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Category Archives: News

Celebrate Labor Day 2016 By The Philadelphia Council AFL-CIO

– On Labor Day, we carve out time to recognize and honor the wonderful achievements of America’s working people. Many of us will spend the day with close family and dear friends at a barbecue, picnic or other community event. While we enjoy the fellowship of our loved ones, it is important to reflect on what strengthens and nurtures the lives and communities of working people and how we can continue to protect our ability to make a good living that will sustain our families.

This Labor Day, we are asking working families across the country to take action and commit to improving the lives of all working people by voting, for a better life. On November 8, 2016, working people will flock to the polls to support policies and candidates that are dedicated to creating fundamental, lasting change for everyone, not just the wealthy few.

Find a Labor Day Event Near You at – https://actionnetwork.org/event_campaigns/labor-day-2016-find-an-event-near-you

Source – http://www.pa.aflcio.org/philaflcio/

State faculty union leaders take a step toward a possible strike

By Susan Snyder

– Faculty in the 14-university Pennsylvania state system will vote next month on whether to authorize a strike, their union announced Thursday.

Faculty will vote on the 14 campuses from Sept. 7 to 9, the union said. Members of the coaches bargaining unit will vote a week later.

The union and administration remain at odds over health care, salary increases, and other issues after nearly two years of negotiations. The previous pact expired June 30, 2015.

Classes are scheduled to begin Monday, and the administration sent a message to the system’s 105,000 students this week assuring them that will happen.

“We want to be sure our students know that no matter what they might hear to the contrary, classes will begin on Monday,” Kenn Marshall, spokesman for the Pennsylvania State System of Higher Education, said. “We would hope the [union] leadership understands, as we do, the devastating impact a strike would have on students and their futures, as well as on the universities.”

The union represents more than 6,000 faculty and coaches at West Chester, Cheyney, Bloomsburg, Kutztown, East Stroudsburg, Slippery Rock, Shippensburg, Mansfield, Edinboro, Indiana, California, Clarion, Millersville, and Lock Haven Universities.

A strike would be the first in the system’s history. Strike authorization votes are typical during negotiations. But union leaders have said that this time they will set a strike date shortly after the vote is taken. They also have said they will not allow the semester to end without a new contract.

The union’s delegates agreed unanimously to hold the vote during a conference call Thursday, just before beginning a two-day negotiation session with the administration.

“Our faculty and coaches clearly feel that the state system has not negotiated fairly; they are more interested in playing games than negotiating seriously,” said Kenneth M. Mash, president of the Association of Pennsylvania State College and University Faculty union.

The sides have agreed on minor issues since June, said Mash, a political science professor at East Stroudsburg.

Late Thursday afternoon, the system announced that it had offered faculty cash payments of $600 this year and raises in the next two in exchange for givebacks in health insurance and an increase in the teaching load for temporary faculty. The raise would amount to 1 percent in January 2018 and 1 percent in January 2019, plus a step increase on the salary schedule equivalent to 2.5 percent to 5 percent, Marshall said.

The starting salary for a full-time instructor is $46,609, with the top of scale at $112,238 for an experienced full professor.

The system has seen an overall enrollment drop of more than 14,000 students since 2010. This fiscal year, the system anticipates a $10 million deficit even before any salary increases or new benefit costs would be added for faculty, Marshall said.

The average cost of tuition, fees, and room and board at state system universities for 2016-17 is about $21,000.

Source – http://www.philly.com/philly/education/20160826_State_faculty_union_leaders_take_a_step_toward_a_possible_strike.html

Graduate Students Can Unionize at Private Colleges, U.S. Labor Panel Rules

By Melanie Trottman and Melissa Korn

– A federal labor board ruled that graduate students who teach at private universities are employees with full rights to join unions, a sweeping decision that paves the way for student unionization on campuses nationwide.

In a 3-1 decision announced Tuesday, the National Labor Relations Board said a group of Columbia University students who sought to join a union deserved employee protections when they get paid for work at the direction of the school.

The victory for the Columbia students could deliver tens of thousands of new members to the nation’s beleaguered labor movement, which has seen its ranks decline dramatically.

For private colleges and universities, it could raise salary costs and prove disruptive to administrators unaccustomed to bargaining about how graduate students learn and work. Injecting collective bargaining into graduate programs could limit schools’ ability to choose who teaches particular classes, and when. It could also make the schools subject to strikes by unionized graduate students.

The decision also applies to undergraduate students who take on teaching duties. The unit the Columbia students were part of also included undergraduate teaching assistants.

“In their broad-based decision, the NLRB swept aside decades of earlier history and basically said that any student who does either research or teaching in a private-sector institution will be considered a school employee entitled to be represented by a union,” said Joseph Ambash, a Boston lawyer who helped write a brief filed by several prestigious universities arguing against a pro-union decision.

At issue is whether graduate students are mostly students or employees, and whether the teaching and research they perform as an integral part of their education exempts them from employee status.

University administrators argued that while the majority of graduate students receive financial support from their schools, they aren’t working in a trade for wages but are being educated to prepare for a career.

Union groups say the students provide essential services for universities and should be considered employees if they act at least in part to serve their employer.

The NLRB’s Democratic majority, in their ruling, said there is no clear language in the National Labor Relations Act that prohibits teaching assistants from getting the same protections of employees, which includes the right to unionize.

