Thank you to all
the friends and family who turned out
Last
Saturday, I saw my life companion of 44 years, Catherine O’Reilly Collette,
inducted into the Rhode Island
Heritage Hall of Fame, one of nine people so honored this year.
Cathy is the first Rhode Island woman from organized labor to earn this honor and was recognized largely for her years of international work to promote the rights of women workers throughout the world.
Cathy is the first Rhode Island woman from organized labor to earn this honor and was recognized largely for her years of international work to promote the rights of women workers throughout the world.
I
was moved by how many people came out to support Cathy. In addition to family
and our Charlestown friends, there were trade unionists, labor historians and
political leaders from all over Rhode Island. In all, they filled ten of the
tables and then some. If there’s one thing that Cathy and I have learned to
appreciate during our lives as activists, it’s turn-out.
I also want to thank the Westerly Sun and Cynthia Drummond for the
article they ran that did a nice job of capturing the broad sweep of
Cathy’s career.
When we were young |
It’s
been a long and winding road that led Cathy and I to Charlestown. Cathy grew
up in the village of Harmony in Glocester, RI and went to Rhode Island College
during the turbulent years of the Viet Nam War and civil rights movement. She
was a student activist, went to Woodstock (as did Frank Glista, we later found
out), and was the first woman page at the Rhode Island Senate.
It
was there she met crusading state Senator
Eleanor Slater who became Cathy’s mentor and friend, and later, Cathy’s
boss when Eleanor hired her to work at the newly formed RI Division on Aging.
There, Cathy became a union activist, helping to form a new local of the American
Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees (AFSCME) at the
Department of Community Affairs and later becoming local President and them
member of the state AFSCME Executive Board.
With members of her AFSCME local at the RI Division on Aging |
I
was offered a job in Washington DC (described in more detail HERE)
and Cathy followed, going to work for her home union AFSCME.
While I changed jobs fairly regularly, Cathy had the good sense to stick with AFSCME and
rose to become AFSCME Director for Women’s Rights. That was a significant position,
given that the majority of AFSCME’s 1.2 million members were women – 700,000 of
them.
Cathy as a new AFSCME staffer |
My
organizing jobs took me all over the US – to every one of the 50 states at
least once, as well as to several foreign countries. Cathy's job also took her to all 50 states and to many more countries.
Cathy generally went to large cities and great world capitals while my travels
took me to much smaller places. I
used to joke that while Cathy would be speaking at a big conference in Zurich,
I’d be doing a kitchen meeting in Zip City, Alabama
(I’m not making this up).
On occasion, we’d hand off car keys at Dulles
Airport. One time we did it on the escalator as she was coming in and I was
going out. A few years before we left DC, United Airlines sent her a card that identified her as having flown one million actual miles on United. We joked that maybe this card meant she was entitled to free foot massages. It didn't.
Cathy
served as a US delegate to the World Women’s Committee of Public
Service International, a wing of the International
Labor Organization of the United Nations which represents approximately 18
million working women around the world.
This
meant even more travel, to Geneva several times a year and to
meetings in all of the other continents (except Antarctica). When the
Presidency opened up, Cathy ran for election, with supporters campaigning for
her in all the major languages spoken in the group. Cathy won, and that came
with even more international duties.
...And as President of the World Women's Committee |
In
addition, Cathy was also sent on assignments that took her to the Philippines
several times and to Africa to train local women trade unionists in leadership
skills so they could rise within the ranks of their unions.
All
the while, Cathy was still travelling all over the US to work with AFSCME’s
women leaders and to advance women’s rights in state legislatures. Plus, she
was frequently detailed to run union phone banks and get-out-the-vote efforts
in key Congressional races around the country.
After
25 years of that, by 2001, we were ready to come home. The years had taken
their toll and cost Cathy her mobility. Events in DC, such as the 9/11 attack,
anthrax scares and the DC snipers, also made it easy to decide to pack it in.
We had already bought our house in Charlestown in 2000, and we made the
permanent move in 2002.
Some of the union women Cathy worked with in the Phillipines |
Cathy
was supposed to be fully retired at the end of 2001, but worked part time for
the Institute for Labor Studies for several
years, served on the boards of the WARM
Center, RI Labor
History Society and the George
Wiley Center, as well as the Charlestown
Democratic Town Committee.
Though
she’s still active, she’s whittled down her permanent commitments down to chairing
the CDTC and serving as the President of the Labor History Society while adding
the job of state Democratic Committee member.
Cathy
and I have been fellow travelers through the past 44 years, sometimes traveling
side-by-side, but always on parallel tracks. I was proud to see her honored
so deservingly. For a couple of kids from Rhode Island, we did our best to
follow our dreams and to do the right thing. It’s gratifying to see that people
noticed.
Finally,
I’d like to share Cathy’s acceptance speech with you. Here it is:
Thank you, Scott
[Molloy], my loyal and valued
friend.
And my heartfelt
thanks to Dr. [Patrick] Conley and the Board for this extraordinary honor.
I was so lucky to have wonderful parents….
Roland and Marie O’Reilly. My mother was a feminist before the word was in
popular use, and my father was very open minded.
They raised my
brother, my sister and I to believe that we all could do anything we
wanted to do. Be anything we wanted
to be. I’ll always be grateful for their belief in me.
I also owe a
debt to the late Senator Eleanor
Slater, a member of this Hall of Fame, and author of Rhode Island’s Fair
Housing Law. Eleanor was my boss, my mentor and my friend. She was smart,
tough, generous and funny. The kind of role model for younger women who not
only reached up, but reached back so others could follow her up the
ladder.
And, to my
husband of 44 years, Will Collette, my fellow traveler in life, and in the belief that the world needs to be a
better place, thank you for your constant guidance and support.
It’s because of
my union, AFSCME, that I got a chance to see this country, and a lot of the
world. I learned so much from the workers, the people I met.
I worked with
amazing women overcoming obstacles that are the stuff of nightmares, and being a small
part of their success is one of the most gratifying things in my life. Like the
shy young women in the Philippines in my Leadership classes who are now running those classes for other women
all around their country.
I was so
fortunate to work for a union that gave me a chance to learn that we are all connected, and that we have a
responsibility to both help those
who have it worse than we do, and to learn
from countries more progressive than our own.
We have a great country, but it can and should be better.
I’m firmly
convinced of two things. The first is that real
change can only be done collectively.
The countries with strong unions and strong community groups are less likely to have widespread poverty
and injustice.
The second thing
is, I’ve seen them all, and Rhode Island is the best state in the union. It’s very
good to be home. This honor means the
world to me.
Thank you very much.