Category Archives: Campaigns & Contracts

Alberta: Parkland teachers reject deal: board

Edmonton Journal: Parkland teachers reject deal: board

Parkland School Division says its teachers’ union rejected a contract proposal today that would have seen them get a 9.5 per cent pay raise over three years.

Drayton Valley Western Review: No strike for now
There is some relief from the tension of a looming teachers’ strike in the Parkland School District.
Robert Twerdoclib, president of the Parkland teachers’ local of the Alberta Teachers’ Association, said that a decision had been made at last Wednesday night’s general meeting to “calm the waters,” by not taking immediate strike action.

“It was resolved not to call any strike at this point and time,” said Twerdoclib.
However, emotion is still running high between the two parties of the dispute.

SIU Faculty contract status in limbo

Daily Egyptian: Faculty contract status in limbo

University administrators are awaiting a response from SIUC’s faculty union after making their final offer in contract talks last week, and it is unclear whether negotiations have reached the second stalemate in just as many months.

New Hampshire: UNH faculty union files complaint

Union-Leader: New Hampshire: UNH faculty union files complaint

he union representing University of New Hampshire faculty filed a labor complaint with the state yesterday accusing university officials of refusing to negotiate in good faith.

California: UC, nurses reach agreement

Inside Higher Ed:

After many months of negotiation and, more recently, mediation, the University of California has reached a tentative agreement with the union that represents its 8,500 nurses. The university said the agreement would increase pay for the nurses, who work in its hospitals and student health facilities, by 5 to 9 percent, keep the nurses as university employees for health benefit purposes, and sustain health benefits for retirees at least through next June, when the university’s comprehensive contract with the nurses is set to expir

200 rally to celebrate unionization of Nova Southeastern custodians

Sun-Sentinel: 200 rally to celebrate unionization of Nova Southeastern custodians

Chanting in Spanish, English and Creole, custodians who work at Nova Southeastern University rallied Thursday to celebrate this week’s vote to join a labor union.

Vermont: Adjuncts Vote Down Union Drive at Community College of Vermont

Burliington Free Press: Adjuncts Vote Down Union Drive at Community College of Vermont

Faculty at the Community College of Vermont voted decisively Wednesday against joining a union.

The 260-144 decision against joining the American Federation of Teachers ended a 2 and a half-year campaign by some faculty to bolster support for a union. Organizers had cited a lack of job security, inadequate pay and no health benefits as drivers of the campaign.

California Faculty Association FAQs

Fresno State News: CFA Bargaining: Frequently Asked Questions

Does the CSU offer include funds for Service Salary Increases for faculty?
The CSU proposal provides a 1 percent salary pool for an incentive/equity program. If we get the funding contemplated in the Compact with the Governor and an additional 1 percent augmentation for compensation, the proposal then allows the CFA to choose whether it wants to use all of the remaining available funds in each year for either:

A General Salary Increase (GSI) for all employees or

A 2.65 percent Service Salary Increase (SSI) for eligible employees and a GSI for all employees reduced by 1 percent to fund the SSI

Here are the specific annual GSI/SSI options available to the CFA:

A 4 percent GSI or a 3 percent GSI and 2.65 percent SSI in FY 2006/07

A 5.53 percent GSI or a 4.53 percent GSI and 2.65 percent SSI in FY 2007/08

A 5.84 percent GSI and 2.65 percent SSI in FY 2009/10

Illinois: SIUC faculty discusses contract negotiations

The Southern Illinoisan: SIUC faculty discusses contract negotiations

While striking is always a legal option, the vice president of the Southern Illinois University Carbondale Faculty Association said no one has ever mentioned taking such action as the union and administration work through a stall in the latest round of contract talks.

CSU Faculty association: Stop the Rip-offs

The State Hornet: Faculty association: Stop the Rip-offs

Almost a year after receiving a 3.5 percent raise, California State University faculty members are still fighting for better pay.

