Thursday, August 9, 2018

Why Are Liberal Media Outlets Not Questioning Russiagate? Q&A (Pt 4/5)








https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UrUpqkA4r7w



















































Hate Groups March in Portland, Oregon and Police Attack Counter-Protesters








https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rXZ1Av4lhqY































































Why Did Saudi State Media Threaten a 9/11 on Canada?









https://www.youtube.com/watch?time_continue=4&v=uDlc-61mCCw

































































Why We All Should Care About the Unionization of Adjunct Faculty in Higher Ed














Submitted by eea on Fri, 2018-05-04 12:00 PM










Adjuncts today are the "gig economy" workers in academia—a growing class of faculty who often work with low pay and no job security or benefits. For around 50 years, the proportion of faculty hired off the tenure track has been soaring, reaching 76 percent nationally when graduate student instructors are added to the mix. This shift is particularly troubling in higher education because, as research conducted by the Delphi Project on the Changing Faculty and Student Success indicates, research suggests an overreliance on poorly paid and unsupported part-time faculty hurts student retention and achievement.

Why are colleges and universities increasingly leaving tenure-track positions unfilled and hiring short-term adjunct faculty? Professors in the Gig Economy: Unionizing Adjunct Faculty in America brings together scholars from a range of fields to answer this question and address the history, context, processes, and outcomes of unionization among adjunct faculty.

Adjunct faculty aren't a new phenomenon. Faculty unions in the U.S have been around for a long time and have typically included adjuncts. They trace their roots back 100 years to the founding of the American Federation of Teachers (AFT) local 33 at Howard University. What has changed over the past two decades is the rise of a national movement to unionize adjunct faculty in separate bargaining units. This shift is a response to the fact that colleges and universities have increasingly left tenure-track positions unfilled and begun relying more heavily on part-time adjunct instructors who often work with low pay, no job security, adequate resources, and no health benefits.

As more and more colleges and universities home come to rely on gig faculty labor, adjunct faculty members have begun to fight back. Some of the nation's largest labor unions have stepped up to help, including the AFT, the National Education Association, the United Auto Workers, the Service Employees International Union, and the United Steelworkers. After the NLRB ruled on August 23, 2016 that graduate students who work as research assistants and teachers can form or form unions, the United Electrical Workers, the Communications workers of American, and UNITEHERE stepped in to help.

Today unionization shows no sign of slowing down. Three years after SEU launched its national Faculty Forward campaign in 2013, part-time and full-time contingent faculty at more than 40 institutions had voted to affiliate with the union, often despite fierce opposition from employers. A 2017 study found that 20 new faculty unions had been certified just the previous year, with nearly two-thirds representing both full- and part-time adjunct faculty. Unionization continues today on campuses across the country. On March 14, 2018, University of South Florida adjuncts voted to form a union, despite opposition from the administration. On April 13, adjunct faculty at the University of Chicago ratified their first union contract, gaining significant pay increases, greater job security, and parental leave.  After around two years of collective bargaining and a strike on April 4, adjuncts at Loyola University in Chicago reached a tentative agreement on April 16.

Faced with rising tuition, increased living costs, and stagnant pay, graduate student workers at 13 colleges and universities have also voted to unionize, despite recent efforts by the presidents of Columbia, Yale, Boston College, the University of Chicago, and Loyola of Chicago to avoid collective bargaining by trying to overturn a 2016 National Labor Relations Board decision allowing grad students to unionize.  Four of the country's major unions—the American Federation of Teachers (AFT), the SEIU, United Auto Workers (UAW) and UNITE HERE—have joined together in a national campaign to make these universities bargain in good faith.

Why should we care?  We should care deeply, because he unionization of adjunct faculty is one of the most important recent developments shaping higher education today. It is critical for all those who work in higher education to understand the significance and relevance of adjunct faculty unions in the context of today’s gig economy.

The poor working conditions of adjunct faculty affect the entire professoriat. The increasing reliance on low-paid, part-time instructors has eroded the availability of tenure-track positions at many institutions. Moreover, the same desire for cost savings that has motivated colleges and universities to rely heavily on gig adjunct faculty has led to worsening working conditions for tenure-track faculty in the form of growing teaching loads, a lack of administrative support, and diminishing funds for research on many campuses.

Anyone who cares about the quality of education in higher education should care about this issue.

The students who are applying to colleges and universities should care. The parents and other family members who will help pay their children's tuition should care. Tenure track faculty at every institution should care enough to begin planning ways to make their academic departments more supportive of adjunct faculty, and they should openly support the unionization of their adjunct colleagues once a union drive begins on campus. College and University administrators who espouse a social justice mission on the website and claim to prioritize the quality of their students' learning should not oppose the unionization of adjunct faculty and graduate students, and they should bargain with their employees in good faith.

It is essential to prevent colleges and universities from slipping into a corporate culture in which they forget their historic purpose and focus primarily on the bottom line.
Since the founding of our nation, the purpose of higher education has been to provide the most empowering education to students, one that promotes analytical and creative thinking and a capacity for problem solving. American colleges and universities have always sought to develop thoughtful citizens fully capable of contributing in meaningful ways to our democratic society.  But hese aims will never be realized with a professoriat composed largely of underpaid instructors who often work without job security or benefits and no real hope of finding a full-time position or earning a living wage.






Kim Tolley is a professor of education at Notre Dame de Namur University. She is the author of Heading South to Teach: The World of Susan Nye Hutchison, 1815–1845 and The Science Education of American Girls: A Historical Perspective. She is also the author of Professors in the Gig Economy: Unionizing Adjunct Faculty in America




















Unionized College Faculty Are Winning Themselves a Lot
















Unions are not just a feel-good sort of thing to do. New research about higher ed unions shows just how much workers have actually gained from organizing, in a short period of time.

