Tuesday, October 29, 2013
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Could Grad Students Regain Union Rights? Some Hopeful Signs
[...]
Data on
federal loan recipients released recently by the Department of
Education distinguishes between graduate and undergraduate student borrowers
for the first time. Grad students, it turns out, are saddled with a
disproportionately heavy debt load. Though they make up only 15 percent of all
students in higher education, they account for nearly a third of federal
borrowing, as Jordan Weissmann noted
this week at The Atlantic. Skyrocketing tuition and scarce financial
aid for graduate programs are among the factors that keep advanced degree
candidates mired in debt.
But at the same time that
they’re students in need of aid, many graduate students are also workers in need
of a raise. The mean annual salary for graduate assistants is $33,000, according to the Bureau of
Labor Statistics. Meanwhile, they shoulder an increasing share of the
teaching load.
Graduate employees now make
up more
than 20 percent of the instructional teaching workforce in higher
education, according to the American Federation of Teachers (AFT), and at many
schools, they are more akin to adjunct faculty than full-time students. The
Coalition of Graduate Employee Unions estimates that between
50 percent and 70 percent of all university classes are now taught by
either graduate assistants or contingent faculty.
Despite that reality,
current labor law bars graduate assistants at private universities from
collective bargaining, under the rationale that they’re primarily students, not
employees. But that may be about to change. The National Labor Relations Board
(NLRB) is set to review a case involving graduate assistants at New York
University (NYU) that could reestablish
the rights of graduate employees to form unions, reversing a 2004 decision
by the Bush-era board and reopening the door to unionizing thousands of
graduate employees at private universities.
The NLRB is one of the
federal agencies currently impacted by the government shutdown, so it’s unclear
when exactly it will issue a decision. The case before before the board dates
back to 2010, when teaching assistants at New York University and research
assistants at NYU's Polytechnic Institute filed a petition for a union
election, hoping to spark a renewed debate over the collective-bargaining
rights of graduate student employees. The NLRB announced last June that it
would review the cases and reconsider the 2004 decision that stripped graduate
employees of these rights, but a ruling was delayed by the long
fight over vacancies on the board. Labor advocates expect that the NLRB's
renewed Democratic majority as of July bodes
well for a decision in favor of the graduate employees at NYU, who are
seeking representation by the United Auto Workers (UAW). Historically, the
board’s position on graduate employee unions has shifted according to the party
in power.
With a ruling from the NLRB
potentially imminent, NYU
offered a partial concession this month. Earlier this year, NYU reportedly
offered to recognize a teaching assistants' union immediately if graduate
employees withdrew their pending petitions before the NLRB, a move that
graduate organizers regarded as an attempt to preempt establishment of a legal
precedent that could help catalyze organizing at other private universities. On
October 4, NYU renewed this offer formally in a letter to the UAW, but it once
again came with a caveat: The union would have to cease attempts to unionize
research assistants, whom it says perform research as a required part of their academic
programs, rather than for pay.
Graduate assistants,
however, are seeking to form a bargaining unit that is comprised of both
teaching assistants and research assistants—a demand that they say would merely
restore the collective bargaining rights that they possessed before the NLRB’s
2004 decision in a separate case involving graduate employees at Brown
University. In 2001, NYU’s Graduate Student Organizing Committee (GSOC)
negotiated the first-ever
union contract with a private university. But the union lost recognition
after its contract expired in 2005, and thanks to the NLRB decision the
previous year, NYU was no longer legally required to continue bargaining with
it.
The union has already
rejected NYU’s most recent offer as a “public relations move” and vowed not to
split up the bargaining unit, as
Scott Jaschik reported at the education blog Inside Higher Ed.
But graduate organizers also
believe it’s a sign that for the first time in a long time, they’re in a
position of strength. The offer by NYU’s administration may be an attempt to
“preempt the NLRB,” says Matt Canfield, a Ph.D. candidate in anthropology and
member of GSOC’s organizing committee, and is also a result of the “incredible
amount of pressure we’ve put on the administration.” NYU says the offer is
instead an attempt to clarify the university’s position. Spokesperson John
Beckman told Jaschik, "We want to be clear to NYU and the union that the
issue to us is not unionization per se, but RAs being unionized, because that
veers into academic territory in a way that is a much greater challenge for
us."
