Bell Atlantic Honors First Graduating Class of Innovative Higher Education and High-Tech Training Program

Bell Atlantic Honors First Graduating Class of Innovative Higher
Education and High-Tech Training Program

92 Employees Earn Associate Degrees, Gain Customer Care Skills

January 12, 1999

Media
contact:

Steve Marcus, Bell Atlantic
212-395-2363

Jeff Miller, CWA,
202-434-1164

TROY, N.Y. - Ninety-two Bell Atlantic union-represented employees in
New York, the first graduates of a precedent-setting higher education and
training program that provides the latest skills in customer care and
communications technology, were honored today at a ceremony at Hudson
Valley Community College.

The graduates of the program, Next Step, have earned two-year associate

degrees in applied science with a focus on telecommunications technology
from Hudson Valley and five other community and technical colleges in
the state. In addition, the graduates were promoted to telecommunications
technical associate, the highest paid craft job in the company.

"I dropped out of school 35 years ago, and I saw this program as a golden
opportunity I couldn't pass up," said John Kelly, a Next Step graduate who
attended Queensborough Community College. "Knowing that Ivan
Seidenberg [Bell Atlantic's chairman and chief executive officer] began as
a technician and got his degree by going to school at night gave me the
added incentive to stick with the program."

Next Step prepares students to solve customer problems and provide
outstanding service. The program emphasizes teamwork, leadership,
critical thinking and customer focus. It is administered jointly by Bell
Atlantic and two unions, the Communications Workers of America and the
International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers.

"In the Information Age, the key to success lies as much in the skills,
dedication and problem-solving abilities of employees as it does in
management making the right investments and strategic choices," said
Donald J. Sacco, executive vice president of Human Resources for Bell
Atlantic, at the ceremony.

"These experienced, committed, capable technicians will walk out of
college and back into our garages and central offices. They're smart.
They're good. They're driven to excel," he said.

Barbara J. Easterling, secretary-treasurer of the CWA, also spoke at the
ceremony.

"Education and the concept of lifelong learning can literally change lives,
and the Next Step program is doing just that," she said. "This visionary
program represents the collective bargaining system at its finest. It is a
win-win situation for both American workers and American corporations.
The end result is better-educated and more productive workers who are
uniquely equipped to meet the challenges of an intensely competitive
marketplace where change is the one constant."

Next Step was established as a result of the 1994 collective bargaining
agreement between the unions and NYNEX, which subsequently merged
with Bell Atlantic. The program, which began operating in New York and
New England in 1995, was the first of its kind in the country.

Robert Reich, then U.S. Secretary of Labor, praised Next Step for
breaking ground and serving as a model for labor and high-tech companies
throughout the country. Last July, Vice President Al Gore cited the
program as a successful effort to promote lifelong learning for employees.

Next Step students attend class at the colleges one day a week - on
company time - for four years. In addition, the students are required to
complete 15 to 20 hours of homework each week on their own time.

Each student is assigned a laptop computer that is used in the classroom
for courses in mathematics and electronics and for E-mail, enabling the
students to communicate with one another and their instructors. The
students also take courses in English, physics and telecommunications.

Bell Atlantic pays all costs for the program, including tuition, books and
the computers. Each college in the program has a coordinator who works
closely with Bell Atlantic and the unions to ensure that the program runs
smoothly.

Because of the heavy workload, the Next Step students must carefully
balance the demands of the program and their jobs with the time they
spend with their friends and families.
Many of the graduates had not been in a classroom for more than 20 years,
and they had to relearn many of the skills - such as how to study and take
notes - that younger students tend to take for granted.

Currently, 1,600 Bell Atlantic employees are enrolled in Next Step at 25
community and technical colleges throughout New York and New
England. To qualify for the program, students must meet several criteria,
including passing an aptitude test that measures skills in reading, writing,
numerical reasoning and elementary algebra.

Bell Atlantic is at the forefront of the new communications and
information industry. With 42 million telephone access lines and eight
million wireless customers worldwide, Bell Atlantic companies are
premier providers of advanced wireline voice and data services, market
leaders in wireless services and the world's largest publishers of directory
information. Bell Atlantic companies are also among the world's largest
investors in high-growth global communications markets, with operations
and investments in 23 countries.

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