miss the work as much as the people.”
    Ron Ross became Donna Ross last July, shortly after telling her story in the pages of the Portland Tribune. She yearned for years to be a transgendered woman, and the desire becomes a reality Sept. 6 in Bangkok, Thailand, when she visits surgeon Dr. Kamol Pansritum to have a sex-change operation.
    She also plans to have cosmetic surgery around her eyes, and maybe breast augmentation. Then she plans to return to Portland to visit friends and relatives at the end of September.
    Ross says she couldn’t be happier with her transition, after living with internal strife for so many years, which included a half-hearted suicide attempt and thoughts of others. “I reclaimed a life I was preparing to throw away,” she says.
    “I’m happy. I’m peaceful. I smell better,” she jokes. “Some days I’m taller (with heels).”
    Ross says there won’t be any legal ramifications for her marriage, which began when she was a he. And, “we’re already cleared with Christy’s employer,” Ross says. “Our marital status as far as they are concerned won’t change. We’re not anticipating any problems.
    “But, like the old ‘I Love Lucy’ line, there’s going to be a lot of ‘splainin’ to do.”
    Ross, who attended Cleveland High School, doesn’t regret telling her story of transgenderism in the Tribune. “I don’t know if it’s been therapeutic … ,” she says. “It was something I was going to have to face: ‘Hockey announcer becomes girl.’
    “And it allows me to give back to those people who have helped make my path easier.”
    Ross continues to try to build the bridge between her and her parents, who have had trouble accepting her change. She becomes teary-eyed — “a leaky moment” in her words — when talking about how co-workers at KBPS “not only accommodated the change, but embraced it.” Ross was the station’s operations director and the IBEW Local 48 steward; she left June 30.
    She said goodbye to her therapist, Heather Leffler, and had some emotional moments in the last days living in her hometown — looking out at the softball field at Benson High, where she coached so many games, or walking through Sewell Crest Park where she grew up.
    She and her spouse and dog zipped off to Kansas City in their Ford Escort ZX2, nicknamed “Little Red Sports Car.” Ross plans to be a homemaker at first and maybe become active with transgenders in Kansas City, as Christy works at her new job, teaching at the National Weather Service Training Center. “Radar is her forte,” Ross says.
    Eventually, Ross will start looking for work; it probably won’t be in radio.
    “It’s going to be interesting to see if I can land a job there,” she says.


    Las Vegas IBEW Plus Credit Union (IBEW Local 357, 396) Head Moves to Manage Fort Campbell Credit Union

    Article published Jul 21, 2005
    Kane new CEO of Fort Campbell credit union

    Tom Kane has joined the Fort Campbell Federal Credit Union as president and CEO.

    Kane previously served in the same capacity for Warren Federal Credit Union in Cheyenne, Wyo., which is where F.E. Warren Air Force Base, home of the 20th Air Force and 90th Space Wing, is located.

    Prior to that role he was president/CEO of IBEW Plus Credit Union in Las Vegas, Nev.

    Kane said in a prepared announcement that he's proud to be in the Fort Campbell area.

    "I felt it was a wonderful opportunity to move up to a more progressive, innovative, and leading-edge credit union, with the Fort Campbell Federal Credit Union," he said.

    Kane's wife, Judy, is a registered nurse. They have a 15-year-old son, a 20-year-old son attending the University of Nevada-Las Vegas, and a daughter that just graduated from the University of Wisconsin in Madison.

    Fort Campbell Federal Credit Union is the 13th-largest credit union in Tennessee, with five full-service branches serving members in Tennessee, Kentucky and around the world.

    The credit union recently received permission to expand its membership to include anyone who lives, works, worships or attends school in Montgomery and Stewart counties in Tennessee and Christian, Todd and Trigg counties in Kentucky.

    Currently, the Credit Union serves over 32,000 member-owners.

