Let me say this about that —By Gene Klare Students try handling 40-ton crane Operating Engineers Local 701 offers test drive at Roosevelt High Greer in Hall of Fame GERRY GREER, 64, a retired Grand Lodge representative for the Interna- tional| Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers (I AM), is the newest member of the Labor Hall of Fame, which is sponsored by the Northwest Oregon Labor Retirees Council. The NOLRC is affiliated with the Northwest Oregon La- bor Council, AFL-CIO. Greer, who lives in Washougal, Washington, with his wife, Annie, also a retired union member, retired from the IAM international staff in 2005. At the time of his retirement, he was based at the IAM’s Western Regional Headquarters in Sacramento, California. GERRY GREER was born on Jan. 13, 1943 in New York City. After his mother divorced and re- married, he moved to Richmond, an industrial city in California’s East Bay across from San Francisco. Gerry did not get along with his stepfather, and ran away from home at age 13, for a time staying with an older brother in Clovis, New Mexico. Then he went to Salina, Kansas to live at the St. Francis School for Boys. After a college football scholarship failed to ma- GERRY GREER terialize, Gerry enlisted in the U.S. Air Force. He spent most of his time in the Air Force as a jet air- craft mechanic stationed at a base across from the Boeing plant in Wichita, Kansas, where the IAM represented the workers. After receiving his honorable discharge with the three stripes of an airman third class, he returned to California and patched up his relationship with his mother and stepfather. By this time he had become a musician who could play the piano and guitar, and he used those talents to form a rock and roll band. Greer and his colleagues joined the American Fed- eration of Musicians and the American Federation of Television and Radio Artists. From 1964 to 1970, the band traveled along a circuit, playing in Alaska, Montana, Idaho, Seattle, Portland and other places. ANNIE GREER On the band’s itinerary was a Portland lounge on SE Powell Blvd. near 32nd Ave., just around the corner from the Machinists Build- ing, where he would later work. After the music business began changing, the band disbanded and Greer took a job as a bartender in Denver. ONE NIGHT IN DENVER, a customer left $300 on the bar when he de- parted. When the man next came in, Greer asked him if he had meant to leave a $300 tip. Surprised, the customer said he wondered where he’d lost the money. Greer handed him the $300, but the customer insisted that Greer keep half of it. Then he offered Greer a job with the restaurant chain Mr. Steak. The man was vice president of the corporation. Greer was hired as an opening specialist, and worked his way up to area vice president responsible for restaurants in Wisconsin, Iowa and Illinois. After three busy years on that job, his then-wife, Mary Jo, urged that the Greer family move to her hometown of Salem, Oregon, and they did. Greer found a job as a welder at a Caterpillar lift-truck plant in nearby Dallas. There he joined Ma- chinists Local 1506 and became active in the union. Lee G. Hunsaker of Albany- based IAM District 163 was the business agent who represented Dallas Local 1506. On April 4, students at Roosevelt High School in North Portland found a 40-ton crane on their football field, courtesy of Campbell Crane. Build- ing trades unions are trying to recruit young people and wanted to draw at- tention to a new after-school trades program. One hundred students gathered on the bleachers, and Operating Engi- neers Assistant Business Manager Nelda Wilson pitched building trades apprenticeships — “earn while you learn” — as a worthy career track. Then it was time for volunteers to try operating the crane. The goal was to lower a ball into one of several blue cans, but it wasn’t as easy as it looked. It took the principal an eter- nity to get the job done. When Debo- rah Peterson, the first student, tried to make the basket, the ball swung so wildly on its cable it looked like it might hit a precariously parked SUV. A star athlete and two other students did little better; the prize for fastest basket — a $100 gift certificate — went to the school’s Rose Festival Princess Sascha-Eden Samantha Pre- ston. Maybe after four years of ap- prenticeship, they’ll do better — and be ready to earn the $29-an-hour wage that comes with that skill. The after-school trades program began this week intended to interest students in union apprenticeship pro- grams and help them get ready to par- ticipate as soon as they graduate. Fif- teen students signed up for the class, which is being taught by a trainer from the United Brotherhood of Car- penters apprenticeship program. Stu- dents will build a work table and other basic furniture at Roosevelt, and will take tours of union apprentice- ship programs. (International Standard Serial Number 0894-444X) Established in 1900 at Portland, Oregon as a voice of the labor movement. 4275 NE Halsey St., P.O. Box 13150, Portland, Ore. 97213 Telephone: (503) 288-3311 Fax Number: (503) 288-3320 Editor: Michael Gutwig Staff: Don McIntosh, Cheri Rice Published on a semi-monthly basis on the first and third Fridays of each month by the Oregon Labor Press Publishing Co. Inc., a non- profit corporation owned by 20 unions and councils including the Oregon AFL-CIO. Serving more than 120 union organizations in Ore- gon and SW Washington. Subscriptions $13.75 per year for union members. Group rates available to trade union organizations. PERIODICALS POSTAGE PAID AT PORTLAND, OREGON. CHANGE OF ADDRESS NOTICE: Three weeks are required for a change of address. When ordering a change, please give your old and new addresses and the name and number of your local union. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to NORTHWEST LABOR PRESS, P.O. BOX 13150-0150, PORTLAND, OR 97213 WITHIN A SHORT TIME, Greer became president of the Salem-based Mar- ion, Polk and Yamhill Counties Central Labor Council. He helped revitalize the In front of about a hundred of her fellow students, Roosevelt High School student Deborah Peterson gets a crash course in crane operation from Jerry Deruyter, a member of Operating Engineers Local 701. b h m k Bennett Hartman Morris & Kaplan, llp Attorneys at Law Oregon’s Full Service Union Law Firm Representing Workers Since 1960 Serious Injury and Death Cases • Construction Injuries • Automobile Accidents • Medical, Dental, and Legal Malpractice • Bicycle and Motorcycle Accidents • Pedestrian Accidents • Premises Liability (injuries on premises) • Workers’ Compensation Injuries • Social Security Claims We Work Hard for Hard-Working People! 111 SW Fifth Avenue, Suite 1650 Portland, Oregon 97204 (503) 227-4600 www.bennetthartman.com Our Legal Staff are Proud Members of UFCW Local 555 (Turn to Page 15) PAGE 2 NORTHWEST LABOR PRESS APRIL 20. 2007