Pride
at Work
July/August 1998 IBEW Journal
Crescent City Rocks with Sights and Sounds
of 1998 Union Industries Show
From the strains of Dixieland jazz that helped open
the show to the closing day, the 1998 Union Industries Show, held
April 17-20, 1998, at the Ernest L. Morial Convention Center in
New Orleans, Louisiana, proved once again that quality union-made
products and services cannot be beat. As might be said in the New
Orleans French Quarter, "aller sans dire"--it
goes without saying--that this annual exposition, sponsored by the
AFL-CIO Union Label & Service Trades Department, highlights
the finest in union-manufactured products.
As has become the custom at the show, the IBEW was front
and center in the show. From the hovering lights of the IBEW
space craft to the chatting robot, I-bew, visitors were delighted
and impressed with the handiwork of the Brotherhood.
This years exhibits showed the breadth of quality
work performed by IBEW members from railroads to utilities
to construction to broadcasting to manufacturing. Among the companies
employing IBEW members who participated in the show were
Amtrak, General Electric, the Southern Company and Lucent Technologies,
to name a few.
IBEW
International Secretary-Treasurer Ed Hill and Fifth District International
Vice President Mel Horton were among the IBEW officers and
representatives present to mark the occasion. At the IBEW
exhibit booth, Arlie Heald, Executive Assistant to the International
Secretary, held hourly drawings at which various appliances, light
fixtures and television sets were given away. Members of numerous
IBEW locals, primarily from Louisiana and adjoining states,
talked to the throngs of visitors about safe practices around power
lines, about how GEs large, side-by-side refrigerators are
made, about careers in the electrical industry, about working on
the railroad and about the mechanics of a television newscast. IBEW
members also had a hand in presenting a special mock space station
in which young visitors could simulate a trip to space.
An interesting note came when Nick Frisco, President of IBEW
Local 2000, Orlando, Florida, representing members employed at a
high tech chip plant of Lucent Technologies won a set of dishes
in a special drawing for presenters sponsored by the Union Labor
Life Insurance Company. As noted in the June issue of the Journal
(p.5), Brother Frisco suffered severe damage to his home in a tornado
that hit central Florida last February, so the prize cam at an opportune
time.
One of the highlights of the IBEWs exhibit area was
a special laser light show brought to New Orleans by members of
Local 518, Globe, Arizona. The show has been a featured attraction
at union and political rallies, county fairs, high school homecomings,
pep rallies, dances, basketball games and more, throughout much
of Arizona. The show first debuted at the Apache Days Community
Festival when Local 518 was invited to participate by the local
Chamber of Commerce. When space permits, the show employs a 28-foot
by 32 foot suspended truss system, under which there are two 8-foot
video screens, graphics lasers and 4,000 watts of amplifiers and
speakers, plus an assortment of nearly four dozen other lights.
One of the lasers projects the IBEW logo onto the floor
or other suitable surface. Business Manager Ron Chesley remarked
that the project "has opened doors to us that are unimaginable.
It has given young and old alike a very positive look at the labor
movement." Fees received for school appearances have been supplemented
by the local and returned to the schools to help fund activities
that have been reduced because of budgetary constraints.
The spirit of the 1998 Union Industries Show was summed up by Secretary
Dennis Kivikko of the Union Label & Services Trades Department,
who remarked, "This was one of the best shows we have ever
had. The IBEW shows and booths were spectacular. It was
great that nearly 11,000 school children from New Orleans and surrounding
areas, including the Mississippi Delta, were able to see just what
unions are all about."

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