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Meet the DC 37 Officers
Click on a photo or name for
a brief biography.
Labor's "Lady of steel" returns to DC 37

Lillian Roberts
Executive Director
District Council 37, AFSCME, AFL-CIO
As
District Council 37s executive director, Lillian Roberts says
her leadership will be rooted in the lessons she learned growing up
on welfare in a Chicago tenement and fighting for better working conditions
as a nurses aide.
A former associate director of DC 37, Ms. Roberts is returning to
a union where she played a major role in organizing new members and
establishing an array of benefits that became the envy of the nations
labor movement. Ms. Roberts aims to reinvigorate DC 37 with the idealism
and militancy that characterized the union in the 1960s and 1970s.
She said she was deeply disheartened by the recent corruption that
tarnished DC 37s previous image as the most progressive and
powerful municipal union in the country.
I want to see that old time religion return to DC 37,
Ms. Roberts said. If it was there when I left, it can come back.
Ms. Roberts is a person driven by compassion for the downtrodden and
known for the toughness that once earned her a headline as labors
Lady of Steel.
Ms. Roberts upbringing as one of five siblings in a family on
welfare instilled in her a deep concern for the needy and a passion
for fighting social injustices. Growing up on the South Side of Chicago,
she remembers going hungry before her familys government-provided
box of food staples arrived at the end of the month.
It was never a good feeling being on public assistance,
Ms. Roberts said. It was a feeling of helplessness.
She also remembers the quiet strength of the elderly women neighbors
who used to gather nickels and dimes to help her buy food while she
attended the University of Illinois on a tuition scholarship. Unfortunately,
Ms. Roberts had to drop out of college to assist her family when her
brother Robert was drafted into the Army during World War II. The
memory of her student hardships was vivid as she pressed to set up
the education program and the affordable four-year College of New
Rochelle campus at DC 37.
Ms. Roberts first full-time job was as a nurses aide in
a Chicago hospital, where she became active in the union, a local
of DC 37s parent, the American Federation of State, County and
Municipal Employees. Her strong advocacy for her co-workers as a shop
steward and officer in the late 1950s led Victor Gotbaum, then head
of District Council 19, to hire Ms. Roberts as a staff rep. She spearheaded
the creation of five locals and led an organizing drive in four Chicago
mental hospitals.
When Mr. Gotbaum became DC 37 executive director in 1965, Ms. Roberts
came to New York and built up the unions Hospitals Division.
She became associate director of DC 37 in 1968, second in command
of the countrys largest municipal union. Essence Magazine called
her probably the most influential black in American labor today.
What drew me to New York was the wonderful possibility of doing
something to create a better society, said Ms. Roberts.
At DC 37, Ms. Roberts distinguished her career by her skill as an
organizer, ability to connect with rank-and-file members and in-your-face
labor militancy. During her 17-year tenure, the unions ranks
skyrocketed from 30,000 to 120,000. Ms. Roberts led DC 37s campaign
to organize thousands of city hospital workers in 1966. In 1968, she
was jailed under the states Taylor Law which prohibits
public employee strikes for leading a walkout of state hospital
employees.
During the Koch administration in the late 1970s and early 1980s,
she brought into the union thousands of workers in federally funded
jobs. Today, Ms. Roberts said, that experience offers a blueprint
for creating unionized jobs for welfare recipients.
Ms. Roberts played a central role in building up DC 37s services.
She is particularly proud of creating career ladders in formerly dead-end
jobs and of building the Education Fund, the largest union-based adult
education program in the United States. She also helped establish
the Municipal Employees Legal Services program, the Personal Services
Unit and the Help Our Own program.
Ms. Roberts left DC 37 in 1981 to become state labor commissioner,
a post she held until 1987. She was senior vice president of Total
Health Systems, an HMO, from 1987 to 1992. Recently, she served as
a consultant to the administrator of DC 37.
It was very painful for me to see so much of what I helped build
be undermined, Ms. Roberts said. So, for Ms. Roberts, her return
to DC 37 is a new rebuilding process that represents a personal calling.
What the members want is loyalty, trust and honesty from their
leaders, Ms. Roberts said. I dont want them to ever
see the union fall down again. My goal and aspiration is to make us
a family again, a powerful family.
"Committed to all 56 locals"

