Following the retirement of Thomas DeBartolo and Lance Deyette’s hiring as assistant to the general president, the SMART General Executive Council (GEC) voted to elect two new members.

Local 19 (Philadelphia) Business Manager Bryan Bush, 10th general vice president, began his career as a sheet metal worker in 1989, entering Local 19’s four-year apprenticeship program in 1991 and successfully graduating as a journeyperson in 1995. Bush has demonstrated active labor leadership throughout his career: He was a site steward on numerous jobs, a foreman on many occasions, and in 2009 he successfully ran to be a Local 19 business repre­sentative. He served as business rep. from 2009–2017; assistant business manager from 2012–2024; financial secretary-treasurer from 2017–2023; and, since 2024, has represented Local 19 members as business manager.

In addition to his local union leadership, Bush has served on the Washington Township Economic Development Board, the Governor’s Transition Committee for Labor and Management, as South Jersey Transportation Authority commis­sioner, Building Trades chairman for Center City Philadelphia, delegate for the Bucks County AFL-CIO and the Philadelphia AFL-CIO, and many other positions. He is also active in various community service efforts, including career days and job fairs, City of Camden Drug Awareness Walks, the City to Shore MS Bike Ride, volunteering at Camden County Homeless Shelters and more.

Born and raised in New Jersey, where he is now raising his own family, Bush’s family history dates back at least 90 years in the labor movement. Today, he carries that legacy forward by proudly repre­senting Local 19 members across aspects of the organization: helping and overseeing business agents with jurisdictional and contract situations, organizing efforts, growth strate­gies and, most importantly, fighting for members.

Local 33 (Northern Ohio) President and Business Manager Corey Beaubien, 11th general vice president, began his career in the sheet metal industry as an apprentice in July of 1999. Beaubien worked for various contractors in and around the Toledo, Ohio, area for 13 years before being hired as a local organizer in September of 2012. Before working as an organizer, he was elected to the Local 33 Executive Board in 2010.

In March 2015, due to his success as an organizer, Beaubien was elected as a business representa­tive for the Local 33 Toledo District, serving in that position for eight years. During this time, he served as the financial secretary-treasurer of the Northwest Ohio Building and Construction Trades Council, as well as a trustee on the Toledo Health & Welfare and Area Pension Funds. After many years of service as a trustee, Beaubien is now a chair or trustee on four pension funds; he was most recently appointed as trustee on the SMART Local Unions & Councils Pension Fund.

Beaubien was named president and business manager of SMART Local 33 in November 2023 and elected to the position the following year in June. Since his election, Beaubien has successfully negoti­ated, along with his committees, multiple contracts in four of the nine contract areas within Local 33.

Congratulations, brothers!

After years fighting for thousands of sheet metal workers and their families as the president and business manager of SMART SM Local 19 (Philadelphia, Pa.) — and for SMART members across North America as a general vice president on the SMART General Executive Council — Gary Masino retired in early 2024.

Gary Masino

A third-generation sheet metal worker, Masino’s career began in the field, where he worked with the tools for approximately 20 years before becoming an organizer in September 2002. In 2006, he successfully ran for local office as a business agent, and in July 2011, he became president and business manager of Local 19. Several years later, former General President Joseph Nigro appointed him to serve as a SMART general vice president.

“I was honored to serve in that capacity and represent Local 19 at the table,” Masino said. “But after looking back on everything, by far the proudest moments of my career were when my two sons Gary and Eric decided to join Local 19, where they both served apprenticeships and are now working in the trade as journeymen.”

Masino took on a variety of leadership roles throughout his career: president of the Pennsylvania State Council of Sheet Metal Workers, president of the Mechanical Trades District Council of the Delaware Valley and vice president of the New Jersey State Council of Sheet Metal Workers. He also served as an executive board member of the Pennsylvania State Building Trades and the Pennsylvania AFL-CIO.

His leadership and industry expertise led former Philadelphia Mayor Michael Nutter to appoint him to the Philadelphia Department of Licensing and Inspection’s Board of Appeals in 2012, as well as the city’s zoning board in 2014. In 2015, then-Gov. Tom Wolf appointed Masino to his Transition Committee for Labor and Industry, later appointing him as a commissioner of the Delaware River Port Authority Board to lend his expertise in revitalizing the city’s historical ports. Current Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro later named Masino to his transition team as well, on the Workforce Development Subcommittee.

“I believe that everything I have, from the day I was born, wouldn’t have been possible without Local 19.”

Throughout Masino’s time as president and business manager, Local 19 organized aggressively to bring in new members, take on low-road contractors, elect pro-worker champions and pass legislation that benefited SMART members and working-class families. Masino’s tenure included historic, challenging times for workers: the aftermath of the Great Recession, during which Local 19 had 800 members out of work, and the COVID-19 pandemic. But years of organizing, strategic financial decisions and the appointment of full-time Political Director Todd Farally helped achieve membership growth, financial security and legislation that created work for members, putting the local in a position to secure its future.

In a retirement message to Local 19 members, Masino noted several of his proudest accomplishments: establishing a Local 19 holiday fund for out-of-work or injured members, which evolved into a program that offers qualified members a $1,000 benefit; the creation of a retiree family benefit that increased the local’s death benefit; growing the local’s sub-benefit; significantly increasing the contribution into the local’s annuity in some areas; securing the pension fund; and negotiating some of the strongest contracts in the local’s history.

Masino brought the same drive to the SMART General Executive Council, working with fellow leaders at the International to pursue growth and legislative wins that are benefiting SMART members across our two nations.

“I’ve had a great career,” he concluded. “I believe that everything I have, from the day I was born, wouldn’t have been possible without Local 19.”

In December 2023, 30-plus-year sheet metal worker Lance Deyette was elected a general vice president on the SMART General Executive Council.

Deyette is a graduate of Bates Technical College and started his apprenticeship with SM Local 66 (Seattle, Washington) in 1988. Deyette turned out as a journeyperson in 1992 and worked at Olympia Sheet Metal, US Sheet Metal and Sunset Air as a journeyperson, foreman and superintendent. In 2005, he was elected to serve the membership as a Local 66 business representative, and on June 1, 2020, Deyette was appointed regional manager of Local 66 and vice president of the SMART Northwest Regional Council. Three years later, Deyette became president of the Northwest Regional Council, winning election to the position on July 1, 2023.

Deyette serves as a trustee on the Northwest Sheet Metal Workers Pension, Northwest Sheet Metal Workers Healthcare Trust, Northwest Sheet Metal Organizational Trust and the Western Washington Sheet Metal Training and Apprenticeship Program, along with the Oregon Master Pension Plan for Local 16. He also serves on the Washington State Building and Construction Trades Executive Board and is the president of the Olympia Building and Construction Trades Council.