Several hundred state employees, protesting the Schwarzenegger administration’s order forcing them to work on Columbus Day, took unauthorized absences Monday at scattered locations across California as part of a union campaign.
There were conflicting accounts of the impact of the
job action, which had been organized by the 95,0000-member Local 1000 of the Service Employees International Union, which
represents about half of the state’s unionized workforce. Both sides declared victory.
SEIU said access to nearly four dozen Department of
Motor Vehicle offices was temporarily interrupted and
nine offices remained closed for at least half a day.
The administration said four offices – in Gilroy, Watsonville, Lincoln Park and Barstow were
closed all day, and services were interrupted at a
handful of others.
By one estimate from the administration, about 560 employees of the DMV’s 4,300-member field-office workforce took unauthorized absences, or about
13 percent of the workers. Another 125 DMV workers also were absent in other offices, including
the department’s Sacramento headquarters. The DMV has about 9,000 employees.
SEIU said 75 percent of employees at some DMV offices in San Diego
and Sacramento were out, and that half the employees
at nine other offices also were absent. A tally provided
by SEIU showed that 45 offices were temporarily closed and that by noon,
nine of them remained closed. Those offices were Barstow,
Glendale, Oxnard, Watsonville, Gilroy, Chula Vista,
Hemet, Oakland and San Jose.
The Schwarzengger administration said the action had
little impact on state operations. Employees participating
in the action faced docked pay or suspension.
“It was business as usual and normal operations yesterday,” said Lynelle Jolley of the Department of Personnel
Administration, which represents the administration
in collective bargaining negotiations with the state’s public employee unions.
“The only places where there were any issues at all
were in isolated pockets at DMV, and they were able
to shuffle employees around there.”
The state, struggling to balance its books, eliminated
Columbus Day and Lincoln’s Birthday to save an estimated $26 million. SEIU protested the move, saying the time
off was legally required by its labor contract with
the state.
SEIU said a number of its workers filed grievances
about the forced day off. The Professional Engineers
in California Government, which represents several
thousand engineers, surveyors, draftsmen and other
workers, also filed a grievance.
The PECG contract “continues to list the second Monday in October as a
holiday.
The grievance for PECG-represented supervisors, based on a recent Court ruling,
is that if pay is reduced when employees are told to
stay home on a normal work day, such as through furloughs,
then pay must be increased when employees are ordered
to work on a normal day off, such as a holiday,” PECG said. It’s grievance applied to both Columbus Day and Lincoln’s Birthday.