A series of rallies by
graduate student employees calling for the administration to allow union
elections to move forward have drawn the support of state officials. During New
York’s mayoral primaries last month, five leading Democratic
candidates—including Bill de Blasio—also
wrote a letter to NYU President John Sexton urging him “to respect the
long-standing majority choice of graduate, research and teaching assistants for
UAW representation.”
The letter continues:
We value the contributions
the university makes to our city as an institution of higher education and as
an economic engine. However, we find the years of delaying the rights of all
graduate employees to choose union representation unacceptable and we encourage
the university to do the right thing. None of us wants to have to continue to
address this ongoing problem as mayor.
The UAW case before the NLRB
has also drawn
support from major labor groups, including the AFL-CIO and the American
Federation of Teachers, which last year filed
amicus briefs. Universities and higher education groups backed NYU, arguing
that the economic relationship between graduate assistants and universities is
incidental to their role of students. "Petitioners urge a cynical view,
that the university is just another big business, that graduate students are no
more than wage earners, and that using graduate student teachers and
researchers is merely a cost-saving measure,” the American Council of Education
argued in a brief filed in conjunction with other labor groups. "The
academic student/teacher relationship is, and should remain, removed from the
issues that our labor laws address."
The view that the
teacher/student relationship is an employer/employee one may be “cynical,” but
many graduate students argue that it’s irrefutable—and that graduate employee
unions provide one of the best means of countering the deepening
corporatization of the university. The argument that academia is “above” the
world of work, graduate
student organizers have long argued, is an anti-union argument cloaked in
the discourse of professionalism.
Furthermore, the notion that
collective bargaining damages student-faculty relationships—which factored into
the NLRB’s 2004 decision stripping graduate employees of bargaining
rights—appears to have little empirical basis, says Paula Voos, a professor at
Rutgers University’s School of Labor and Management Relations who testified
before the NLRB on behalf of the union in 2010. “We see this argument being
repeated again and again on the management side, but there isn’t really any
evidence,” she says. Voos is the co-author of a survey, published
this April in ILR Review, that surveyed unionized and non-unionized
graduate student employees at public universities, many of which fall under
state collective-bargaining laws that permit unionization. The survey found
that student employees represented by a union typically earn more, and report
similar (and sometimes better) outcomes in terms of relations with faculty.
Adrienne Eaton, another co-author of the study, told In These Times via e-mail
that union representation could potentially improve student-faculty
relationships “by moving any bargaining over financial terms of the
relationship to the top-level administration … leaving faculty and students to
concentrate on the work and the mentoring relationship.”
Voos says she hopes to see
the NLRB return to its pre-2004 standard, when graduate students were afforded
the protections of employees under the law if they worked as either teaching
assistants or research assistants. “The law in this area has sorted people into
one category or the other,” says Voos. “In fact, you can be multiple things.
You can be a student and employee, just like you can be a mother and an
employee—that is obvious in the real world, but the law treats them as mutually
exclusive.”
Legal barriers aren’t the
only factor that have stopped academic employees from organizing in the private
sector. Both New York University and Yale University retained
union-busting law firms in an effort to head off graduate employee
unions. More recently, union efforts to step up organizing drives of adjunct
faculty in the private sector have been met with a similar response.
Northeastern University has reportedly hired the notorious union-buster Jackson
Lewis to counter organizing efforts by adjuncts, as
I reported in August.
In several cases, graduate
employees have made gains even when they are barred from formal collective
bargaining. Graduate Students United (GSU) at the University of Chicago, which
is also seeking union representation, won substantial pay raises for
teaching assistants in 2008 following a series of rallies and “teach-outs.”
Graduate employee unions at
public universities in so-called “right-to-work” states, which have restricted
collective-bargaining rights, have also turned to less conventional tactics: this
summer, members of the Teaching Assistants’ Association at the University of
Wisconsin-Madison, who lost collective bargaining rights under Governor Scott
Walker's Act 10 in 2011, won
a wage increase following a series of “grade-in” protests during which
graduate employees occupied administrative halls while performing their
required grading duties.. And at NYU, GSOC has continued to protest cuts to
graduate students’ paid health insurance, which they first won through the
union contract in 2001, that now require them to pay thousands of dollars in
fees in order to add dependents, among other things.
[...]
Sunday, October 6, 2013
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