| Fifth
                              District Vice President Melvin W. Horton Retires
 March 2005 IBEW Journal     A
                              long and distinguished career of service comes
                              to a close with the March 1, 2005, retirement of
                              Fifth District Vice President Mel Horton. He will
                              be missed as a lively, inspiring orator and a pioneer
                              in the use of innovative member training. "It
                              has been a very exciting, rewarding career," said
                              Brother Horton, who had held that position since
                              1994. Fifth
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                District
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                Vice
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                President
 Melvin W. Horton
 After
                            serving four years in the U. S. Air Force, Horton
                            was initiated into Local 2188, Shreveport, Louisiana,
                            in 1966. He served his local in numerous positions
                            including steward, industrial engineering committee
                            chairman, executive board member and vice president. In
                            1972, Horton was appointed to the International staff
                            as an organizer in Washington, D.C., where he directed
                            or assisted on numerous organizing campaigns, resulting
                            in more than 15,000 new members being organized into
                            the IBEW. Horton returned to the Fifth District five
                            years later. His responsibilities included contract
                            negotiations, presenting grievances in arbitration
                            and teaching various local union training programs.
                            In 1992, Brother Horton returned to the I.O. as Director
                            of Manufacturing Organizing. He helped implement
                            the Membership Education and Mobilization for Organizing
                            (MEMO) program and developed and taught organizer
                            training courses. Brother
                            Horton was appointed Fifth District Vice President
                            by then-IBEW President John J. Barry and was unanimously
                            elected at the IBEW 35th International
                            Convention in 1996 and again at the 36th in
                            2001, where New Orleans Local 130 Business Manager
                            Robert Hammond said in his nominating speech: "What
                            Mels about is making things happenpositive, progressive,
                            proactive things. Mels about organizing the unorganized
                            and union building. Mels about shared visions and
                            designing strategies to accomplish our missions." Throughout
                            his IBEW career, Horton has emphasized the importance
                            of training and course development for IBEW officers
                            and members. Under Brother Hortons leadership, the
                            Fifth District has pioneered the development of numerous
                            training courses on subjects as varied as public
                            speaking to advanced brief writing for labor arbitration.
                            Another legacy of Hortons is the new local chartered
                            in San Juan, Puerto Rico, the result of years of
                            tenacious effort. Horton
                            attended Louisiana State University and the George
                            Meany Center for Labor Studies and the School for
                            Workers at the University of Wisconsin. He is a long-time
                            member of the A. Philip Randolph Institute, a national
                            organization of black trade unionists working toward
                            racial equality and economic justice. Horton
                            said he will stay in Birmingham Alabama, where he
                            plans to continue working as a training consultant,
                            developing and teaching labor education and training
                            programs. He also plans to become a motivational
                            speaker.   The
                            IBEW members, staff and International Officers thank
                            Brother Horton for his service and wish him and his
                            wife, Leslie, a long and fulfilling retirement. 
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