Category Archives: Unions

Arbitrator Rules Against Prof Who Didn’t Want Extra Course

Inside Higher Ed: Arbitrator Rules Against Prof Who Didn’t Want Extra Course

The University of Florida did not violate collective bargaining rules by requiring a professor to teach an additional course, an independent arbitrator has concluded. Florence Babb, an endowed professor and graduate coordinator of the university’s Center for Women’s Studies and Gender Research, challenged Florida’s decision to change her teaching load, saying her employment agreement stipulated that she would only be required to teach one course each semester. Given significant budget challenges, Florida officials increased Babb’s teaching requirements. Babb is now required to teach three courses over the spring and fall semesters, in addition to carrying out her duties as graduate coordinator for the women’s studies center. Ben Falcigno, an arbitrator who reviewed the case, based his decision on Babb’s 2004 appointment letter. The letter states that the “normal” course load for Babb would be two courses a year, but Falcigno concluded current budget constraints constitute “abnormal” conditions that allow the university to increase Babb’s teaching requirements. Babb was represented by the United Faculty of Florida, a statewide union affiliated with the National Education Association and the American Federation of Teachers. Pradeep Kumar, who represented Babb for the union, said the arbitration ruling is binding and won’t be appealed. Babb could not be reached for comment.

Scrutiny and Standards for Branch Campuses

Inside Higher Ed: Scrutiny and Standards for Branch Campuses

The growing trend of North American colleges creating branches abroad threatens to erode the quality of higher education and to undercut the rights of faculty members, according to a statement issued Wednesday by the American Association of University Professors and the Canadian Association of University Teachers.

AAUP Urges Faculty Role in Protecting Workers’ Rights at Overseas Campuses

The Chronicle: AAUP Urges Faculty Role in Protecting Workers’ Rights at Overseas Campuses

The American Association of University Professors and its Canadian counterpart jointly issued a statement on Wednesday calling on colleges with campuses abroad to protect the rights of overseas workers and give their faculty more say in planning foreign programs.

Hamas wins teachers union elections for UN schools in Gaza

Jerusalem Post: Hamas wins teachers union elections for UN schools in Gaza

Hamas supporters scored a victory in elections for the school teachers’ union of the United Nations Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA) that were held in the Gaza Strip on Wednesday.
Palestinians pick up bags of…

Palestinians pick up bags of flour at a United Nations food aid distribution center in Beit Lahiya, northern Gaza Strip.
Photo: AP
SLIDESHOW: Israel & Region | World

However, the rival PLO list won a majority of votes for two other UNRWA workers groups: the employees’ and the services’ unions.

NYC: Teachers at two charter schools want out of teachers’ union

Gotham Schools: Second set of KIPP teachers strike back, separating from union

Teachers at two New York City KIPP charter schools today asked state labor officials to sever their ties from the city teachers union, in petitions signed by every single teacher at the two schools. The move is a powerful response to efforts by teachers at another KIPP school in Brooklyn, KIPP AMP, who in the past few months have sought to join the politically powerful union, the United Federation of Teachers.

Teachers at KIPP Infinity and KIPP Academy charter schools, considered the two premier members of the high-profile charter network’s New York City branch, sent the petitions. The schools’ affiliations with the union were loose to begin with: KIPP Academy is represented by the union only because it was one of the city’s original charter schools, and it could only transition to charter status on the condition that it remained represented by the teachers union, and KIPP Infinity teachers are represented by the union only in order to get health benefits through the union’s services, KIPP leaders have told me.

New Adjunct-Faculty Union Gets a Name

The Chronicle News Blog: New Adjunct-Faculty Union Gets a Name

The nascent national voice for contingent faculty members now has a name: The New Faculty Majority.

Adjuncts have been trying to form a national union and met in a teleconference at the end of February to hash out preliminary details. This past Sunday, during another call, the 18 members of the organizing committee picked “The New Faculty Majority” as their calling card, with a subtitle: The National Coalition for Adjunct and Contingent Equity. Nearly 70 percent of professors at the nation’s colleges and universities work off the tenure track.

India: Teachers’ union demands suspended DAV professors be reinstated

IndianExpress.com: Teachers’ union demands suspended DAV professors be reinstated

Chandigarh: The Chandigarh District Council of Punjab and Chandigarh College Teachers’ Union (PCCTU) organised a dharna in Sector 17 on Saturday in support of the suspended office-bearers of the DAV College Teachers’ Union: president A Taneja, secretary Anil Sarwal and staff secretary Avanindra Chopra.

Florida: TCC faculty still want union representation

Tallahassee Democrat: TCC faculty still for union representation

A union update, the state’s economic shortfalls and federal stimulus dollars will dominate discussion at Monday’s Tallahassee Community College trustee board meeting — scheduled for 4 p.m. at the administration building.

The union activity, for example, is at a standstill. It’s been about two months since trustees unanimously agreed not to recognize United Faculty of Florida as the union representing the college’s 180 faculty members.

