Marina V. Secchitano
Regional Director, Inlandboatmen’s
Union of the Pacific,
Marine Division, ILWU
Member, WTA Board
What is the IBU?
We’re the largest inland maritime union
on the West Coast. We were founded in San Francisco in 1918 as the
Ferryboatmen’s Union of California, later renamed the Inlandboatmen’s
Union of the Pacific (the IBU). Our Union extends from Alaska to
Washington, including Oregon, California and Hawaii. Altogether, we have
about 4,000 members. But that’s down from the 4,000 we had in San
Francisco alone before the bridges were built.
What do IBU people do?
We’re deckhands on ferries and tugboats,
tankermen (who load and discharge petroleum products on barges),
engineers, cooks, bartenders, and captains. But, ferry riders are
probably most familiar with the deckhands and captains. We’re the
largest union representing people who work on ferry boats but we also
represent workers in the dredging, marine construction and bridge
building industries. We have shore side s folks working on the Columbia
River in warehouses for the paper companies, as well as ferry ticket
agents, terminal assistants and terminal supervisors.
What are the issues you’re concerned
with?
Our key issues are good wages and the
safety of our members. A crucial safety issue is the heavy gangways at
Pier ½ that our members have to lift. Most of our injuries in the ferry
industry occur handling gangways. We worked to make sure that they would
be hydraulically operated at the new ferry terminal.
In the towing industry, manning and
fatigue are our prime concerns. We have suffered severe manning
reductions over the years, making it difficult to get enough rest while
living and working on board tugs.
My responsibilities include political work
at the local, state and national level. One of the issues we worked
hardest on was requiring tug escorts for oil tankers coming into San
Francisco Bay. Our members worked in Alaska cleaning up after the oil
spill. A lot of them sent back photographs of the devastation. After
almost 30 years of trying to get tug escorts, and 5 regional directors
later, we thought the time was right to convince legislators that there
should be safeguards in case a ship lost it’s steering. It took us two
more years, but out of it came a requirement that tankers and barges
have to have tug escorts.
How did you get to be Regional
Director?
I was a ticket agent in Larkspur when I
started out in 1976 (the month the Larkspur Ferry Terminal opened) with
the ferry division. I went to work for the union in 1979 as a staff
member. In 1989, I ran for Regional Director for the first time.
What’s your job like?
I live in Santa Rosa, so I’m on my way
about 5am. Sometimes, I stop by our job sites on the way into work. We’ve
got a new boat at Golden Gate Ferry, for example, so the other day I
stopped by and made sure everything’s going okay. Once I’m in the
office, the phone is ringing constantly.
We run a daily hiring hall to dispatch
relief jobs. Regular employees working on ferries and tugs will from
time to time be off for vacation, out sick, or on a leave of absence. We
maintain a qualified pool of "casuals" that work for all of
our companies. They report to the hiring hall each day to be dispatched
out of our hall to fill these vacancies. We have set up an IBU Basic
Seamanship class and an Advanced Seamanship Class for our casuals.
Another important part of my job is
organizing new members, negotiating contracts and enforcing them. We
just finished negotiating a first contract for 36 new members at Marine
Aggregate Services, a sand mining company. Getting the workers "a
place at the table" with the employer is a great feeling.
Organizing new companies allow us to maintain our hard fought for wages,
benefits, and conditions, and is therefore vital to our industry. There
are several companies operating non-union in the coastwise petroleum
trade, which chips away at our conditions and erodes our contracts.
You are a leader in the fight to
preserve maritime activity on SF’s waterfront. How goes the fight?
It’s difficult and frustrating. Look at
Pier 1, where Golden Gate Ferry used to berth their boats between runs,
at what’s called a layover berth. Well, that area has now been
redesignated, in part to make possible what are known as "view
corridors".
There are people that believe that because
Oakland has such a tremendous container business that San Francisco’s
maritime business has seen it day. But people should rethink their
perception of what a working waterfront is. Just because you don’t see
a big ship there all the time, it’s not O.K. to eliminate maritime
facilities. We need these piers for the tugs that protect us from
spills, and, of course, ferries, not to mention ships carrying bulk
cargo.
Maritime should not become secondary to
community access or real estate development. What’s happening on the
San Francisco waterfront is that real estate development and housing are
crowding out industrial areas essential to maritime activity. When
people move close to the waterfront they don’t want noise, lights or
any activity at all at certain times.
Maritime jobs shouldn’t be seen as
unglamorous. Quite the opposite; they protect our environment, keep
people moving and fuel the economy. How many people know that heavy bulk
items like sand and flour are delivered by water? You can’t build or
bake without sand and flour. If you eliminate more maritime facilities,
the prices on these basic items, and more like them, will go way up. And
so will pollution, because trucks will have to bring them in from
further inland.
What’s it like to be a woman in your
position?
It has its drawbacks and it has its
assets. It’s taken a while to get the respect of the industry. As a
woman in this business, you’re expected to work harder than most.
Describe how you got involved in the
process of making WTA happen.
The IBU believes that a comprehensive
regional ferry service will result in a renaissance of San Francisco’s
waterfront. So from the start I took an active interest in plans for
what eventually turned out to be the WTA. I am personally motivated,
too, because I’m a commuter, myself. I want a better way of getting to
work.
I spent many months attending meetings,
watching the process, making sure it went forward. Part of the IBU’s
concern is that any regional service coordinate with the existing
companies. We have a good working relationship with the existing
services.
It was a tough fight getting the
legislation passed that established the WTA. I, along with Joe Freitas,
was one of the first two appointments to the WTA Board. But along with
everyone else, I was disappointed when the Governor vetoed the first
attempt to fund it.
Everyone — ferry companies, labor, and
environmentalists had come together to support the funding of WTA— but
then, to everyone’s surprise, it turned out that the Governor was
unhappy with the pot of money it was coming out of.
So we enlisted a great friend of labor,
Senator John Burton. He got our $12 Million into an end of session bill
– and from the right pot this time. It was supposed to be routine. But
from past experience, I’ve found you have to be there just in case
they need a final push.
So Bobby Winston and I drove to Sacramento
the last day of the session when our bill was taken up. The bill sailed
through the Transportation Committee. Something told us that there were
still a lot of ways that this could get fouled up. Since it was the
final day of the session, it was crucial it be taken up, and passed -
that night. Bobby and I waited until almost midnight and sure enough
when it went to the Assembly, it failed the first time up. We panicked,
but within moments, we got the help of the Port of San Francisco’s
lobbyists, Barry Broad, an important labor lobbyist and Cathy Snodgrass,
the lobbyist that worked on passage of the original legislation. It
passed just a few minutes before the midnight deadline.
I’m enjoying being on the WTA Board. It’s
great because it’s where the kind of passion I have can be properly
placed. It adds a lot to my already overcrowded schedule, but it’s
time well spent. I feel I’m working to make a revitalization of the
San Francisco waterfront happen, helping the economy, and relieving
congestion. I’m putting my coalition building skills to good use
helping my own people and the entire Bay Area.