SCANDLON
FOR
GENERAL PRESIDENT
Long Shot Takes Aim At Laborers Presidency
'Why is a 70-year-old man running? A young man with a mortgage, car payments and children cannot afford to put his livelihood in jeopardy.'Barney Scanlon
By Kenneth C. Crowe
STAFF WRITER
Barney Scanlon, a 70-year-old laborer from Sayvill,was hauling
50-pound buckets of sealer around a parking garage at the end of August when an election
fluke gave him the opportunity to run for the presidency of the 700,000-member
Laborers International Union of North America.
The odds are against the longtime union dissident winning the
threeway national election for the $203,000-a-year job as Laborers general president. He
has no money and no election organization behind him.
But the union's first rankandfile election of a president will
give him a shot, albeit a long one, at the top post. Delegates usually elect the top
officers.
Scanlon contends that members should have a
chance to vote for a reform candidate unconnected to the sullied history of the Laborers.
The other two contenders, incumbent Arthur A. Coia, 53, and Bruno
Caruso, 52, president of the 18,000-member Chicago Laborers District Council, argue they
are just as dedicated to having the union free of corruption and mob control as Scanlon.
To run in the election, which will take place in November or
December, Scanlon, Caruso and Coia must win at least 5 percent of the
votes cast by the 2,400 delegates at next week's Laborers Convention in Las Vegas.
The rank-and-file election is part of a Justice
Department effort to end the purported domination of the Laborers by the Chicago mob.
Scanlon, who was an Army Air Corps gunner in World War II and was
a semipro football linebacker in the late '40s and '50s, describes his chances of winning
the presidency of the huge international union as "one of those next-to-impossible
things."
Then why is he running "Because no one else will do it,"
he said. "Why is a 70-year-old man running? Where are the young men? The answer is
the intimidation factor. If they run, they can be penalized [by being
kept out of work]. A young man with a mortgage, car payments and children cannot afford to
put his livelihood in jeopardy."
Scanlon can draw on his own history to illustrate the risk of
speaking out. He joined Local 66 in 1953, working for two decades during the unprecedented
building boom on Long Island. During those years, he often rose to confront the union
leadership at meetings.
By 1973, when jobs became scarcer, Scanlon, who had four children
at home, claims he was being kept out of work in retaliation. "They
starved me out," he said.
Scanlon, who had studied law but failed to get a degree, found a
new, well-paying career preparing cases for lawyers.
But at the urging of several rank-and-filers,
Scanlon became a laborer again in 1989 and rejoined Local 66 to help with a budding reform
movement.
In August, Scanlon won an election to become one of Local 66's
eight delegates to the Laborers Convention, a prerequisite for running
for international president. He admittedly won that race only because the Laborers
elections officer declared three of Local 66's officers ineligible to run.
Scanlon says that 95 delegates so far have pledged their support.
He needs another 20 to 25 before he can be nominated.
Herman Benson of the Brooklyn-based Association for Union
Democracy, a civil-rights advocacy group, says that Scanlon's candidacy "is a great
idea. It gives the rank and file a chance to express a little independence. The more votes
he gets, the more officialdom will be inclined to be sensitive to what
the members want. "
Benson said, "Scanlon is to be admired. It takes a hell of a
lot of guts to announce your candidacy in the Laborers. This is a rough union. It might
sound corny, but he is an unusual guy. He is out there fighting for a
principal, for decency, not to get himself somewhere."