Category Archives: Contingent labor

North Carolina: Faculty job cuts followed retreat at luxury inn

Charlotte Observer: School job cuts followed retreat at luxury inn
RCCC trustees spent weekend at Biltmore

Before Rowan-Cabarrus Community College cut its faculty to help make up a $600,000 budget shortfall, its trustees spent nearly $16,000 on a retreat at Asheville’s posh Inn on Biltmore Estate.

That was 60 percent more than the much larger Central Piedmont Community College spent on its retreat last year. And it was mostly public money.

The state paid $11,018 toward the RCCC retreat last April. Rowan and Cabarrus counties chipped in $2,803 for meal costs beyond what the state paid, college officials said. The college’s foundation paid the nearly $2,000 tab for spouses’ meals.

Maryland Bills Would Hand Labor Rights to TA’s, Adjuncts

The Chronicle: Maryland Bills Would Hand Labor Rights to TA’s, Adjuncts

Legislation has worked for graduate students in other public systems

When graduate students who work as teachers and researchers at the University of Maryland at College Park reignited their efforts to gain collective-bargaining rights this past fall, they knew they would be waging an uphill battle.

Maryland’s labor laws don’t grant those rights to graduate students or adjunct professors, even if they do form a union. And university administrators, who could voluntarily recognize a graduate-student union, have made it known that they are not inclined to do so.

Adjunct Dismissal Questioned

Inside Higher Ed: Adjunct Dismissal Questioned

The Foundation for Individual Rights in Education is taking up the case of June Sheldon, who lost her job teaching science courses at San Jose City College after a student complained about Sheldon’s discussion, in a class on heredity, of the causes of homosexuality. Sheldon was talking about the “nature vs. nurture” debate with regard to why some people are gay, and students complained that her comments suggested that she did not believe anyone could be born a lesbian, and that the way she endorsed the “nurture” side of the debate was offensive. FIRE’s Web site details the case, and provides many of the relevant documents, and FIRE officials noted that Sheldon disputes the way her statements were described by college officials, and maintains that she was describing arguments on both sides of the debate. FIRE’s complaint charges that Sheldon is losing her teaching position in punishment for expressing controversial views that were appropriate for the class topic, and in violation of due process rights. Michael Burke, the president of San Jose City College, noted that Sheldon was an “at will” employee and said she had been granted more rights of review than her contract required. He said she was removed from teaching following an investigation that raised questions about what she was telling her students, and that the process was consistent with college guidelines.

Maryland: Grad Students May Get to Unionize

Washington Post: Grad Students May Get to Unionize
U-Md., Which Doesn’t See Them as Employees, Likely to Oppose Bill

A Montgomery County lawmaker will introduce legislation tomorrow to allow graduate students and adjunct professors at Maryland’s public universities to form unions, setting up a legislative battle over an issue that has hit a nerve at campuses across the nation.

Graduate students at the University of Maryland’s flagship campus in College Park, many of whom hold campus jobs teaching undergraduates or conducting research for faculty, have partnered with national labor unions and hired an Annapolis lobbyist in the campaign to unionize.

New York: A Victory for Adjunct Professors at Pace U.

The Chronicle News Blog: A Victory for Adjunct Professors at Pace U.

A federal appeals court has blocked Pace University’s attempt to limit the size of the bargaining unit for adjunct professors, who are locked in a longstanding battle to negotiate a contract.

The U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit, in an opinion issued last week, agreed with the National Labor Relations Board that the union for part-time faculty members at Pace should include every instructor with a class load of at least three credit hours.

Key Legal Win in Adjunct Union Battle

Inside Higher Ed: Key Legal Win in Adjunct Union Battle

Adjunct professors at Pace University — who have been engaged in a long fight to unionize and negotiate a contract — won a key battle on Friday when a federal appeals court rejected the New York university’s attempt to limit the size of the bargaining unit.

The U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia upheld the actions of the National Labor Relations Board, which had ruled that the adjunct union should have as its members all instructors who met certain minimal teaching requirements (teaching three credit hours). The university had asked the court to restrict membership to those who met those requirements in at least one semester in any two of the previous three academic years — a request that would have eliminated adjuncts from union membership in their first two years working at Pace.

Michigan: Ford CC adjuncts talk union

Detroit News: Ford teachers talk union
Drive moves to election stage for part-timers at college who seek better pay, working conditions.

DEARBORN — Part-time teachers at Henry Ford Community College hope to form a union this spring in an effort to gain higher wages and better working conditions.

Following a national movement to unionize among part-time faculty who increasingly teach heavier workloads for far less money than full-timers, adjunct professors formed an association last spring to explore unionization. The group is affiliated with the American Federation of Teachers-Michigan.

Rethinking Work at MLA

Inside Higher Ed: Rethinking Work

Given that many attendees at the Modern Language Association’s meeting, this year in Chicago, are here for job interviews, it’s no surprise that working conditions for academics are always a hot topic.

At several sessions this year, panelists sought to reframe the way some of those issues are discussed. With many new Ph.D.’s fearing that their careers may be off the tenure track, panelists considered how to draw attention to the inequities of the adjunct system and whether new models — close to tenure but decidedly not the same — should be embraced. And at other sessions, professors raised concern about whether professors on the tenure track are being hurt by the way service requirements are enforced (but not rewarded).

GW Adjunct faculty finalize contract

GWHatchet.com: Adjunct faculty finalize contract

Following months of negotiations with the University, the adjunct faculty union is set to distribute a contract concerning job security, promotions and salaries by mid-December, a union leader said.