CUPE Ontario members back boycott of Israeli universities

CBC: CUPE Ontario members back boycott of Israeli universities

Delegates at a Canadian Union of Public Employees conference in Windsor, Ont., have voted in favour of a resolution to boycott Israeli universities to protest against Israel’s recently ended offensive in Gaza.

An NLRB Victory for Grad Employees

The Chronicle: An NLRB Victory for Grad Employees

cross-posted from howtheuniversityworks.com

Last week’s appointment of Wilma Liebman to chair the NLRB is extremely welcome news to graduate employees and other academic workers.

The author of a scathing dissent to the Bush mob’s truculent Brown decision, Liebman adds serious credibility to hopeful interpretations of the Cabinet-level nomination of Hilda Solis.

Unions: Beyond the numbers game

newunionism.net: Beyond the numbers game

We’ve said it before and we’ll say it again… the trade union movement is no longer in decline! Earlier we reported that from 1997 to 2003 it grew in more countries than not*. Since discovering this we have been collecting further data (see below) and measuring the trend and extent of change. Thanks to ongoing help from our readers, we can now update our report of 2007.

Ontario: Faculty mulls joining OPSEU

The Windsor Star: Faculty mulls joining OPSEU

Part-time and sessional faculty members from St. Clair College campuses in Windsor, Wallaceburg and Chatham will be voting on whether to join Ontario Public Service Employees Union next Monday.

Ontario: Part-time faculty to decide if they’ll join union

The Kingston Whig Standard: Part-time faculty to decide if they’ll join union

St. Lawrence college’s part-time and sessional faculty members in Kingston, Brockville and Cornwall are set today to take part in what is touted to be the largest union vote in Ontario history.

They will vote to decide whether they will join the Ontario Public Service Employees Union.

CUPE Ontario restates position on boycott of academic institutions

CUPE Ontario restates position on boycott of academic institutions

January 14, 2009

TORONTO, Ont. – Welcoming a statement issued earlier today by the national officers of the Canadian Union of Public Employees, CUPE Ontario President Sid Ryan said his division has been saying for over a week now that the proposed international boycott will focus on Israeli academic institutions, not individuals

Ontario union calls for ban on Israeli professors

National Post: Ontario union calls for ban on Israeli professors

Ontario’s largest university workers’ union is proposing a ban on Israeli academics teaching in the province’s universities, in a move that echoes previous attempts to boycott goods and services from the Jewish state.

Ontario union wants ban on Israeli academics

The Globe and Mail: Ontario union wants ban on Israeli academics

A proposed resolution by a major Ontario union to ban Israeli academics at the province’s universities has sparked a bitter debate between leaders on both sides over an Israeli attack on a Gaza university.

Union at Ontario Universities Proposes Boycott of Israeli Professors

The Chronicle News Blog: Union at Ontario Universities Proposes Boycott of Israeli Professors

The Canadian Union of Public Employees in Ontario, the largest labor union representing staff members at the province’s universities, plans to introduce a resolution at its conference next month to ban Israeli academics from teaching, speaking, or doing research at Ontario universities if they do not first condemn Israeli actions in Gaza.

The union, which represents teaching and research assistants and other members of the support staff at many universities, says the proposal is a response to the bombing on December 29 that damaged the Islamic University of Gaza. An Israeli army spokeswoman said the bombed buildings had been used as “a research and development center for Hamas weapons,” referring to the terrorist group that governs the Gaza Strip.

Virginia: UVA staff union will shut down

Charlottesville News: UVA staff union will shut down

Not enough members, says parent union

In May 2002, Jan Cornell quit her job as an editor at UVA’s School of Continuing and Professional Studies to become a full-time union organizer for the Communications Workers of America (CWA). She later became the president of the Staff Union at UVA (SUUVA).

But as of January 1, Cornell will be unemployed. CWA has cut SUUVA’s funding for failing to add new members.

Ontario: CUPE working to gain student support to increase its clout

The Globe and Mail: CUPE working to gain student support to increase its clout

Union leaders, working to set the stage for provincewide bargaining at Ontario universities in 2010, planned to gain student support for their cause with campus barbecues, pub nights and protests against rising tuition fees, internal planning documents show.

The union strategy, developed by a group within the Canadian Union of Public Employees, calls for contracts of CUPE workers to expire at the same time as a way to increase bargaining clout.

The demand for such a two-year deal is a central issue in the strike at York University, which has halted classes for 50,000 students since Thursday. That dispute involves teaching assistants, contract faculty and graduate assistants who are CUPE members.

Ontario: Unions lose ‘bargaining clout’ in hard times

Toronto Star: Unions lose ‘bargaining clout’ in hard times

Faltering economy to keep lid on wage hikes

For 42,000 Ontario government employees who started contract talks last week, negotiations likely couldn’t have come at a worse time.

The global financial crisis that has laid waste to stock markets and brought banking giants to their knees also is hitting government coffers.