News

Your union newsletter - April 24, 2024

Posted Apr. 24, 2024 by

OHIO CIVIL SERVICE EMPLOYEES ASSOCIATION
UNION NEWS / APril 24, 2024

 

Celebrating public services' good stewards of the Earth

Monday, April 22, was Earth Day, and we are celebrating the public employees who are tasked with managing, preserving and studying Ohio’s natural resources. Not just on Earth Day, but all year long, proud and dedicated public service employees help take care of our public lands. They keep our soil and water safe and so much more in a variety of agencies from the Ohio Department of Natural Resources to the Ohio Environmental Protection Agency to the Ohio Department of Agriculture. 

This past weekend, Michael Durst, an OCSEA member at ODNR, joined public employee union members and communities around the state in celebrating Earth Day. A Naturalist at Dillon State Park in East Central Ohio, Michael helped host the park's annual Earth Day celebration that included educational opportunities for the public, wildlife, food trucks and more.

"The morning started off with a wonderfully engaging Tree Talk Hike during which we delved into the world of trees––what they can tell us, how they connect to the rest of the forest (and world), and even the universes of other worlds they themselves harbor," said Michael, full of excitement about the work he does.

Michael and the park also joined community groups like the Muskingum County Library System, for a Naturalist's Nature Book Club, and the Wild at Hart Wildlife Rehabilitation, for an education on non-releasable wildlife. Michael says the event would not be possible without the contributions of the Friends of Dillon State Park volunteer group.

"It’s imperative for us to be here to help foster these relationships between people and the natural world and to help illuminate the earthly wonders that surround––and connect––with us all," said Michael. "While this is an everyday core component of what we do, Earth Day is a prime time to really shine that spotlight on the importance of it all...as long as we turn that spotlight off at night so as not to detrimentally affect our nocturnal wildlife friends," he says, throwing in a naturalist joke. 

It’s imperative for us to be here to help foster these relationships between people and the natural world and to help illuminate the earthly wonders that surround––and connect––with us all.” 

~ Michael Durst, ODNR Naturalist, Muskingum/Coshocton Chapter 6000

 

Last chance to register for annual women and minority conference

Just a reminder! The OCSEA Womens' Action and Community and Minority Affairs Committees joint conference is taking place May 3-5, 2024 at the Kalahari Resort and Convention Center in Sandusky.


There is still time this week to register for the event and get lodging. Visit OCSEA.org/WAC-CMCA for all the information. Today is the last day to book lodging for the event.


While there, check out the full agenda, which includes three speakers with labor and motivational speaking backgrounds.

  • The event begins Friday evening with early conference check-in and a hospitality reception. It's the perfect way to network with other OCSEA members from around Ohio.
  • The conference begins promptly at 10 a.m. on Saturday and runs through Sunday at 11 a.m.
  • Conference check-in on Saturday opens on 8 a.m.
 

Workers Memorial Day is Sunday, April 28

More than 50 years ago on April 28, Workers Memorial Day, the Occupational Safety and Health Act went into effect, promising every worker the right to a safe job—a fundamental right. 

The law was won because of the tireless efforts of the labor movement, which organized for safer working conditions and demanded action from the government to protect working people. Since then, unions and allies have fought hard to make that promise a reality—winning protections under the law that have made jobs safer and saved lives. But our work is not done. 

Each day, more than 340 workers are killed and more than 6,000 suffer injury and illness because of dangerous working conditions that are preventable.

Workers are winning good jobs and safe jobs through union contracts across the country to secure a better livelihood and safer future for ourselves and our families. A seat at the bargaining table can be a matter of life or death in the workplace, ensuring everyone can go home at the end of a work shift, alive and without work-related illnesses that plague many workers. We thank each and every OCSEA activist who serves on their agency's health and safety committees. It is these voices that matter the most. 

 

Health Care and UBT Open Enrollment begins May 16

Spring open enrollment for both the Union Benefits Trust (UBT) dental, vision, life insurance and legal programs and the State of Ohio Health Plan is just around the corner. The period begins May 16 and goes through May 29.


It’s a great time to review your benefit plan coverage as well as check your dependents’ eligibility. OCSEA members are also encouraged to check and update their beneficiaries, where necessary. More open enrollment information will be sent out to OCSEA members and all eligible State of Ohio employees in the coming weeks.

 

Time is running out. Apply for OCSEA scholarship by April 30

The deadline is quickly approaching to apply for the OCSEA Les Best Scholarship. The deadline is April 30, 2024. Learn more at ocsea.org/lesbest.

There are scholarships for OCSEA members, their spouses and their undergraduate dependents.

 

Tell Congress: Repeal unfair social security provision that harms public workers

A quarter of public service retirees have seen cuts to their Social Security because of the Government Pension Offset (GPO) and the Windfall Elimination Provision (WEP). Some have even had their Social Security benefits cut to zero.

GPO and WEP essentially penalize dedicated retirees for choosing careers in public service. Write a letter to your representative now, urging them to repeal GPO and WEP.

WRITE A LETTER »»»

The bipartisan Social Security Fairness Act (H.R. 82), sponsored by Ohio's Senator Sherrod Brown and co-sponsored by hundreds more in Congress, would repeal GPO and WEP once and for all. 

If this is not repealed, this will eventually impact most public workers who have dedicated their lives to public service. The best way for our union to push this bill across the finish line is by sending a flood of letters to our representatives today voicing our support.

Every member of Congress needs to hear from public service workers and retirees on this issue. Send a letter to your representatives and tell them to fully repeal GPO and WEP, so all public service retirees receive the full Social Security benefits they earned!