Employees protest poor working conditions in state office buildings

State employees protest unsanitary work conditions early Friday morning outside the Texas Health and Human Services Commission Office's Brown-Heatly building, in Austin on August 17, 2018.
State employees protest unsanitary work conditions early Friday morning outside the Texas Health and Human Services Commission Office’s Brown-Heatly building, in Austin on August 17, 2018.
Rachel Zein for The Texas Tribune

Joanne Day is no stranger to problems in her workspace. In her nearly 20 years working at a state health agency, she’s dealt with mold, leaking rainwater and falling drywall — all issues she blames on poor funding of the state’s facilities commission and mismanagement within her agency.

But after reading a recent report by The Texas Tribune that revealed the mold incursion in the Austin State Hospital 636 building, Day still shuddered.

“I was surprised, but not surprised,” said Day. “I was appalled. I was disappointed that someone else is going through this.”

On Friday morning, a group of state employees gathered outside of the main campus of the Health and Human Services Commission holding signs with illustrations of rats and roaches. They were protesting what they believe are poor working conditions and failed maintenance responses in state office buildings. Earlier this month, Department of State Health Services employees were relocated from a state hospital building where a mold infestation had invaded some of their desks, chairs, carpeting and keyboard hand rests. The move was announced one day after the Tribune uncovered the conditions.

Simon Andrade, whose workplace was directly affected by the mold invasion, said he was “frustrated” that the problem wasn’t addressed sooner — and more frustrated that his coworkers had to go to the media to seek help instead of getting help from senior leadership.

“I think [the mold] has been disruptive in our work having to move locations, having to work in conditions that don’t give us everything we need to get our jobs done,” Andrade said. “As state employees, our concerns fell on silent ears.”

This isn’t the first unsanitary issue in state buildings. Last year, the health commission said its Austin building was overrun by several hundred rats— and had to pay $60,000 for exterminators.

But the recent issues with mold has energized workers with the Texas State Employees Union to call on the Health and Human Services Commission and the Texas Facilities Commission to not ignore requests for building maintenance, and to move employees immediately if there’s a building issue. State employees are already calling on lawmakers to properly fund the Texas Facilities Commission next session in order to avoid problems with building conditions.

“If you’re seeing multiple state agencies dealing with issues around facilities, it just begs the question of what’s been the state’s approach to establishing safer work environments for their employees,” Andrade said.

But state employee Sarah Swallow said the recent case can’t be the only the state building that has mold — she’s heard that most state buildings have the same issues. Swallow said she’s looking at the Legislature to “do whatever it needs” to sort out the problems so working conditions can improve for her and thousands of other state employees.

“The Legislature needs to do something, do whatever it takes,” said Swallow, who declined to give the specific agency where she works. “Because for whatever reason, the Texas Facilities Commission is not willing or not able. It’s just ridiculous the amount of things that go unaddressed.”

The Texas Health and Human Services Commission and Texas Facilities Commission didn’t immediately return requests for comment Friday morning.

Disclosure: The Department of State Health Services has been a financial supporter of The Texas Tribune, a nonprofit, nonpartisan news organization that is funded in part by donations from members, foundations and corporate sponsors. Financial supporters play no role in the Tribune’s journalism. Find a complete list of them here.


Source: Texas Tribune Blue Government News

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