Maine: UMS, faculty union reach tentative deal

Sun Journal: UMS, faculty union reach tentative deal

he union representing University of Maine System faculty has reached a tentative contract deal. Only the union representing the system’s support staff now is without a contract.

Michigan: Oakland University, professors union reach tentative deal

The Detroit News: Oakland University, professors union reach tentative deal

Leaders from Oakland University and its faculty union reached a tentative labor agreement late Tuesday that will ensure professors will be in class Wednesday for the first day of school, according to the university.

Members of the American Association of University Professors were expected to boycott their classes if the ongoing negotiations with the university had failed to yield a contract. But the three-year agreement means all classes will be held, and all faculty are expected to report to class to teach, according to the university.

Under the tentative contract posted on AAUP’s Web site, professors will receive raises of 3.2 percent, 3.25 percent and 3.3 percent over the next three years and the minimum salaries will increase from $27,041 to $33,000 for this school year. Health insurance co-pays will increase from $10 to $20. Retiree benefits from one Medicare plan will be eliminated and the Medigap program will be phased out.

California: Hartnell faculty members protest

The Monterey Herald: Hartnell faculty members protest

Thirty Hartnell College faculty members picketed in front of a Salinas business owned by the president of the college’s board of trustees to protest stalled contract negotiations.

The action also was staged to draw attention to a recent independent report that called on Hartnell administrators to increase faculty wages and benefits.

Faculty members arrived in front of the parking lot at McShane’s Nursery & Landscape Supply on Monterey-Salinas Highway a little after 3:30 p.m. Friday. However, board of trustees president Steve McShane was nowhere to be seen. His staff said he was on his way back to Salinas from Denver. He could not be reached Friday for a comment.

British University Lecturers Approve Contract, Ending Labor Dispute

UCU: HE members vote in favour of pay deal

UCU members have voted by a substantial majority in favour of a pay deal that increases salaries for academic and related staff by 10.37% over the next two years.

The third year of the deal provides a minimum increase of 2.5% and further negotiations when an independent review of university finances has reported.

British lecturers approve contract by wide margin

British lecturers approve contract by wide margin

College lecturers in the UCU have voted overwhelmingly to accept a pay offer from their employers for the next academic year.

UCU today announced the result of its ballot of its members in further education colleges: 80% of those voting voted to accept the pay offer.

Barry Lovejoy, head of Further Education at UCU said: ‘Our members have accepted this deal as the best achievable through negotiation. The settlement of the dispute offers the prospect of industrial relations peace for the sector but we expect employers to play their part and honour this deal in full.

‘In particular the 140 colleges who have still to implement the modernised pay scales agreed over two years ago should pay particular heed to the clause in the agreement that recommends local talks on this take place with trade unions.

‘We expect all such colleges to take up the opportunity to reach agreement before march next year on the process of introducing the new pay scales bringing lecturers pay closer to that of schoolteachers.’

British Columbia: Teachers settle at last minute for 16% over 5 years

Vancouver Sun: Teachers settle at last minute for 16% over 5 years

Contract agreement just before midnight deadline means BCTF members will get $4,000-a-person signing bonus from provinceThe B.C. Teachers’ Federation has signed a tentative contract giving its members a 16-per-cent salary hike over five years and holding out promise of labour peace this fall in public schools.

The deal also includes an enhanced signing bonus of $4,000 a teacher.

“It’s not everything we wanted for our members, but it’s a significant step,” said BCTF president Jinny Sims.

Sims said she would have preferred a shorter deal, but added, “Sometimes you have to make compromises.”

The deal was announced late Friday night, just hours before the government’s offer of a signing bonus was due to expire.

The teachers, like other public sector union workers, were eligible for $3,700 bonus if they inked a new contract before their old deal expired at midnight, although teachers negotiated a larger bonus.

Sims said she would have liked to address teacher workload and class size and composition in a more significant way, but suggested the union will continue working for those improvements.

“There are many ways to effect change besides the negotiating table,” she said.

Teachers will vote in September throughout the province to ratify the tentative agreement. The BCTF executive will recommend they accept it.

