Our Training Partnership with District Council 9

 
Photo by Silvestre Morais  of DC9

Photo by Silvestre Morais  of DC9

Cold weather has just ended this job training program for 2016, so we are reporting in!

This year our partnership with Local 806, the bridge painters of District Council 9 (DC9) really ramped up. They are using the MARY A. WHALEN as a training site. The project is also supported by a generous paint donation from International Marine Paint!

We are glad to participate in training apprentices and get help restoring the MARY in the process.   The value of their labor this year is estimated at $64,571.

A mix of first, second and third year apprentices have been working on the ship. These jobs pay $19.80 to $39.60 an hour plus considerable benefits.  Well over 90% of the apprentices are minorities.  

They are glad to have a training site in Brooklyn and have said that the work has helped some trainees get back to work after some rough patches.  Some have come on their own time to volunteer, inspired by the ship and the project.  Osiris Mosley has been particularly dedicated. He has convinced many apprentices to come to this site. His work on the boat has been great. He is currently painting the Brooklyn Bridge. He’s on that job before dawn and worked here til after 6pm on Tuesday training sessions.  He posts photos to his Facebook page after every time he is here, and he posted this moving tribute on his Facebook page:

“I'm glad to be a part of the effort to restore the Mary A Whalen in Red Hook Brooklyn, as this is the borough I was born in. This undertaking of restoration to me is a great thing to do because it's for a not for profit organization designed to better the community and to educate those about maritime.”

Osiris mosley taking a break and photographing geese and large schools of fish under them

Osiris mosley taking a break and photographing geese and large schools of fish under them

In April, DC9 had a statewide day of community action where they donated services to non-profits.   We were one of their sites. NY1 covered the event, and our Councilman Carlos Menchaca came by to thank them for their work and support of PortSide.  During that day, we learned about the maritime connection to many bridge painters (besides the fact that most bridges are over water). Many local bridge painters are Cape Verdeans who learned about painting and climbing high structures on ships. They emigrated here and as shipyard declined moved into bridge painting.

The apprentices were great as temperatures dropped and really poured it on, racing winter weather. They came the night before Thanksgiving, working well into the dark. We learned that bridge painters do a lot of their painting at night, since that is when bridges can be closed to traffic.


the mary whalen has been transformed thanks to work by dc9 local 806 and by our volunteers!

the mary whalen has been transformed thanks to work by dc9 local 806 and by our volunteers!