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New York City: Columbia graduate students go on strike
By John Levine
29 April 2004
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Some 1,900 teaching and research assistants at Columbia University
in New York City have been on strike since April 19 demanding
union recognition. Members of the Graduate Student Employees Union
(GSEU), which represents teaching assistants (TAs) and research
assistants (RAs), had voted for the action by an 80 percent margin.
The TAs and RAs have increasingly become the mainstay of the
teaching workforce at major US universities, teaching on average
40 percent of undergraduate class hours as well as conducting
and supervising research work.
At Columbia, TAs and RAs teach a majority of Core Curriculum
classes, write grants, carry out experiments, grade papers, lead
labs, and teach discussion sections in half of the humanities
courses and two-thirds of natural sciences courses. Despite the
fact that they get paid to do much of the work that makes Columbia
an educational and research institutionor more precisely,
because of this factthe university does not want to recognize
them as employees with a right to bargain collectively.
It has been three years since the union filed for an election
with the federal National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) in March
2001. Columbia immediately hired a union-busting law firm to mire
the union in legal wrangling at the NLRB before the vote could
take place. After stalling for a year, the NLRB finally allowed
the assistants to vote. But following the March 2002 vote, Columbia
appealed to the NLRB again, preventing the ballots from being
counted. In the three years that Columbia has refused to negotiate,
most of the students present during the original organizing drive
have graduated or left.
Stephen Twilley, a second year graduate student in Italian,
described to the WSWS the situation confronting the striking TAs
and RAs:
This goes way beyond stipends. When we choose a university
for our graduate studies, we are committed for five, six or seven
years. If we havent got health care, vision care, dental
care, or childcare we have to worry about a lot of things other
than our teaching. Its not good for us, and its not
good for the undergrads either, because we arent able to
focus the kind of attention on them that we would like.
He pointed out that Columbia could use its purchasing power
to obtain such benefits relatively cheaply, while most graduate
students cannot afford to obtain them on their own.
The Columbia administration has set a current minimum stipend
level of $16,000. Twilley said that the decision to set a minimum
came in response to the union organizing effort.
Twilley further explained that the graduate students have become
a source of cheap labor for Columbia. Graduate students
teach 60 percent of the core courses. Columbia brings in a few
star professors and charges a high tuition, but were the
ones who run things. They are just trying to get things done at
the lowest possible cost.
In addition, the lack of grievance procedures at the university
leaves TAs and RAs at the mercy of their superiors, who can cut
their positions as well as their grades.
Throughout the US higher education system, there is a move
to a part-time and contingent teaching staff in order to cut costs.
According to a study done by the American Association for University
Professors (AAUP), between 1989 and 2001, the percentage of part-time
faculty rose from 17.4 to 20.6 percent at public four-year institutions,
while at private colleges, the rate increased from 33.3 to 40.7
percent.
Universities often argue that increased stipends and benefits
for teaching and research assistants will force increased tuition.
This years tuition at Columbia jumped 5.8 percent to $26,340the
largest hike in the past seven years.
According to the AAUP, this past year tuition and fees around
the country rose by an average of 6.0 percent at private four-year
colleges and universities and by 14.1 percent during the same
period at public two- and four-year institutions. At the same
time, however, the average faculty salaries at private four-year
institutions rose by only 3 percent, and average faculty salaries
at most public two- and four-year institutions rose by less than
2 percent. At Rutgers University in New Jersey, for instance,
professors and graduates received no raise, yet tuition rose by
9 percent.
The other factors that lead to tuition hikes, according to
the AAUP, include the escalating costs of benefits for all
employees, reductions in state support of public institutions,
growing institutional financial-aid costs, expansion of the science
and research infrastructure at research universities, and the
increasing costs of information technology. Public universities
also spend enormous sums on sports facilities and administrative
bureaucracies.
Aside from the increasing reliance on part-time labor, universities
have been undermining the tenure system. Professors traditionally
try to find tenured positions at universities. The tenure system
not only ensures job security but also maintains academic freedom
and permits scholars to conduct research in areas that have human
rather than profit interest.
The gradual abolition of the tenure system and its replacement
with contingent labor threatens salaries and living standards,
but it also subordinates research to the profit motive of the
institutions. Those professors doing research in areas that bring
in grants from corporations, publishers, the government, and private
institutions will be much more likely to receive tenure.
At public universities, where labor laws are determined by
the states, TAs and RAs first began organizing in 1969. Only in
the fall of 2000 did the NLRB recognize the status of graduate
students at private universities as workers, spurring organizing
drives at a number of universities.
In response, these ostensibly liberal academic institutions
have mounted corporate-style anti-union campaigns, often to the
detriment of the educational and research environment.
In its anti-union campaign, Columbia has used the pretext that
union recognition would interfere with the relationship between
graduate students and their professors. Although the 1,900 graduate
students do a considerable amount of the universitys work,
it claims they are not employees but only students whose labor
is simply a part of their training. However, in his former post
as president of the University of Michigan, Columbias president,
Lee Bollinger, said he welcomed the union of TAs and RAs and admitted
it did not hurt their relationships with their professors.
The refusal of the university to recognize the graduate students
union could result in thousands of undergraduates losing the investment
of time, energy, thought and large tuition payments they put into
their classes. They may receive grades, but no one will be able
to read their essays or grade their tests.
Laboratory experiments and other research that requires the
work of RAs will likely be interrupted at great cost as well.
As economic conditions worsen and state governments balance
their budgets by cutting funding to universities, strikes and
threats of strikes by faculty and employed students have taken
place at a number of major universities. These include:
* The University of Michigan Lecturers Employee Organization
(LEO) staged a one-day walkout on Thursday, April 8. It is in
the process of negotiating its first contract.
* Yale University: In March of 2003, a thousand TAs and RAs
in the Graduate Employees and Students Organization joined in
a week-long strike along with three other unions representing
a total of more than 5,000 workers. This was Yales eighth
strike in 35 years and involved more workers than ever before.
* University of Wisconsin: Teaching assistants walked out for
a two-day strike on April 27, which is set to be followed by a
grading strike if a contract agreement is not reached
with the State.
* New York University: On April 21, 91 percent of adjunct professors
voted to strike at NYU if a bargaining agreement was not reached.
An agreement was reached at 6:40 a.m., the morning that the strike
was scheduled.
* Rutgers University: Teaching assistants, after working since
last June with no contract, voted to strike but the union leadership
decided to push it off until next September. The strike could
have been made to coincide with the Columbia TA/RA strike.
* University of Pennsylvania: TA union members set a strike
vote this month. TAs there are facing an almost identical situation
to those at Columbia, where an appeal to the NLRB has been used
to indefinitely postpone recognition and enter bargaining.
* University of Hawaii: On March 30 and 31, professors voted
to strike over wages. A strike was barely averted when the union
agreed to a contract that was grudgingly accepted by the members.
Professors had a strike only three years earlier in 2001.
* Pennsylvania State College System: 90 percent of the 5,500
faculty members voted, and 95 percent of those voting supported
a strike, according to the union. Despite the overwhelming willingness
of the faculty to strike, the union agreed to an unpopular contract
and pushed it through. Only 3,300 of the unions 5,500 members
even voted on the contract, and of these about 30 percent opposed
it.
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