John Lepley, Director of Education and Membership Development at the United Steelworkers, joined the America's Work Force Union Podcast during Mental Health Awareness Month to describe a union that has been working to humanize workplaces for 84 years and is now bringing that mission into a new era with voluntary mental health classes for local union leaders and members.
The program was developed with psychology professor, Waleed Sami, from The City University of New York (CUNY), whose doctoral dissertation examined the link between unions and mental health outcomes. It teaches workers to recognize warning signs in their colleagues, creates stigma-free spaces for honest conversation and equips Local leaders with practical tools to connect struggling members with professional help.
Lepley also addressed the issues facing the union's healthcare members, the role of collective bargaining in addressing staffing and scheduling pressures and the continued support of General President Roxanne Brown for the mental health program she helped champion.
John Lepley opened by marking two milestones that arrived together this month: Mental Health Awareness Month and the United Steelworkers' 84th birthday, celebrated on May 22, the date in 1942 of the union's founding in Cleveland.
The connection, he said, is not incidental. From the beginning, the USW's founding principles included a commitment to improving workers' total well-being through collective bargaining, not just wages and benefits.
The central message the USW's mental health program carries into every class is simple: it is OK not to be OK. That message cuts against a cultural norm Lepley described from his own experience growing up in the 1980s, when toughness meant walking off pain and not asking for help. COVID-19, he said, cracked that norm open for many workers in ways nothing before it had. The stress and isolation of that period made conversations about mental health feel not just acceptable but necessary.
The program's classes are entirely voluntary, offered as part of a conference curriculum that members can choose to attend. Lepley said the most striking thing about watching these classes over time is the change in who shows up. Workers who would not have walked into a mental health session a decade ago are now among the most engaged participants. The union space, he said, makes that possible. It is a rare environment where people from different regions, different industries and often different worldviews find common ground in their shared union identity and their responsibility to look out for each other.
The curriculum, developed with CUNY psychology professor Waleed Sami, does not try to train union members as therapists. It teaches them to be observant, informed and caring colleagues. Examples include the following: What are the visible warning signs that someone is struggling? Is a co-worker withdrawing from contact? Are there physical signs of possible domestic violence? Is substance use becoming apparent? What practical steps can a steward or local leader take to help someone connect with professional help? This can be a medical provider, a counselor or a faith leader in their community?
Lepley described the atmosphere in the first pilot class as something close to a balloon on the verge of bursting. People were stressed even in a positive environment, and the permission to acknowledge that stress openly produced a reaction he said he had never seen in any other class setting. Members left having formed genuine bonds and checked in on each other long after the conference ended. That outcome, he said, is the point.
Healthcare is one of the most hazardous industries in the United States, and the USW's healthcare members are among the workers whose mental health needs the program is most urgently designed to serve. Nurses and other healthcare workers are routinely isolated during their shifts, dealing with patients who are in distress, sometimes under the influence of substances and occasionally violent. Staffing shortages amplify every stressor. The pandemic made it all dramatically worse, and the recovery has been uneven at best, Lepley explained.
In collective bargaining, the union is pushing healthcare employers to hire adequate staff, adjust scheduling to give workers genuine time away from work and protect workers from isolation. Lepley framed staffing not just as a workload issue but as a safety and mental health issue, noting that a nurse working alone is in a fundamentally vulnerable position that no amount of individual resilience can fully address.
Lepley connected the mental health program directly to collective bargaining. Scheduling, staffing levels and the boundary between work and home life are all bargaining issues with mental health dimensions. The union's work on those fronts is inseparable from its work in the classroom.
General President Roxanne Brown has been a visible champion of the mental health program since its earliest days. She was present during the pilot class when a member described the experience as transformative, telling her it had given him a new language for connecting with the people he cares about. Her continued advocacy has been essential to the program's growth, Lepley said.
If you or someone you know is struggling, the 988 Suicide and Crisis Lifeline is available by calling or texting 988. More information on the United Steelworkers is available at usw.org.
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