    Kane succeeded John H. Moorhead who recently retired. Moorhead had been president/CEO since June 1992, during which time the Credit Union grew from $65.8 million in assets, to more than $211 million.

    IBEW Member, CBS Cameraman, Tony Cucurello Covered, Remembers, Much of Modern History

    He saw history through a television lens

    SPECIAL TO THE DAILY PRESS

    July 21 2005

    Tony Cucurullo's stride is slower now. His hair has gone white. But let him talk for a while, and he takes you back to when he was young, hustling to make his way in an industry that gave him some of the greatest moments of his life.

    The 77-year-old worked as a CBS cameraman in the network's New York studio and on the road from 1955 to 1992. His mind is a storehouse of indelible images that, to hear him tell, happened just yesterday.

    And complementing his words are proud possessions - not big or showy but surely the makings of a grown-up show-and-tell.

    The International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers represents many broadcast industry employees, and on Cucu- rullo's white satin IBEW jacket is an array of pins from events that he's viewed through his lens.

    "These are some of the places I've been to," he says, fingering a pin from a Belmont Stakes race won by Secretariat.

    "Nineteen seventy-three," he recalls. "He won by 31 lengths."

    Cucurullo opens a worn brown clasp envelope at his kitchen table in York County. Out tumble press passes from NASA, NBA and Super Bowl games, the United Nations, the U.S. Capitol and late President Ronald Reagan's inauguration.

    "That was the coldest inauguration I ever been in," he muses.

    A bad back forced his retirement in 1992. In 1999, he and his wife, Pauline, settled on the Peninsula, near his brother, Joe, who lives in Williamsburg.

    "I just faded into the woodwork," he said. "Nobody's ever ready to leave. (But) you have to go. It's your time to pack it in."

    Even in high school, Cucurullo wanted to be around celebrities. He got a job with CBS Radio's "Major Bowes' Original Amateur Hour," later hosted by Ted Mack. It didn't matter that he was only an office boy. "That was a glorious time for me," he said.

    In the radio studio in the 1940s, he watched Jimmy Durante, Gary Moore and Kate Smith rehearse their shows.

    After a stint in the Navy, followed by college and some per-diem camera work that included NBC, he was back at CBS.

    In the 1950s, he was one of Arthur Godfrey's CBS cameramen.

    Remember television's Ernie Kovacs and his wife, Edie Adams? Cucurullo does.

    "Oh," he said, "was she lovely!"

    "That Old Black Magic," a tune from the 1940s, is playing as Cucurullo reminisces. "It's just fun talking about it," he says. "It brings back my memories."

    There are no careers these days like the one that he spent with the "Tiffany network," he says. If you were sick, CBS developer and honcho William Paley paid the bills and sent flowers.

    "William Paley was a father to all of us," Cucurullo says. "I was known as a 'Bill Paley boy' because I worshipped him."

    His prime time put him in contact with a who's who of history makers.

    "You meet the headlines," he says over a cup of coffee in his breakfast room. "I was there for Nixon's Watergate."

    When Pope John Paul II celebrated a papal Mass at New York's Yankee Stadium on Oct. 2, 1979, Cucurullo arranged the camera work. "So," he reminisces, "everyone in the world saw that pope through my eyes."

    He traveled the world, a camera on his shoulder, capturing history through a lens.

    Vietnam. Russia. Israel.

    He covered the Olympics; a space launch at Cape Kennedy, Fla., with CBS News' Dan Rather; and the Andrews Air Force Base homecoming of the U.S. hostages held for 444 days in Iran.

    Spending 12 weeks on stories for the "Captain Kangaroo" show around the late 1970s, Cucurullo was assigned to a piece about how New York's World Trade Center twin towers' windows were washed. Although he was the technical director on the project, he volunteered to go up in the bucket to do the camera work.

    "For a half-hour," he says of his 110-story perch, "I went up and down the Twin Towers, shooting this machine. No other cameraman ever did that - and no other cameraman will ever do it. I had a high for two days."

