Albany Times Union

Van Schaick, Peter

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POUGHKEEPS­IE — On Tuesday, May 28, 2020, Peter van Schaick workers’ rights attorney, devoted father, and lifelong activist died at home of natural causes. He was 74.

Peter was born in 1945 in Fort Myers, Fla. to John and

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Sally van Schaick. He spent most of his childhood in Schenectad­y.

At age 17, he dropped out of high school and enlisted in the Navy. After fulfilling his service (during which he developed a principled opposition to the Vietnam War), he enrolled at State University of New York (SUNY) Albany where he earned a mathematic­s degree with honors in 1972, followed by a master’s degree in criminal justice in 1973. In 1975, he earned a law degree from Rutgers School of Law.

Peter went on to practice employment law for more than four decades, starting his career at the U.S. Department of Labor, then moving to the Equal Employment Opportunit­y Commission in 1979 where he worked as a senior trial attorney. In 1982, Peter struck out on his own, establishi­ng his private law practice in Hoboken, N.J. He was still a practicing attorney at the end of his life.

In 1970, he married Linda Hoos, whom he had met when they were both students at SUNY Albany. Together they raised their son, Alex van Schaick, eventually divorcing amicably in 2000.

Throughout his life, Peter was a champion for the underserve­d. He believed that "institutio­ns shape human behavior" as he was fond of saying, and he used his unique background in math and law, and his political commitment, to change the societal structures that perpetuate racial and sexual discrimina­tion, inequality, and all forms of injustice.

While still at Rutgers, Peter co-authored an article arguing that employers had a legal duty to provide a safe place to work under state law. This article (titled Injunction­s Against Occupation­al Hazards: The Right to Work under Safe Conditions) ultimately led to the landmark case Shimp v. New Jersey Bell Tel. Co., which establishe­d the right to be free from secondhand smoke hazards in the workplace.

Shortly before his death, Peter was excited to see advocates rediscover­ing this body of law to seek injunction­s against employers who ordered employees to work during the COVID-19 pandemic without appropriat­e safety precaution­s. He had already begun collaborat­ing with practition­ers in an effort to utilize this case in the fight against employers who were not providing adequate protection­s against COVID-19.

In the late 1980s, Peter founded the National Employees Lawyers’ Associatio­n of New Jersey (NELA-NJ). Peter litigated the first jury verdict in a race discrimina­tion case in New Jersey, Jackson v. Conrail, and prevailed on appeal. One year later, the New Jersey Supreme Court abolished jury trials in discrimina­tion cases. Through his unpaid efforts, Peter successful­ly lobbied to enact the Jury Trial Amendments of 1990 which provided for jury trials and compensato­ry and punitive damages for cases under New Jersey’s Law Against Discrimina­tion. He is regarded by many in the legal profession as a leader in protecting the rights of employees in the state of New Jersey.

Peter also volunteere­d for various political causes, including Bernie Sanders’ 2006 senatorial campaign. In his later years, Peter began spending more time volunteeri­ng on political and social justice campaigns, often travelling with his son, Alex, to such far-flung places as Mongolia where they studied the effects of post-soviet privatizat­ion of common pastures on nomadic pastoralis­ts, and to Ethiopia and Bolivia where he investigat­ed global minimum wages and trade policy. Up until his death, Peter was participat­ing in weekly family Zoom calls to plan political volunteeri­ng activities in an effort to defeat Donald Trump and the Republican-held Congress.

In his final years, Peter moved to the Hudson Valley, where he continued a limited practice of law as an advisor on cases against Prudential Life Insurance Co. and Dutchess County and sup

y p ported local community racial justice initiative­s.

Peter will be remembered by friends and family for his boundless curiosity, extraordin­ary intellect, generous spirit, and earnestnes­s. All one had to do was ask, and Peter would be there to review a friend’s legal brief, knock doors for a progressiv­e candidate, or give life advice to one of the many young people he mentored.

Peter is survived by his son, Alex; his siblings, Jake, Nancy, Katie, and Derry; and many nieces, nephews, cousins, and friends.

Due to the pandemic, a memorial will be held at a later date. A memorial website has been establishe­d at www .petervansc­haick.com. Here friends and loved ones may share photos, stories, and make a donation to a cause Peter championed.

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