PAGE 28 | August 24, 2018 | NORTHWEST LABOR PRESS UNION DEMOCRACY Sheet Metal Local 16 members elect first-ever female business agent In balloting that took place in June and July, members of Sheet Metal Workers Local 16 elected their first female business agent in the local’s 130-year history, and returned several incumbents to union office unopposed, in- cluding business manager Char- lie Johnson. Vanessa Steward challenged incumbent business agent Robert Riehl, and the initial re- sult was an outright tie, 143 to 143, in voting held June 25-28. That led to a July 23-26 runoff election for the office, which Steward won 242 to 218. In both elections, members cast ballots in person at nine loca- tions around Oregon and South- west Washington. Steward came to Local 16 as an apprentice in 1996, and be- came journeyman in 2001. In 2013, she was recruited by for- mer business manager John Candioto to join the staff of Lo- cal 16 as a union organizer. Since then she has worked to sign up new contractors and bring non-union members over to the union side. Johnson, meanwhile, was un- opposed for re-election as busi- ness manager. He’ll serve a sec- ond three-year term amid a construction boom that’s keep- ing members fully employed all over the local’s jurisdiction. Local 16 includes sheet metal workers in both construction and production. The production side includes employers like Helser Industries in Tualatin, which makes steel forms for precast concrete, and Thompson Metal Fab in Vancouver, which ceptance of women and minori- fabricates large-scale ties in the local, a com- metal works used in mittee of women and bridges, hydro dams, minority members vessels and in oil and meets before Local 16 gas industry. On the con- general membership struction side, Local 16 meetings begin. Member involve- journeymen earn $40.82 ment has also in- an hour plus benefits. creased in the last few The 2,045-member years, Johnson says. In local is currently train- ing nearly 300 appren- Vanessa Steward response to a call from tices, more than ever before, so the international union, Local 16 many that the Local 16 training formed a committee of mem- bers called the SMART Army to center is at capacity. Johnson says the local has volunteer in the community, been working to increase union build team spirit, and get mem- market share and attract more bers more politically engaged. women and minority workers, [SMART stands for Sheet who haven’t traditionally been Metal, Air, Rail and Transporta- well represented in the local tion Workers; it’s the name the sheet metal workforce. To en- former Sheet Metal Workers In- courage the participation and ac- ternational Association took af- UNION ORGANIZING North coast bus drivers unionize A group of 20 drivers and me- chanics at the Sunset Empire Transit District in Astoria and Warrenton Oregon have union- ized. The workers drive and maintain buses that connect Astoria to Cannon Beach and parts in between. In May, Sunset Empire driver Jessie Martin reached out to Amalgamated Transit Union Local 757. Sunset Em- pire management reportedly told workers that “hell will freeze over before there's a union,” but the decision wasn’t up to management. Members signed union authorization cards, and on Aug. 20 the Ore- gon Employment Relations ter its 2014 merger with the United Transportation Union.] Local 16’s branch of the SMART Army has as many as 50 members. Also elected were: ■ President Dustin Hysmith ■ Vice president Devin Hosking ■ Recording secretary Michael McIntyre ■ WardenTom Belezos ■ Executive Board members Art Himm, Jared Bonney, Steve Stewart II, and Ed Dawes (building trades); and William Willman and Russ Jacobson (production) ■ Trustees Justin Bigelow, Todd Stevens, Doug Haase, and Eric Clayton ■ Business agents Joe Harris and Josh McClaughry (building trades) and Shawn Eckelberry (production) Board certified them as mem- bers of Local 757. When contract bargaining starts, they’ll have nowhere to go but up: Drivers now earn $14 to $16 an hour, and work up to 6 hours without a break. Almost every driver qualifies for food stamps. Several live in tents because they can’t afford the cost of housing, and some walk long distances to work because they can’t afford a car.