January 27, 2017 by Peter Schmidt
The number of faculty unions
at the nation’s colleges has surged, with most of the growth the result of
efforts by the Service Employees International Union to organize private
colleges’ non-tenure-track instructors, a new study has found.
In the first nine months of
2016 alone, the National Labor Relations Board certified 20 new
collective-bargaining units at private colleges, concludes the study, published
online this week in the Journal of Collective Bargaining in the Academy. SEIU’s organizing
campaign accounted for 90 percent of that figure, which could rise or
fall depending on the results of litigation over union drives.
“The growth in private-sector
faculty representation and bargaining constitutes a major new shift in higher
education,” says an article summarizing the study’s findings. Although
public-sector faculty unions remain much more common, the growth in their
numbers has been much slower, it says.
The article credits the
activism of groups such as New Faculty Majority and the Coalition of Contingent
Academic Labor for part of the union growth. Of the 20 new faculty unions
certified in the first nine months of last year, 19 represented
non-tenure-track faculty members at private colleges, with nearly two-thirds
representing both full- and part-time contingent faculty members, just over
one-fourth exclusively representing part-timers, and about a tenth exclusively
representing full-timers.
At private colleges that held
union elections, an average of nearly 73 percent of faculty members who cast ballots
voted in favor of forming collective-bargaining units.
The tally of unions
successfully organized last year could fluctuate based on the results of
litigation over such efforts, the article says. At the center of many of the
disputes are clashing interpretations of new guidance on private-college
unionization that the NLRB offered in 2014 in a decision
involving Pacific Lutheran University.
The article predicts that the
number of unions representing graduate assistants and research assistants could
soon surge as a result of two other recent NLRB rulings: An August
decision, involving Columbia University, that declared such workers
eligible to collectively bargain, and a ruling this
week that cleared the way for Yale University’s graduate assistants to
form separate
unions for individual academic departments.
Such recent NLRB decisions
could be reversed, however, if President Trump fills vacant seats on the
five-member board with people who are unsympathetic to organized labor.
The new study was conducted by
William A. Herbert, executive director of the National Center for the Study of
Collective Bargaining in Higher Education and the Professions, at Hunter
College of the City University of New York. On Friday he said his center
planned to conduct additional research to more thoroughly document the growth
in faculty unions since 2012, when the center published its most recent
national survey of them.
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