Tuesday, April 22, 2014

ARTICLE ON 4/18/14 PICKET SUPPORTING JOHANY PILAR, BY JONATHAN ADAMS OF OPEN MEDIA BOSTON

Harvard Staff Claims Retaliation by Management for Prior Sexual Assault Complaint

Text & Image
by Jonathan Adams (Staff)
Cambridge, Mass. - An employee at the Harvard University Mail Services (HUMS) is claiming that management in her department is retaliating against her after she previously spoke out against alleged sexual harassment in her workplace.
Johany Pilar alleges that management is now “punishing” her due to the complaints she made against a colleague in 2012, and because she also claimed she was disciplined by management for making that initial complaint.
Around 30 demonstrators – and members of a number of groups including the Harvard Union of Clerical and Technical Workers (HUCTW), the Student Labor Action Movement, the Industrial Workers of the World, UNITE HERE, and Black Rose – took part in a rally at the Smith Campus Center on Massachusetts Avenue on Friday in support of Pilar, and calling on the Harvard University administration to listen to her claims.
In an interview with Open Media Boston Pilar says she’s being treated unfairly now, “because I wouldn’t shut my mouth [about] the sexual harassment,” and added later that she wants “people to know what happened to me.”
Geoff Carens, a representative of HUCTW who’s helping Pilar with her grievances told Open Media Boston in an interview, “basically she was sexually harassed at work and when she complained about it management disciplined her.”
Carens explains that he helped organize a public campaign to support Pilar in 2012, and says it attracted a lot of publicity that contributed to HUMS management removing a disciplinary action against Pilar from her file, promoting her three salary grades, and restoring sick time to her.
He claims “this September or so [management] started harassing her again,” including one incident where “they had her in this enclosed space,” and “held the door so she couldn’t get out,” despite being aware that she has a panic disorder and post-traumatic stress disorder.”
They also “recently just started harassing her about her time off” for doctor’s visits, says Carens, who claims management has been “demanding ridiculous amounts of documentation” for such visits, including one incident where her supervisor was “refusing” to believe she had an emergency dental appointment until she provided evidence to support her claim.
Carens claims that management has “just been pushing her around, giving her a hard time, and they’ve basically made the environment toxic for her,” which has “really traumatized her,” and because of that, he explains, “we’ve requested a transfer to an at least comparable position” within the university.
He claims that a former union member who “provided evidence to cut across her sexual harassment and retaliation claims” was later promoted and put in charge of Johnay, “so we feel he has a bias against her and she needs to be out of that department.”
Management has “tried to make her as unpopular as they can in the department,” telling “co-workers that she’s a troublemaker,” claims Carens.
He also claims that HUMS is a “racist department,” where Pilar has been referred to as an “embarrassing Latina.”
Given previous public demonstrations highlighting Pilar’s claims, Carens says, “you would think that they would look at this as a stain on the university’s reputation,” and “do something about this, but for whatever reason management backed them up time after time” with legal representation.
During the interview, Pilar says, “I try to deal with my health … for me to be OK, to be at work, to [get on] with my life, but they don’t let me, there’s always something,” and she claims that that management are often after her for one thing or another, which has made her “uncomfortable.”
“I hope Harvard people do something about it,” says Pilar, “because before it was me, and who’s [going] to be the next one,” adding that, “I hope it’s nobody,” and she says that she wants others to be “safe.”
She says that the university administration “can change the management,” and that “there are so many good people looking for a job.”
Open Media Boston contacted Harvard University for a press statement, but did not receive a response before the filing of this report.

IMAGES FROM 4/18/14 PICKET SUPPORTING HUCTW MEMBER JOHANY PILAR, ENDURING ONGOING RETALIATION FOR REPORTING SEXUAL HARASSMENT














Wednesday, April 16, 2014

FRIDAY 4/18, 5 PM, DEFEND JOHANY PILAR! PICKET AND PHONE EMAIL ZAP


HUCTW* member & activist Johany Pilar sued Harvard for sexual harassment, gender bias and retaliation when she was repeatedly grabbed by a co-worker and disciplined for reporting it. She was promoted 3 salary grades, and the discipline was rescinded, after a campaign which featured picketing and public pressure. Recently HUMS** managers have renewed their retaliation against Johany, yelling at her that she is a "trouble-maker," physically holding the door to prevent her from leaving a closed room, and harassing her about doctors' appointments. Let's stand up for Johany!
 
Supporters will gather in front of the Smith Campus Center (formerly Holyoke Ctr) at 1350 Mass. Ave. Cambridge (very close to the Harvard Square Red Line MBTA stop and next to Au Bon Pain), starting at 5 pm, this Friday, 4/18. You're invited to join us! The Facebook event is here.

Please phone and email Harvard's Director of Labor and Employee Relations, William Murphy, at (617) 496-9193, bill_murphy@harvard.edu. Suggested message: "It is reprehensible that HUMS management continues to harass HUCTW member Johany Pilar. I demand you use your influence to arrange a transfer for Johany into an at least comparable position. End the culture of victim-blaming and retaliation at Harvard!"
 
*Harvard Union of Clerical and Technical Workers / AFSCME Local 3650

**Harvard University Mail Services