Dozens of people are commenting in public at rallies, in newspapers, and in Town Council meetings about how two men, Kerry Bigelow and Clyde Clark, were fired from the Chapel Hill Public Works department last fall. However, almost none of those people have access to the private details of the personnel decision that was made by the Town. How is it that these folks have a better understanding of the Manager's decisions than the Manager? Why don't the two fired workers make these details public? As Mayor Mark Kleinschmidt pointed out tonight, they and they alone can speak publicly about their ongoing appeal process with the Town.
I am increasingly alarmed at the confidence of statements I hear from people who seem to know almost nothing about the situation. No-one likes to see people lose their jobs, but I haven't heard any evidence that the Town has done anything wrong, and I'm not willing to condemn any staff members nor elected officials - who are legally obligated not to comment on the matter, especially while the appeal is ongoing.
Do you know the truth? If so, please spill the beans. If not...
Issues:
Comments
good post.
good post.
I, too, find this troubling.
I, too, find this troubling. It is hard to hear about two men being fired around the holidays and denied unemployment, especially from the teen daughter of one of the men, without feeling moved to action. As the leader for Justice United's Fair Jobs & Wages team I support fair, unbiased working conditions where workers feel free to air grievances without fear of retribution. Justice United supports the right of workers to be able to unionize and collectively bargain. However, although we have been asked, we have chosen not to take sides in this issue because there is no way we can know the full story because it has not been made public.I was encouraged to hear tonight that the two gentleman have agreed to allow their hearings before a citizen review board (one on Feb. 3rd and the other on Feb. 9th I believe) to be public. Perhaps than we will all have more information.One positive action we can all take is to learn more about NC 95-98 (North Carolina's anti-union statute) and advocate for it's repeal at the state-level.
Public record
I believe the men asked for the transcripts of their hearing before the manager's committee to be made public, and the town refused. As we all know from our own experiences, the facts of any story can get mixed up with retelling. For them to start telling their story outside of the transcripts would leave them open to creating a mixed record.
I'm with Ruby on this....
Sanitation workers work very hard, earning every penny they make IMHO. One might wish to criticize local government on many grounds, but being anti-union is not one of them. Absent evidence to the contrary, I have sympathy for the town manager on this.
The plot thickens
With the publication of additional facts it seems prudent to withhold judgment.
NAACP statement
My friend Al McSurely e-mailed me yesterday to say that Clark And Bigelow had in fact released the facts of their case to the public, but that he hadn't thought to send it to me (as a blogger) as well. (Let that be a lesson to you, activists!)
He sent me the document this morning saying he didn't have time to edit it, but I should feel free to post it. The entire attachment is below.
After a first read of it, it seems to me that there are some legitimate grievances against the Town management, to which I'd like to hear the Town's response. (There is also a lot of interesting, if not exactly relevant, historical and contextual information.) If I understood the Mayor's comments correctly on Monday night, the Town isn't at liberty to publicly discuss this while the appeal is on-going (in fact I wonder if it's considered a private personell matter anyway). So I still think we will have to wait until the whole story comes out.
Al and the local NAACP strongly urge people to attend the two hearings for Clark and Bigelow at the Public Library. I'll post the times when I get them.