    "He was an excellent cameraman - a crackerjack cameraman," says retired Lt. Col. Arthur Korff of Newport News, who worked in CBS' engineering department years ago and was a director of the IBEW's cable television department.

    "A good cameraman knows ahead of time what will work," Cucurullo explains. "See the shot in your mind's eye, and do it."

    These days, Cucurullo is "practicing" painting. Pencil sketches of Big Band greats such as Benny Goodman and Glenn Miller dot his walls.

    He's also learning to play the trumpet.

    He reads.

    He stays in touch with former colleagues via the CBS retirees' Web site that he was instrumental in starting, www.cbsretirees.com.

    "And I have my memories," he says.

    "I daydream. That's my hobby. I have wonderful friends. I've met wonderful people all over the country."

    Those people remember Cucurullo and his connection to his career. "He loved every bit of it, by golly," says Korff, now Langley Air Force Base's retiree activities office director.

    "It was great, it was great," Cucurullo marvels, "every minute of every day."

    Copyright © 2005, Daily Press

    IBEW Local 146 (Deacatur IL) Hosts Illinois Governor signing Workers Comp Bill


    Blagojevich visit turns bill into law

    By RON INGRAM - H&R Staff Writer

    DECATUR - A bill reforming Illinois' workers compensation system won praise Wednesday from business and organized labor prior to Gov. Rod Blagojevich signing the measure into law in Decatur.

    Even Blagojevich joked about the ceremony in the hall of the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers Union Local 146, the third time on Wednesday he had signed the bill after earlier stops in Lincolnshire and Granite City.

    "Of course, this is the real signing," the governor quipped.

    But House Bill 2137 was not a laughing matter to legislators and business and labor leaders who spent two years hammering out the reform package. The new law took effect immediately.

    Local 146 member Michael Carrigan, state AFL-CIO secretary-treasurer and a key reform negotiator, said the reforms were long overdue, noting the state's workers compensation law had not been revised in 30 years.

    Blagojevich said the law created a medical fee schedule indexed to the Consumer Price Index that provides a reasonable connection to various injuries. Illinois joins 44 other states in using such a schedule.

    "Benefits will increase, and that will help working people," Blagojevich said. "We're also cracking down on fraud."

    The law creates a workers compensation fraud statute and an investigation unit within the Illinois Department of Financial and Professional Regulation's Division of Insurance. It will investigate fraud, including uninsured employers, and allow for reporting of fraudulent claims by employees.

    Medical providers are now prohibited from billing an injured worker for the balance of charges not paid by insurance while the worker's compensation claim is pending. Illinois is the last state to adopt this prohibition.

    A Workers Compensation Commission is created to expedite resolution of disputed claims. It also can expand and expedite emergency hearings to resolve cases within 180 days, which will allow injured workers to receive treatment more quickly and allow them an earlier return to work.

    The law will help businesses contain workers compensation costs by providing for a utilization review of proposed or provided medical treatment to ensure it is reasonable and necessary for injured workers using nationally recognized medical standards.

    Illinois Manufacturers Association President Greg Baise said 300,000 work-related injuries occur each year in Illinois and $2 billion is spent in the workers compensation system.

    "We wanted to make sure the benefits package was fair and balanced," Baise said. "The cost of this component is critical in helping business decide if it will stay in Illinois and do business here."

    Baise, Carrigan and other speakers said Blagojevich deserved much of the credit for the reform package because he had outlined the need in his State of the State address two years ago, then pushed negotiators to try again after they came close to an agreement last year before talks stalled.

    Jay Shattuck of the Illinois Chamber of Commerce said his organization supports the reform package.

    "We think this a great start in helping business save money on the cost of workers compensation," Shattuck said. "We look forward to working on other reforms to help employers."

    Ron Ingram can be reached at ringram@;herald-review.com or 421-7973.