Pasquale "Pat" Barbato Was a Friend to Hamden Firefighters
May 12 - The New Haven Register reported this morning the passing of Pasquale "Pat" Barbato. When he was a state senator in the late 1960s, Mr. Barbato played a major role in successful efforts by Hamden firefighters to get the Town to agree to a 42-hour work week.
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© 2010 - The New Haven Register |
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Working Hard for a 42-Hour Workweek
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In February 1967, the Hamden Paid Firemen's Sick Benefit Association formally requested a 42-hour work week from the Town.
When ongoing attempts by the Association to discuss the proposal with Town officials proved disappointing, State Senator Pat Barbato, on behalf of the firefighters, submitted a special act before the Cities and Borroughs Committee of the General Assembly that would allow the matter to be decided by Hamden voters in a November 1967 referendum.
On April 25, 1967, Senator Barbato's bill was approved by the Committee. Town officials knew that if the bill passed, the resulting mandated referendum in November would also pass and the new 42-hour work week would have to go into effect immediately. So, before the bill could be voted on by the General Assembly, the Town agreed to the 42-hour work week for Hamden firefighters. In return, the Sick Benefit Association agreed to a three-year phase-in that the firefighters had proposed to the Town originally.
From The New Haven Register (Thursday, June 15, 1967): "Frederick Knudsen, president of the firemen's association, said his group agreed to the three-year period, which had been their original plan. However, the mayor's [John DeNicola, Sr.] reluctance to agree to the plan forced the firemen to take the bill before the State Legislature." But despite the settlement between the Town and the firefighters, the referendum bill went forward in the General Assembly - and it passed. Now, by law, the referendum on a 42-hour workweek would have to be voted on by Hamden voters in November 1967, and a positive outcome would mean immediate implementation of the new schedule.
With the Town and the Sick Benefit Association both agreeing on a 42-hour work week with a three-year phase-in, the question now was "How do you turn off a referendum?" According to a New Haven Register article dated July 20, 1967, the Association's attorney Herman Bershtein opined that the solution was in the U.S. Constitution. He stated that Article One, Section10 of the Constitution reads that no law shall be passed that impairs the obligations of a contract. "Bershtein maintains that a contract exists inasmuch as the town and the firemen have signed an agreement on a 42-hour work week." Regardless, the referendum went forward.
On November 7, 1967, the voters of Hamden elected their second Mayor, William Adams. By a three-to-one margin they also approved the referendum to give Hamden firefighters a 42-hour work week.
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The Agreement is Signed! |
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Mayor Adams took office on January 1, 1968. Within two weeks, the Adams administration and the members Hamden Paid Firemen's Sick Benefit Association finalized the agreement to implement the 42-hour work week with a phase-in period. During the phase-in period, the Town built two new fire stations, hired the necessary additional personnel and purchased two pumpers and one ladder truck.
In 1967, there were four officers and 20 firefighters on each of the three platoons. By July 1970, the Town had hired 40 more firefighters, bringing the total to four officers and 24 firefighters on each of four platoons. The increased manpower and shortened work week can be attributed to the efforts of the members of the Hamden Paid Firemen's Sick Benefit Association, led by Fred Knudsen, Carmen Amarante, Luke Tobin and John Tramontano.
The 42-hour work week went into effect on Tuesday, October 6, 1970 at 8 a.m.
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Transition - CLICK to enlarge |
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