FOR BREAKING NEWS VISIT WWW.QNS.COM  NOVEMBER 26, 2020 • THE QUEENS COURIER 17 
 LaGuardia Airport workers demand Governor  
 Cuomo sign Healthy Terminals Act into law 
 BY TODD MAISEL 
 editorial@qns.com 
 @QNS 
 Scores of airport workers and elected  
 leaders rallied last week for better healthcare  
 benefi ts at LaGuardia Airport ahead  
 of the busy Th  anksgiving travel season.  
 Leaders of the Local 32BJ of the Service  
 Employees International Union (SEIU)  
 asked Governor Andrew Cuomo to sign  
 the “Healthy Terminals Act” (HTA) into  
 law.  Some  union  members  held  held  
 empty Th  anksgiving platters and signs  
 saying “Th  ank Me with Healthcare” and  
 “Give Th  anks, Give Healthcare.” Members  
 say health benefi ts will cost them much of  
 what they earn each month without state  
 intervention. 
 Th  e New York legislature passed the  
 Health Terminals Act in July of this year  
 and  it  would  provide  25,000  workers  
 with access to aff ordable, quality health  
 insurance, leaders say. Leaders say the  
 Th  anksgiving holiday could fi ll New York’s  
 airports in the coming days as COVID-19  
 cases are on the rise in New York and in  
 many parts of the country. 
 While  travelers  make  their  way  to  
 friends and families, essential airport service  
 workers struggle to protect themselves, 
  leaders claimed. 
 If  signed  into  law,  
 the  bill  would  provide  
 health insurance  
 to  cabin  and  terminal  
 cleaners, baggage  
 handlers, security offi  - 
 cers, customer assistance  
 employees,  skycaps  and  
 other subcontracted airport  
 workers. 
 “Th  is is an issue of racial  
 justice,”  said  32BJ  SEIU  
 President Kyle Bragg to a  
 socially distanced crowd.  
 “Right now, thousands of  
 Black and Brown frontline  
 airport workers do  
 not have health care in  
 the midst of a global pandemic. 
  Th  e  bill,  which  airport  
 workers pushed to pass  
 in both chambers in the summer, would  
 keep workers and the public safe by putting  
 aff ordable health care within reach  
 for frontline airport workers. COVID-19  
 cases are going up and many New Yorkers  
 are about to take fl ight at this airport to  
 unite with loved ones for Th anksgiving.  
 Workers do this job without very much  
 protection. Th ey  do  
 it  without  healthcare.” 
 Essential  workers, 
  including 32BJ airport  
 workers, have gotten  
 sick and died from  
 COVID-19  while  
 others  struggle  
 with managing  
 t hous ands  
 of  dollars  
 in  medical  
 bills,  
 B r a g g  
 said. 
 Numerous elected offi  cials  joined  the  
 chorus calling for passage of the legislation. 
 Manhattan State Senator Brad Hoylman,  
 a sponsor of the bill, said it was incumbent  
 upon them to provide health insurance for  
 people who can’t ill aff ord to pay for it. 
 “Th  ank you all 25,000 of you for being  
 out on the front lines during the pandemic,” 
  Hoylman said. “Th  ank you for risking  
 your lives, your families lives and your  
 health during COVID-19. And you know  
 how we repay you for that, we passed the  
 Healthy Terminals Act.” 
 Comptroller  Scott  Stringer  said  that  
 while the city recovers, “we will not leave  
 our airport workers behind.” 
 “Th  e Healthy Terminals Act gives you  
 the opportunity to take care of your family  
 to make sure that there is safety in the  
 household,” Stringer said. “You risk your  
 lives keeping the city going, keeping the  
 airports going. You have always played  
 that role. But time and time again you  
 have faced discrimination. You have been  
 cast aside by the executives who reap hundreds  
 of millions of dollars because of the  
 work you’re doing. Well, we’ve got to level  
 this playing fi eld.” 
 “Th  anksgiving  is  a  special  holiday,”  
 said Gale Brewer, Manhattan borough  
 Photos by Todd Maisel 
 president, who was joined on stage by  
 Queens Borough President-elect Donovan  
 Richards. “But it’s only a special holiday  
 when 32BJ gets the Healthy Terminals Act.  
 We know that the union fi ghts and that’s  
 what we are going to do with you because  
 you are essential workers and you need to  
 be provided with quality healthcare. I want  
 to thank airport workers, just like so many  
 other workers — you have been on the  
 front lines our nation’s airports forever.” 
 Teresa Peralta, a terminal cleaner at JFK,  
 said her job is not safe. 
 “I have been on the front lines every  
 day that I wasn’t sick with COVID,” said  
 Peralta. “It’s my job to protect passengers  
 and everyone who works here by keeping  
 the terminal clean during the pandemic. 
  When you have thousands of workers  
 who can’t aff ord to go to the doctor working  
 together, it’s not a safe place.” 
 Th  e landmark Healthy Terminals Act  
 comes as the airline industry received a  
 $50 billion taxpayer bailout through the  
 CARES Act, with billions more expected. 
  Th  e HTA will require employers at  
 New York airports to compensate workers,  
 including sub-contracted passenger services  
 workers, with a benefi ts supplement  
 of at least $4.54 an hour that they can use  
 to acquire the quality health insurance. 
 
				
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