As I was cleaning up leaves and debris in my yard in
Massachusetts this past weekend, I mentioned to one my neighbors who had
stopped by that one of the areas hard hit by Hurricane Sandy was SeasideHeights, a place on the New Jersey Shore that my family, high school friends
and I used to frequent during the summers.
"Wasn't that where they turned away those utility
linemen from Alabama who'd driven up to help get the power back on because they
weren't union members?" he asked.
I didn't know and I hadn't heard about the incident. If
it happened as he described, I was all set to write about how wrong it was,
that the right thing when facing a crisis such as this was to forget about union
affiliation and embrace the help offered.
It turns out, however, that the report aired by a localnews program in Alabama wasn't correct.
The six-man crew from Decatur, Ala., did travel to
Seaside Heights, but communication "with Seaside Heights was poor due to
lack of cellphone service in the area," a statement later issued by
Decatur Utilities read. "As we waited for clarification, we became aware
that Seaside Heights had received the assistance they needed from other
sources. To be clear, at no time were our crews 'turned away' from the utility
in Seaside Heights."
John Reitmeyer, a reporter for The Record in Bergen
County, N.J., wrote that crews from a dozen other states and Canada traveled to
New Jersey to assist utility crews. "New Jersey utility companies are
taking all the help they can get from out-of-state crews-- including both union
and nonunion -- as they scramble to turn power back on for those who've been in
the dark for days now," he wrote.
Reitmeyer ended his report with a quote from Gov. Chris
Christie that indicated he would block any effort to restrict out-of-state
help. "I wouldn't allow it," he said. "I would invoke my powers
of the Disaster Control Act."
The local Alabama TV station later posted the video of a
press conference with Decatur Utilities General Manager trying to clarify what
had happened.
At a time of crisis, it's good that people want to help.
In this case, the linemen from Decatur did the right
thing by offering assistance. Those who actually made it to the disaster site
to help did the right thing, as well. And Gov. Christie did right by making
clear that the issue was never about union vs. nonunion employees. The biggest
wrong was to try to sensationalize an issue that, by virtue of the fact that
union and nonunion employees were indeed working side by side, did not exist.
Focusing on getting help where it was needed was the right thing to do and by
all accounts there were many who did just that.
There was clearly confusion in Hurricane Sandy's
aftermath, not the least of which was that TV station's early report that
fueled false rumors about unions protecting their turf. Sadly, that's all that
sticks in my neighbor's head and likely the heads of others who heard the
initial report but not the subsequent corrections. At least my neighbor now
knows the fuller story.
Jeffrey L. Seglin, author of The Right Thing:
Conscience, Profit and Personal Responsibility in Today's Business and
The Good, the Bad, and Your Business: Choosing Right When
Ethical Dilemmas Pull You Apart, is a lecturer in public
policy and director of the communications program at Harvard's Kennedy School.
Follow him on Twitter: @jseglin
(c) 2012 JEFFREY L. SEGLIN. Distributed by Tribune MediaServices, Inc.
4 comments:
Was there an ethical question in this scenario, Jeffrey?
There are a few implicit ones, such as "Do the media have the responsibility to get the story straight?" "Do others have the responsibility to verify wild media assertions before passing them along?" and "Is it ethical to tar and feather reporters?"
Also, "would it have been ethical to turn away non-union workers in emergency situations?" which Jeff notes (in the third paragraph) he would have answered with "no."
Well put by Jeffrey Seglin. In all of the comments about this particular situation and in some (not all) of the other discussions of the awful experience(s) in enduring Hurricane Sandy, this one sticks out as a situation made worse by sensationalistic reporting. It was bad enough that this tragedy happened but here the entire episode was simply a misunderstanding, willfully complicated by nasty reporting that had only one purpose, to stir up bad feelings.
Charlie Seng
Lancaster, SC
They ought to outlaw all unions,
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