The NLRB oversees unionization elections and referees workplace disputes in most of the private sector. It doesn’t have jurisdiction in the public sector. A small portion of the roughly one million graduate students at public universities have been unionized for decades. There are roughly 535,000 graduate students currently enrolled at private colleges.

Colleges stood firm Tuesday in their belief that their teaching assistants are students, not employees.

“Columbia—along with many of our peer institutions—disagrees with this outcome because we believe the academic relationship students have with faculty members and departments as part of their studies is not the same as between employer and employee,” the university said in a statement.

Anna Cowenhoven, a spokeswoman for Harvard University, said a union representing its students “will impact not only current students, but also faculty, staff, and future students.”

The Service Employees International Union said that because of the ruling, students at several universities plan to take immediate steps to try to join the union, including graduate assistants at Duke, Northwestern, St. Louis University and American University.

“Colleges and universities that used to provide a pathway to the American dream are now becoming a road to poverty for students who find themselves saddled with debt and graduate workers and faculty who are unable to support their families on low pay,” said SEIU President Mary Kay Henry.

Paul Katz, who is entering his fourth year of a PhD program in Latin American history at Columbia, said that 2½ years of organizing efforts on campus have already pushed the school to be somewhat more responsive to graduate workers’ needs, such as by extending paid family leave and childcare subsidies. They are “suddenly willing to move on a number of things that graduate workers cared about for a long time,” he said.

Columbia announced last month that it would raise its standard stipend for many PhD student workers by at least 3.75% for the coming academic year, and at least 3% for each of the following three years. It also adjusted its child care, fee-waiver and leave benefits in May.

Duke graduate students started to organize this spring with an eye toward unionizing if the NLRB ruled in favor of the Columbia students.

Anastasia Karklina, a PhD candidate in literature at Duke, said, “There’s a lot of dissatisfaction with the working conditions and lot of desire for change.” She added, “I think many of us are feeling very hopeful and very motivated to continue collectively organizing.”

Source – http://www.wsj.com/articles/graduate-students-can-unionize-at-private-colleges-u-s-labor-panel-rules-1471972147

PA Supreme Court Rules in Favor of the PFT!

By The PFT

– The Court has ruled that the District had no legal right to cancel the PFT contract On October 6, 2014.

PHILADELPHIA–In a unanimous opinion issued this week, the Pennsylvania Supreme Court emphatically held that the Philadelphia School Reform Commission has no authority under Act 46 to cancel an existing teachers collective bargaining agreement or change existing terms and conditions of employment contained in such an agreement. The Court stated that:

“… collective bargaining agreements are teachers contracts which are excepted from a school reform commission’s cancellation powers.”

“This much-anticipated decision by the Supreme Court is a total and complete repudiation of the position taken by the SRC when it surreptitiously met in October of 2014 and adopted a resolution which purported to cancel the terms of the agreement with our union,” said PFT president Jerry Jordan.

“After two years and three Court decisions ruling against them, we hope that the SRC has now learned that even Act 46 presumes what is required for good public schools is to work with your employees by bargaining in good faith negotiations, not brute and dictatorial actions,” said American Federation of Teachers president Randi Weingarten.

“The costs to the taxpayers just in the sheer number of attorneys and law firms hired to advance this fruitless strategy is truly breathtaking, Jordan said, “It is time now for the District to negotiate a new contract with the PFT. Our educators and schoolchildren can’t wait any longer.”

To read the PA Supreme Court’s full ruling, Go To: http://pft.org/docs/SupremeCourtRulingAug15.pdf

Source – http://pft.org/Page.aspx?pgid=51&article=880

12 News Guild bargaining units ratify three-year contract with major newspaper chain

By Bill Ross, Executive Director, Newspaper Guild 10, of Greater Philadelphia

– The last of 12 Guild bargaining units nationwide ratified a tentative agreement with Digital First Media Thursday night, culminating a seven-month campaign for the first pay increase in years.

Under the new contract, workers will receive an across-the-board raise of 3 percent in the first year. In years two and three, leaders of the 12 bargaining units will bargain wage re-openers jointly with DFM management.

Some employees hadn’t seen a raise in as much as ten years.

The national framework for future negotiations represents a critical advance for Guild members at all 12 newspapers, campaign leaders said.

The three-year contract will expire July 31, 2019.

The historic agreement between the Guild and DFM was reached after three days of negotiations in July, and after months of coordinated actions by Guild members at 12 newspapers nationwide.

The joint negotiations for the first wage re-opener will begin in February 2017 – just a little more than six months from now.

The joint bargaining framework will include workers at The Denver Post, The Mercury News, East Bay Times, Monterey Herald, St. Paul Pioneer Press, Macomb Daily and The Daily Tribune, Kingston Daily Freeman, Pottstown Mercury, Norristown Times-Herald, The Delaware County Times, and The Trentonian.

The DFM national “#NewsMatters” campaign was financed by a special grant from the Communications Workers of America. That grant, coupled with exceptional rank-and-file leadership, made the nationwide coordination possible.

Campaign leaders expressed thanks to rank-and-file members for their support and participation, and to the more than 11,000 Guild, CWA and community supporters who signed our petition and took part in this campaign.

#NEWSMATTERS