British Columbia: Teachers’ union sued

Times Colonist: Teachers’ union sued

A class-action lawsuit has been filed in Victoria seeking damages from the B.C. teachers’ union for their illegal strike last year.

The suit names seven individuals as representatives of the class of people who are claimed to have lost money when teachers walked off the job last fall. It names the British Columbia Teachers’ Federation as defendant.

Detroit teachers OK deal

Detroit Free Press: Detroit teachers OK deal

Detroit Federation of Teachers members have approved a three-year contract with Detroit Public Schools.

The contract avoided a pay cut for teachers, but required union members to pay 10% of their health care benefits.

The agreement also restored salary increases, provides legal assistance to union members and reduces the number of required elementary prep periods from five to four a week for the next two years.

However, the contract freezes teacher pay for one year. It also cuts the district’s budget 2% across the board, meaning reductions in everything from curriculum to facilities and safety budgets. The contract was approved Friday by a vote of 5,401 to 1,714. Officials with the teachers union said 7,115 of its 9,000 members voted at individual schools last week.

The vote comes a couple of weeks after teachers returned to work after a 16-day strike, which began Aug. 28.

Indigenous Teachers Defend ´A Just Cause´

NYC Indymedia.org: Indigenous Teachers Defend ´A Just Cause´

Teachers build and defend thousands of makeshift barricades throughout Oaxaca City

By John Gibler The Herald Mexico/El Universal
 October 07, 2006

OAXACA CITY – Every night streets here become battlefields in waiting. But behind the commandeered city buses, burned trucks, and coils of barbed wire, a group of atypical urban rebels stands guard.

Watching over a barricade where a small altar to the Virgin of Guadalupe rests between tangled wire and sand bags, six women ranging from their early 30s to their late 60s, none taller than 5 feet, huddle around a small fire in the street, wrapped in blankets and without so much as a club in sight.

For over a month these six women, teachers from the southern mountainous region of Oaxaca, have been poised on the front lines of a conflict that has seized this colonial city, paralyzed the state government, and come to dominate national headlines. And while they may not be threatening to a casual passerby, these women’s resolve to defend their barricade is implacable.

“If they kill us, then we were born to die,” says María, a Mixteca indigenous woman who teaches in Mixteco and Spanish in a rural elementary school, a five-hour walk from the nearest road.

“We are not afraid,” she adds, “because we are here defending a just cause.”

RAID BACKFIRES

The conflict in Oaxaca began on May 22 as a teachers strike for better wages and a higher budget to provide impoverished school children with uniforms, breakfasts, and basic school supplies. After refusing to negotiate with the teachers union, Gov. Ulises Ruiz sent the state police into Oaxaca City’s central plaza on June 14 to remove the teachers´ protest camp with tear gas and police batons.

Hundreds were injured in the pitched battle that resulted, and after a few hours the teachers, supported by outraged local residents, forced the police out of town. They have not been back since.

The teachers and members of the Oaxaca People’s Assembly (APPO) that formed after the failed police raid decided to suspend the teachers´ original list of demands and focus all their efforts on forcing the removal of Gov. Ruiz.

Since June 14, they have subjected Oaxaca City to increasingly radical civil disobedience tactics, such as surrounding state government buildings with protest camps, covering the city´s walls with political graffiti, and taking over public and private radio stations.

Their struggle has led to a severe drop in tourism and the economic impact of the empty restaurants and sidewalk cafes has polarized the community, leading many who are sympathetic to the teachers´ cause to clamor for an end to the movement’s grip on the city.

“We do agree with some things the teachers demand, but this is affecting too many people, ” says Mercedes Velasco, a 30-year-old resident who sells banana leaves in the Mercado de Abastos in the southern reaches of the capital.

TENSION INCREASES

The tension shot up in late August when a convoy of armed gunmen opened fire on the protesters´ camp outside Radio Ley, killing 52-year-old Lorenzo Cervantes. From that night on, striking teachers and members of the APPO, have built massive barricades across all the streets surrounding the radio station and other strategic points near protest camps around the city.

Shortly thereafter, the U.S. State Department issued a warning to U.S. citizens considering Oaxaca as a potential vacation spot.

“U.S. citizens traveling to Oaxaca City should consider carefully the risk of travel at this time due to the recent increase in violence there,” states the announcement, which was extended to expire on Oct. 30.

Despite the announcement, there have been no reported incidents of violence against tourists during the conflict.

Since the shooting on Aug. 22, teachers and local citizens take to the streets every night between 10 and 11 p.m. to reinforce their barricades.

Walking the desolate streets at night, fires are visible at every intersection, as figures gather around holding vigil.

The visual impact is alarming: at many barricades men with clubs and Molotov cocktails stand in the shadows with their faces covered by bandanas or cheap surgical masks.

As rumors of a federal police or military intervention intensified this week, teachers and APPO protesters extended their barricades throughout the city, making it impossible to navigate the streets of Oaxaca by automobile at night.

But this is no ordinary battlefront. Rather than tanks making rounds, in this labyrinthine conflict zone one finds instead families winding through the predawn streets, carrying large stew pots filled with steaming coffee and hot chocolate for the night guards.

The barricade guards are at times skittish, but not hostile. They ask pedestrians where they are going, and then tell people walking alone to be careful and not to walk down dark streets.

A well-dressed couple returning home in the middle-class Colonia Reforma gave the barricade guards near their house directions to their back door saying: “if anything happens, our house will be open.”

At the barricade near Niños Héroes Avenue, the six Mixteca and Zapotec women stay up all night discussing their favorite topic: education.

