Today
recognized as a stable, innovative, responsible , and thriving
local, Local 1533 was born over the free speech rights battle of
Jack owens, a teacher in the Lassen County community college system.
Owens' letters criticizing the local education system were published
in a Lassen County newspaper, and he was fired by his school board.
A tenured teacher, Owens demanded a Superior Court hearing. Instead
of defending its member, the California Teachers Association justified
the local superintendent's and school board's action by insisting
that Ownes had betrayed their (CTA's) highly arbitrary Code of
Ethics.
Against
these powers, Owens fought his case, exhausting his funds, losing
a lower court battle and finally, in 1962, winning his case (against
his own union!) in an overturn ruling by the 3rd District Court
of Appeals. FCC teachers Dave Hendrickson, Noel Frodsham, and Franz
Weinshenck met on October 30, 1962 in Manchester school (City College
was Part of the unified district at the time) with CTA state president
James Williamson. The FCC carried a demand from their faculty club,
whose members urged the Fresno Teachers Association to censure
CTA for its behavior in the case. Three fiery debates, with Owens
facing his accusers in an open forum for the first time since the
1958 firings, ensued. Ultimately the FTA Council declined to censure
the CTA, but the CTA's claim on the loyalties of Fresno area teachers,
especially those at FCC, had been considerably weakened.
Hendrickson, Frodsham, Weinshenck and the others
had made their point, and amidst the storm of the Owens case, Local
1533, affiliated with the AFY and the California Federation of Teachers,
was born with ten charter members. Its official charter was dated
1964.
Though from the onset Local 1533 enjoyed high regard
among faculty interested in the fight for teachers' rights, its membership
growth was slow. But the success of the local was inevitable, given
the quality of early members like Hendrickson, Frodsham, Carl Waddle,
Yolanda Statham, Maurice Van Gerpen, Robert Merz and others who impressed
their faculty colleagues with their understanding of the issues of
most importance to teachers and by the energy with which they pursued
teachers' rights in the days before state law provided teachers'
union with much power or protection. These were founders who were
active in all aspects of professionalism at (then) SCJCD, serving
in the senate, grievance hearings, and salary negotiations committees.
Many
early members of the Local asked that their names be kept a secret,
and it is a tribute to the courage of the earlier organizers of
the local, teachers like Maurice Fitzpatrick and Bill Reynolds,
that they would risk earning the displeasure of the "superiors" by
openly admitting their membership and fighting for their rights.
Perhaps the fears of the "anonymous" members were
not entirely unfounded. As late as 1964, instructors at College of
Sequoias were threatened with firing because they had joined AFT.
The
pages of The Federalist from 1964 through 1977, when membership
was less than half that of the CTA local, resounded with the eloquent
writing of Local 1533 members like Terry Scambry, Gerry Stokle,
Jim Piper, Charles Lynes, Carl Waddle, Mary McFarland and others
on a range of topics from freedom of speech and censorship to class
size and fair pay and benefits. Throughout those years The Federalist
developed into the voice of faculty concerns. From 1964 until now,
one can find articles and letters to The Federalist from more than
two hundred teachers (many of them CTA members) and comments and
notes from many more. When the Board or administration failed to
disseminate vital information to the faculty, AFT Local 1533 did,
often to the discomfort of authorities bent on hiding administrative
practices from the faculty.
It
is interesting to note that the local was always eager to help
teachers in their professional struggles. In 1970-71, for instance,
one find the local supporting Joan Newcomb (long-time AFT member
and 1988 winner of the Hayward Award for teaching excellence and
leadership) in her formal grievance procedure against unfair working
conditions in the district. The records show the bill for legal
costs of this case came to $85.00. Given the local's average case-by-case
expenses in support of dozens of teachers' grievances in the last
twelve years, that does not seem like much, but for the still-young
local it was a large sum.
With all this service to the faculty, it is not
surprising that when the collective bargaining election came in 1977,
the faculty of the district voted overwhelmingly for AFT's Local
1533. At the time of the election there were 214 certificated employees
in the (then) SCJCD, and 140 were CTA members.
On May 12, 1977, when AFT Local 1533 President Don
Wren filed his petition for the local to be designated exclusive
representative for the full-time staff, he turned in the names of
59 if the full-time teachers in the district. Many CTA members wanted
CFT to represent them in the tough negotiation battles ahead.
In the subsequent election, the AFT won over sixty-seven
percent of the vote. The hard work and dedication of the early members
of the local had paid off. Now the hard work of negotiating contracts
with a recalcitrant board and administration began. In the next few
years Local 1533 presidents and negotiators like Jim Ruston and Harold
Sadler would face the task of establishing the union as a powerful
and professional defender of teachers' rights both in and out of
collective bargaining sessions.
The first post-Rodda Act president was Don Wren,
who was instrumental in building the Union in the transitional years
before and after collective bargaining. The first negotiating team
included Jim Ruston, Celia Maldonado, Tom Keefe, and Jim Phillips
(who has served on every subsequent team). The highlight of our first
contract was being one of the first districts in the state to get
binding arbitration if grievances.
In
1978, after Proposition 13 passed, the District sent lay-off notices
to over seventy tenured employees. These faculty members were represented
by Federation attorneys in lengthy lay-off hearings, which resulted
in all of the teachers' jobs being saved. Not so coincidentally,
Federation membership rose by nearly 20%, as grateful faculty saw
the value and need for Union representation.
The
late seventies and early eighties were marked by strong adversarial
relations between the Federation and an anti-collective bargaining
Board of Trustees. Picketing, board member demonstrations, and
fact finding were common occurrences during marathon negotiation
periods. Fiery Federation President Harold Sadler was an unrelenting
activist on behalf of faculty, and John Peterson, Loren Gaither,
Wren, Philips, Maurice Van Gerpen and Tom Tyner, along with Sadler,
became year-round negotiators. Sadler was succeeded as President
by Van Gerpen who, with skill and integrity, led the Federation and
faculty through times of double-digit inflation and continuing anti-union
Board sentiment.
1984 marked a turning point in Union-District relations
as the Federation, led by President Tom Tyner and the Executive Council,
launched an all-out campaign to change the make-up of the Board of
Trustees. Supporting excellent trustee candidates Warren Kessler
and Willie Smith, the Federation raised over $20,000 of campaign
money and ran a highly sophisticated direct mail campaign, which
resulted in victories for Kessler and Smith and the ouster of two
prominent anti-collective bargaining board members. It was the biggest
political victory in the history of the Federation and precipitated
the gradual positive changes in relations among faculty, management,
and the board which are continuing to this day.
The last four years have been good ones for the
Federation. With inflation slowed, faculty are finally enjoying some
negotiated salary gains beyond the cost of living. Local 1533 has
become an acknowledged state leader in negotiating excellent retirement
plans, including District-paid benefits, for retiring employees.
Federation-supported candidates have continued to be elected to the
Board of Trustees, and thirty new faculty members have joined Local
1533 in the last two years. The Federation is also the first local
in the state to co-sponsor educational workshops with its districts,
providing "Writing Across the Curriculum," and "Critical Thinking"
working in the last three years.
Finally,
new leadership in the Federation has emerged in the past few years,
with members Paul Kaser, Richard Valencia, Linda Albright, Allen
Beck, Ed Perkins, Art Amaro, Tanya Liscano, and Jim Studebaker
serving the faculty tirelessly and well. And the "old guard" like
Wren, Phillips, and Van Gerpen continue their involvement, setting
high standards of dedication, perseverance, and selflessness,
and providing a continuity that has helped Local 1533 work effectively
for State Center faculty for thirteen years. They have learned a
special place in our history and our hearts.
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