Skip to main content
Cornell University mobile logo
New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio

ILR’s Impact on Future of New York Lauded by Policymakers

 

The ILR School’s legacy in the city and state of New York was celebrated at the grand opening of its new Manhattan headquarter on Thursday.

New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio and New York State Labor Commissioner Roberta Reardon spoke about ILR’s role in shaping a strong workplace for the future.

“This expansion means a lot … your work is absolutely crucial. Your expanding can only mean great things for New York City and for this country,” de Blasio told 175 people gathered at the 570 Lexington Ave. hub for ILR and nine other Cornell colleges and programs.

The ILR School “is a place where generations of really talented committed people have been trained to create a productive positive relationship between labor and management to move us all forward.”

The mayor credited ILR alumni and Cornell trustee Martin F. Scheinman ’75, M.S. ’76, an arbitrator, with helping the city and 380,000 workers in 100-plus union locals agree to contracts in recent years. “He was the one who helped people find their way” to labor-management agreements that “created an atmosphere of respect,” de Blasio said.

Ribbon cutting at the grand opening of ILR's new Manhattan hub

“ILR has always been [about] how we can get someplace that people may have presumed impossible, where we can find agreement where people might have thought it could not exist, how we can create unity, how we create common cause … this place is part of the formula of the future.”

Labor Commissioner Reardon, a 2005 graduate of the ILR-based New York State AFL-CIO/Cornell Union Leadership Institute (ULI), said, “The things that I learned in the [ULI] classes profoundly changed my life. I call on that knowledge every day. It is an integral part of what I do.”

“The ILR School is near and dear to my heart. It has truly been a game-changer for my professional development,” she said. “The things that I learned in the classes and the amazing wisdom I gathered from my colleagues and my fellow students changed my life.”

“As I travel around the state, I look out at the crowd and I see my classmates as labor leaders. It’s a real testament to the school.”

When co-founding SAG-AFTRA, Reardon said, “People from Cornell were involved in every step of that process. I called on my friends to help me through difficult times. You always said ‘yes.’”

Reardon lauded the Worker Institute’s Labor Leading on Climate Jobs initiative to help develop just transition for workers as New York state works toward a clean energy economy. The commissioner also noted ILR’s arts and entertainment research and sexual harassment training programs.

“As income inequality increases, I'm thrilled to see ILR double down on our land-grant mission and commitment to improve the lives of working people in New York state," she said.  Reardon is a fellow of ILR’s Worker Institute’s and was a recipient of a leadership institute scholarship named in honor of Lois Gray, who had been at the center of ILR since the 1940s until her death last year.

Interim Dean Alex Colvin was the emcee of the celebration, where several alums spoke, including Russell Hernandez ’88, Jamie Morganstern ’18 and Samantha Falchook ’18.

To listen to the mayor's remarks, see this video