One of the most active areas of new union organizing in America is higher education: adjunct professors and other academic and non-academic workers on college campuses, who tend to have shockingly low pay and poor job security even though they tend to be highly educated and work in prestigious settings. Those are the sort of ingredients that can motivate people to unionize. And voila: it has been so. And the gains have been clear. Duke University non-tenured faculty members who signed their first union contract this summer immediately got double digit raises and improved job security.

Researchers at the SEIU, one of the unions most active in organizing college faculty, have taken a crack at quantifying the actual gains that workers in that industry have made so far, through unionizing—faculty at more than two dozen colleges across the country, including more than 4,000 people in the Boston area alone. And here is what they came up with:

“In Boston, 20% of adjunct faculty at traditional private colleges were represented by a union in 2012. Now 48% have a union and 4,100 have united in SEIU alone. In the Bay Area, union density grew from 21% in 2012 to 71% today. Nearly 40% (3%) of Chicago adjuncts are unionized, up from 25% in 2012. There were no adjunct unions at private colleges in Minneapolis/St. Paul metro in 2012. Today, 27% have a union.”
“63% of the SEIU Faculty Forward first contracts include pay raises of at least 20% for the lowest paid faculty, and 43% of contracts have pay raises of 30% or more for the lowest paid.
“Over 70% of new SEIU Faculty Forward contracts include a professional development program worth over $550,000.”

This is all just to illustrate, with numbers, a fact that has always been true, whether you are a college professor or a janitor: If you unionize your workplace you will get more than you have now, and the reason your boss does not want you to do so is because they don’t want to give you more.

But it’s all just sitting on the table, waiting for you to pick it up.

























New Study Charts Recent Proliferation of Faculty Unions







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.





























From the AAUP President: What Is a Union?















By Rudy H. Fichtenbaum

Recently I heard from Jeff Halpern, the longtime chief negotiator for our Rider University chapter. He inspired me to use this column to highlight events at Rider, because they show what’s possible when faculty act collectively.

Like many institutions, especially smaller private ones, Rider has declining enrollments. Demographic changes are typically the cause of such declines. Most institutions react by raising tuition discount rates.

This strategy is clearly unsustainable. I am reminded of the story of two hikers who spot a far-off grizzly running their way. The first hiker sits down to discard hiking boots for running shoes. The second says, “Even with those shoes, you can’t outrun that bear!” The first replies, “True—but I can outrun you!”

When administrators at Rider finally realized they could not discount their way back to financial health, they embarked on an alternative path, heeding the canonical advice not to waste a crisis. They pursued a destructive path of “structural change.” Jeff said, “We are in a struggle over who will be at the heart of the university. Will it be the faculty as it has been until now? Or will it be a management that imagines itself running just another business—a management with clear disregard for the educational quality of the institution and obvious disdain for the professional standing of faculty?”

As a private university, Rider is subject to the 1980 Supreme Court decision in NLRB v. Yeshiva University, which denies most full-time faculty members in private institutions the right to pursue collective bargaining under the legal framework of the National Labor Relations Act. The administration could simply refuse to recognize the union: no federal statutes protect the right of faculty at Rider to unionize. So how does AAUP-Rider function successfully as a union? The chapter has about 98 percent membership, and members have shown they’ll do whatever it takes to preserve their union, including striking.

The chapter, Jeff continued, is committed to “the ideal of a university where real education is at the heart of the mission. A university where the relationship between faculty and students is recognized as the very essence of education. A university where the pursuit and dissemination of knowledge are seen as inseparable.”

Seeing this relatively small chapter battle so intently against such overwhelming odds is truly inspirational. By staying together, faculty preserved their right to speak with a collective voice.

Faculty often say, “I wish we had a union, but I teach at a private university,” or, “I live in a right-to-work state,” or, “My state ‘prohibits’ unions.” But what is a union? It is only a group of employees who act collectively in order to have a voice at work. You—everyone—can have a union, provided you and your colleagues organize and act collectively. Remember, unions long predated enabling legislation and state-sanctioned collective bargaining. Likewise, AAUP-Rider lives and breathes, Yeshiva notwithstanding.

What does it take to have a union? Faculty—you and your colleagues— must organize. You must collect “real dues”; twenty dollars annually won’t do. Resources facilitate organizing: conducting meetings; holding rallies and demonstrations; having a substantial campus, online, and media presence; disseminating information; and employing assistants to support such activities.

Any group of faculty can have a union. Aim for 15 percent membership within the first year, then 20 percent, and keep building. All the while, have chapter leaders speak out at every opportunity, issue demands, and work on broadening the circle of active members and leaders. Just building membership is not enough!

Organizing is a process. Nobody can specify the exact membership threshold you must attain. But with the support of a large majority of faculty willing to act together, the day will come when you decisively influence events on your campus. That’s a union.

Faculty have immense power, but in the absence of organizing that power is only unrealized potential. Fruitful negotiating entails issuing demands and acting collectively to realize that power. Of course, no group will get everything it wants. But without organized, concerted activity, you’ll get either nothing or just what the administration wants to give you.

The failure to exercise our power has allowed the malignant corporatization of higher education to metastasize. Faculty often seem reluctant to act because we worry about hurting today’s students. But our failure to act now actually hurts generations of students.

Frederick Douglass said it well: “Power concedes nothing without a demand. It never did and it never will. Find out just what any people will quietly submit to and you have found out the exact measure of injustice and wrong which will be imposed upon them.”