Kip Lornell, who is both a union leader and an adjunct music professor, said he is confident the part-time faculty will approve the contract.

Maryland: Payroll Failure At BCCC Leaves Many Teachers Without Pay For 10 Weeks

City Paper: Lessons in Frustration

Payroll Failure At BCCC Leaves Many Teachers Without Pay For 10 Weeks

For ace student and part-time fashion design teacher Meredith Page, Baltimore City Community College seemed like a great opportunity to teach and encourage young women less fortunate than herself.

But after going 10 weeks recently without a contract or pay, Page says she’s fed up after just a year and a half on the job.

“This is the third semester in a row I haven’t been paid on time,” she says. “There’s a different excuse every week. I have a mortgage and bills to pay. The school doesn’t care.”

Rhode Island Part-timers Vote for Union

AAUP: Rhode Island Part-timers Vote for Union

Part-time faculty at the University of Rhode Island voted by a wide margin this week to be represented in collective bargaining by the campus AAUP chapter. The chapter also represents the full time faculty and graduate employees at URI.

Stalemate for Pace U. Adjuncts

Inside Higher Ed: Stalemate for Pace U. Adjuncts

When adjunct faculty members at Pace University voted in 2004 to unionize, they were at the forefront of a movement among part-timers at private colleges across New York in particular, but also at public and private institutions beyond.

Yet, three years later and still without a contract, Pace adjuncts are learning first-hand how difficult getting a first contract can be.

Ontario: OPSEU Wins Union Rights for College Part-Timers

CAUT Bulletin: OPSEU Wins Union Rights for College Part-Timers

Ontario’s governing Liberals are proposing to extend collective bargaining rights to part-time college workers if reelected.

The government has appointed Kevin Whitaker, who chairs the Ontario Labour Relations Board, the College Relations Commission and the Education Relations Commission, to conduct a broad-based review of the Colleges Collective Bargaining Act, said a statement issued last month by Colleges and Universities Minister Chris Bentley.

Ontario is the only province that prohibits most part-time college staff from unionizing.

Adjuncts and God: Why Are 2 Instructors Out of Jobs?

Inside Higher Ed: Adjuncts and God: Why Are 2 Instructors Out of Jobs?

Instructor at Southwestern Community College says he lost job for not taking Bible literally. Colorado AAUP says instructor lost job for taking faith too seriously.

Kentucky: Benefit Concert for Adjuncts Bombs With Critics in College’s Administration

The Courier-Journal: Ex-professor at Ivy Tech files complaint

The liberal arts program at the Ivy Tech Community College campus in Madison remains without a chairman after school officials opted not to bring back the professor who held the job.

Becky Meadows Wilson of Carrollton, Ky., has filed a formal grievance with the college, claiming that her contract with the school was not renewed because of a flap over a concert she was organizing to benefit part-time instructors who work without health benefits.

Ontario to Allow Unionization of College Part Timers

The Ontario government said it would seek legislation that would give part-time workers at colleges in the Canadian province the right to bargain collectively. The government had been under pressure from the National Union of Public and General Employees to allow 16,000 workers at the province’s 24 colleges — which are equivalent to technical and community colleges — to unionize.

Unions for Graduate Students Are Allowed in Cases Involving Foundations Attached to Public Universities

The Chronicle: Unions for Graduate Students Are Allowed in Cases Involving Foundations Attached to Public Universities

Graduate students who work at private, nonprofit research foundations attached to public universities have the right to unionize, according to a recent pair of decisions by the National Labor Relations Board.

The decisions represent a rare expansion of bargaining rights for graduate students under the current labor board, appointed by President Bush, but the expansion is limited: The rulings’ authors took pains to distinguish the research assistants in these cases from graduate teaching assistants at private universities.

The cases involve private research foundations at the State University of New York and the City University of New York.

Washington: UW settlement to give part-timers catch-up raise

The Seattle Times: UW settlement to give part-timers catch-up raise

The University of Washington has settled a class-action lawsuit with part-time faculty, agreeing to pay them $500,000 in merit raises for the past six years.

As part of the settlement, the UW also will give returning part-time instructors a 6 percent pay increase next year, an amount which the university estimated at about $290,000.

The settlement affects nearly 1,000 part-time UW lecturers who have taught at least one quarter for two consecutive years between 2000 and 2007.

Where the adjuncts are

Inside Higher Ed: Where the adjuncts are
Everyone knows that the share of faculty jobs held by part-timers is on the rise. But the share varies by type of institution — and new research points to patterns on which institutions are most likely to be relying on adjuncts.

New research from the Cornell Higher Education Research Center suggests links between size, public/private status, and the relative share of part-time students. But in many cases, the research found exceptions to some of the trends. The study is based on data from the National Center for Education Statistics and was conducted by Xiangmin Liu, a Ph.D. student in the School of Industrial and Labor relations at Cornell University, and Liang Zhang, an assistant professor of public policy and higher education at Vanderbilt University.

The Adjunctification of Antioch

Inside Higher Ed: The Adjunctification of Antioch

Much of the discussion of the planned shutdown of Antioch College at the end of the coming academic year has focused on the unique qualities of the education offered there.

Another shift will also take place with the shutdown — a shift that many professors at the college find sad and ironic. Antioch University — known because of the original undergraduate college as an institution with a strong faculty — will become an institution with five campuses, not one of which will have a tenured faculty member or a tenure system.