Hugh Finlayson, chief executive officer of the B.C. Public School Employers’ Association, said he thinks it is a good agreement for teachers and taxpayers.

“I think this is a very, very positive move for public education,” he said. “There was a lot of goodwill expressed on both sides, and we have something that we be used to build a strong and effective relationship between the BCTF and ourselves.”

Before Friday’s deal, the union had been asking for a 19-per-cent wage hike over three years while the employer had countered with 10 per cent over four years.

Teachers had given their union a strike mandate, and job action had been expected in September. Last fall, the BCTF shut down schools for 10 days in an illegal strike.

The two sides hadn’t negotiated an agreement since provincial bargaining was introduced for the education sector more than a dozen years ago.

Earlier Friday, Sims played down the importance of the signing bonus, although it was obviously a significant factor in the last-minute push to reach a deal before the union’s contract expired.

“We really would like to get a settlement done by tonight because I think the students, the parents, the teachers — everybody — wants to have a sense of stability as they go into the fall,” she said outside negotiations at a downtown Vancouver hotel.

The main sticking point in the dispute was wages. The employers’ association, the bargaining agent for school boards, had said the BCTF proposal for a 19-per-cent salary increase and improved benefits would increase education costs by 38 per cent — or $2 billion — over three years. The union disputed that calculation but did not provide its own figures.

Before the settlement with teachers, B.C. Finance Minister Carole Taylor said a total of 136 agreements had been reached with public sector unions, covering 261,798 employees. The contracts, which extend to 2010, include settlements with support staff in all 69 school districts.

Illinois: SIUC faculty in contract negotiations yet again

The Southern: SIUC faculty in contract negotiations yet again

CARBONDALE – Best-case scenario: Faculty members will have a new, agreed-upon contract by the time they return to Southern Illinois University Carbondale this fall.

The worst case – the $20,000 the university spent preparing an amicable system of bargaining goes to pot and negotiations degenerate into a professors’ strike, as nearly happened in 2003.

Florida: Faculty, BCC set to agree on deal

Florida Today: Faculty, BCC set to agree on deal

Putting a bitter year of salary negotiations behind them, Brevard Community College and its full-time professors today expect to reach a tentative contract agreement for the coming school year.

Ontario college teachers get 15.3% raise and workload study

Faculty members at community colleges in Ontario will receive a 15.3 percent raise over four years, 2.7 percentage points more than a previous offer from the province’s colleges, under an arbitrator’s ruling, The Toronto Star reported. The arbitrator also ordered further study of workload and class size issues. In March, the faculty union and the colleges agreed to abide by an arbitrator’s ruling to end a strike by most professors.

Janitors at the University of Miami elected overwhelmingly to unionize with the Service Employees International Unio

SEIU: Janitors at the University of Miami elected overwhelmingly to unionize with the Service Employees International Unio

By an overwhelming majority of janitors who clean the University of Miami have elected to form a union with SEIU according to the American Arbitration Association, which certified and made public today the results of the workers’ decision. A nine-week strike by the janitors, who are employed by the national cleaning firm UNICCO, drew national attention and support from an impressive coalition of religious leaders and community supporters including students and faculty at the University of Miami, elected officials, and national figures such as Sen. John Edwards, Teamsters President Jimmy Hoffa, and civil rights leader Charles Steele, Jr. of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference.

Oregon: EOU union reaches a deal

Corvallis Gazette-Times: EOU union reaches a deal

The faculty union at Eastern Oregon University reached a tentative agreement on a revised contract, likely preventing the first-ever strike at a state university in Oregon.

The union, Associated Academic Professionals, will vote to ratify the deal Tuesday.

“We achieved some justice,” said union president Greg Monahan.

The EOU faculty contract expires June 30, 2007. However, the contract has a reopener clause that allows salary and other portions of the contract to be renegotiated. Mindful of Eastern Oregon’s status as the lowest-paying among the Oregon University System schools, the union had asked for salary increases.