Veronica Montgomery-Costa
President
District Council 37, AFSCME, AFL-CIO
The focus of our leadership team will be our commitment to all
of the 56 locals in District Council 37. Were going to make
sure they have a voice, said Veronica Montgomery-Costa, DC 37s
new president. She was elected Feb. 26, 2002, without opposition.
Ms. Montgomery-Costa is deeply concerned about the state of the economy
and the effect of the proposed budget cuts on municipal employees.
We represent low-wage workers. We have to make sure that our
members do not suffer as the city looks to trim fat from the budget,
she said.
Since July 15, 1999, Ms. Montgomery-Costa has headed Local 372, a
union with more than 26,000 members. The local includes many part-time
employees, who enjoy the best benefits of any part-time workers in
the country. It covers School Aides, School Lunch Workers, Substance
Abuse Prevention and Intervention Specialists (SAPIS), Family Paraprofessionals,
Community Coordinators, school-based Health Service Aides, and Loaders
and Handlers in the Board of Education and School Crossing Guards
in the Police Dept.
A Harlem native and 27-year-veteran of Local 372, Ms. Montgomery-Costa
first demonstrated her organizing ability in1974 when she helped organize
her SAPIS coworkers into Local 372. She was also instrumental in organizing
Crossing Guards and Community Coordinators. When DC 37ís national
union, AFSCME, needed her skills, she went to Gary, Indiana and organized
public hospital workers.
She served as a Grievance Rep, SAPIS Chapter Chair and Local 372 Executive
Board member from 1977 until 1982, when she became a DC 37 Rep, working
with all job titles in the local.
Ms. Montgomery-Costa served her co-workers at DC 37 as Vice President
of the Federation of Field Representatives from 1982 to 1986, when
she became assistant director of the Schools Division. As assistant
director she was responsible for negotiating with management at all
levels, including school administrators, district and central Board
of Education labor relations officials, and chancellors.
Recently Local 372 has organized an Earned Income Tax Credit
Campaign. Ms. Montgomery-Costa arranged for the Internal Revenue
Service to train volunteers to help eligible members receive their
tax credit.
Its been very successful, she said. We have
several members who have gotten as much as $5,000 back, and one woman
showed up at a meeting waving a check for $6,800.
As president of DC 37, she wants to expand union services for members
in every local.
"Integrity, democracy and strength"

Mark Rosenthal
Treasurer
District Council 37, AFSCME, AFL-CIO
Big, bold, brash and bent on change, is the reputation
Mark Rosenthal has earned because of his efforts to root out corruption
in his local and District Council 37.
In 1998, Mr. Rosenthal became president of Local 983 and quickly began
exposing the fiscal fraud and election rigging that marred the unions
reputation. He was a founder of the Committee for Real Change in DC
37, and he plans to continue rebuilding the unions strength
and integrity.
As DC 37s Delegates elected him treasurer on Feb. 26, 2002,
Mr. Rosenthal said his watchword would be, The members come
first.
In Local 983, he turned a $140,000 deficit into a surplus and began
fighting aggressively for members needs. The local represents
eight job titles in 50 agencies and is proud of its many members who
showed their dedication to public service by volunteering around the
clock at Ground Zero.
Municipal employees make a 25-year commitment to the government,
Rosenthal said, and the new DC 37 leadership will see that the
government upholds its commitment to its employees. We will fight
to protect the benefits, pensions and dignity of DC 37 members and
their families.
Mr. Rosenthal has spearheaded victories for his members, restored
the career ladder for Parks Dept. employees, battled to contain the
cost of prescription drug benefits and pressed for social justice
for working families.
When allegations of entrenched racial bias in promotions scandalized
the Parks Dept., Mr. Rosenthal helped rally DC 37 members to file
complaints with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission.
In 1999, Rosenthal and DC 37 fought and won a lawsuit on per diem
employees. Since then five civil service tests have been offered,
union classes have prepared members for exams, and more than 700 Local
983 members have become permanent civil servants.
In 1999, he filed a lawsuit to prevent WEP workers from replacing
civil servants in Parks Dept., and this year the local is fighting
to provide real city jobs for former welfare recipients in the job
opportunity program. Our target is always public sector jobs
with living wages and union benefits, said Rosenthal.
This is what the union stands for: fair employment practices,
permanent jobs, respect, integrity and democracy, said Mr. Rosenthal.
He vows to fight for a better future for members and their families
and a stronger labor movement in New York City.
"DC 37 is the ultimate safety net"

Edward W. Hysyk
Secretary
District Council 37, AFSCME, AFL-CIO
Edward W. Hysyk (pronounced hiss-ik) was elected Secretary of District
Council 37 at the delegates assembly on February 26, 2002.
This is a great honor, said Mr. Hysyk. Along with
the other elected officials I will do everything in my power to restore
the honor of this union and make it once again worthy of the trust
of the members. DC 37 is the ultimate safety net for the workers of
New York City. This is a union that fights for its members. That is
our tradition, and I am proud to be a part of it.
Mr. Hysyk was elected President of Local 2627, NYC Electronic Data
Processing Employees, which represents 3,200 municipal workers, in
1999. In 2000 he was appointed to the DC 37 Executive Board and elected
co-chair of the DC 37 Civil Service Committee. He worked his way up
through the ranks serving as a shop steward before becoming president.
As President of Local 2627 Mr. Hysyk helped provide promotional opportunities
for members and participated in major negotiations for the local.
Prior to becoming President, he was Assistant to the President of
Local 2627 where he worked with shop stewards, local leadership and
staff on civil service and personnel practices, citywide and unit
contracts. He was chairperson of the locals Education Committee.
He began his career with the city more than 30-years ago as a social
worker later becoming a training supervisor with the Human Resources
Administration (HRA). He then became a project manager with the HRA
Bureau of Computer Equipment Services in which he helped plan and
coordinate the installation of computer hardware for the Welfare Management
System.
Since 1967 Mr. Hysyk has been a proud member of the Army reserves
serving on active duty in Europe and the United States.
He received his Bachelor of Arts degree in economics/history from
the University of Colorado and holds a Masters degree in American
History from New York University and a Masters degree in guidance
and vocational counseling from Hunter College.
Born in Astoria, New York, Mr. Hysyks father was a Polish immigrant
who became a member of the window cleaners union. His mother was a
UAW shop steward. Mr. Hysyk resides in New Hyde Park, New York.
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