“I have to walk six hours to get to my school,” says Estela, a Mixteca woman who has been teaching in mountainside communities for 30 years, “And then when I get there, I find that half the kids have not had breakfast and the other half don’t have pencils or notebooks. I use my salary to buy these supplies, to prepare bread and tortillas. How do you expect children to learn if they have not had breakfast?”

OFFENDED BY REPRESSION

Estela and the other women expressed outrage and offense at Ruiz´s use of violence to answer their call for a greater education budget, and that outrage fuels their long nights at the barricades.

“Ulises made a mistake when he attacked us on June 14,” says María as she leans away from the smoke of the street fire where she warms her hands. “He thought that he was going to repress a small organization, but the teachers union is large, and resilient.”

Columbia Students Vs. Minutemen Free Speech Dispute Continues to Simmer

Gothamist: Columbia Students Vs. Minutemen Free Speech Dispute Continues to Simmer
In the aftermath of the protest on the night of October 4 against Jim Gilchrist and the racist Minutemen at Roone Arledge auditorium, we want to state clearly: We are proud to send the message to the country that racist and fascist groups are not welcome at Columbia or in New York City.

Full Statement of Columbia Students Who Occupied the Stage

ZNet: Full Statement of Columbia Students Who Occupied the Stage

In the aftermath of the protest on the night of October 4 against Jim Gilchrist and the racist Minutemen at Roone Arledge auditorium, we want to state clearly: We are proud to send the message to the country that racist and fascist groups are not welcome at Columbia or in New York City.

Columbia Students Strategize In Wake of Brawl

inews_ara.gifInfoshop News: Students Strategize In Wake of Brawl

In the immediate aftermath of Wednesday night’s protest against Jim Gilchrist, founder of the Minuteman Project, the University and student groups moved quickly to coordinate their responses to the incident, reconcile differing opinions, and plan their next moves. Gilchrist spoke in Roone Arledge Auditorium on Wednesday night at the invitation of the Columbia University College Republicans. Audience dissent grew throughout the presentation of the introductory speaker, culminating when several protesters stormed the stage. Gilchrist supporters followed, leading to a chaotic brawl and bringing an abrupt end to the event. In an interview on Thursday night, a Student Affairs dean said that officials from Student Affairs and the Office of Multicultural Affairs met with a number of students who had been present at the protest to offer support.

Columbia Investigating Protests That Stopped Speaker

The New York Times: Columbia Investigating Protests That Stopped Speaker

Columbia University officials said today they were investigating what happened Wednesday night when protesters stormed a stage where the founder of a conservative anti-immigration group was trying to deliver an address, an incident that ended in chairs being overturned, and charges that students violated the speaker’s freedom of speech.

Protesters Occupy Gallaudet Classroom Building

Washington Post: Protesters Occupy Gallaudet Classroom Building

Hundreds of protesters took over the main classroom building at Gallaudet University on Thursday night and refused to leave yesterday, demanding that the board of trustees reopen the search for a president.

Support Columbia Students Who Protested the Minutemen

On October 4, the College Republicans at Columbia University hosted Minuteman Project founder Jim Gilchrist. The Minutemen are known for inciting racist violence against immigrants. In an exercise of free speech, students unfurled a banner on the stage reading “No One is Illegal”, prompting audience members to join them on the stage with another banner with the message, “No to Racism”. These peaceful protesters were violently assaulted. Below is their initial statement published the night of the protest as well as a link to a video showing parts of the event. They are now under attack from the
administration and potentially face disciplinary charges.

Please support them by signing the online petition at http://www.petitiononline.com/nominute/petition.html. The students
are also soliciting letters of support and solidarity, which can be sent to them at nominutemen@gmail.com

Statement of the Student Protestors:
We celebrate free speech: for that reason we allowed the Minutemen to speak, and for that same reason we peacefully occupied the stage and spoke ourselves. Our peaceful protest was violently attacked by members of the College Republicans and their supporters, who are the very same people who invited the Minutemen to our campus in the first place. The Minutemen are not a legitimate voice in the debate on immigration. They are a racist, armed militia who have declared open hunting season on immigrants, causing countless hate crimes and over 3000 deaths on the border. Why should exploitative corporations have free passes between nations, but individual people not? No human being is illegal.

-Those who occupied the stage

Links to coverage, including video:
http://media.www.columbiaspectator.com/media/storage/paper865/news/2006/10/05/News/Protestors.Rush.Minutemen-2333693.shtml?sourcedomain=www.columbiaspectator.com&MIIHost=media.collegepublisher.com

http://nyc.indymedia.org/en/2006/10/76890.html

http://www.bwog.net/index.php?page=post&article_id=2265
http://www.bwog.net/index.php?page=post&article_id=2265

September 7 Camp Democracy: Immigrants’ Rights Day
Washington D.C.

Sponsored by National Immigrant Solidarity Network
Location: Between Mall and Constitution Avenue, Between 14 and 15 Streets, Washington D.C.

For More Information: http://www.immigrantsolidarity.org/CampDemocracy/

Tel: (202)595-8990

Yesterday We Marched
Today We Organized
Tomorrow We’ll Achieve Our Dreams and Goals!

==============================================================
National Immigrant Solidarity Network
No Immigrant Bashing! Support Immigrant Rights!
webpage: http://www.ImmigrantSolidarity.org
mail: info@ImmigrantSolidarity.org
New York: (212)330-8172
Los Angeles: (213)403-0131
Washington D.C.: (202)595-8990

Please consider making a donation to the important work of National Immigrant Solidarity Network

Send check pay to:
National Immigrant Solidarity Network/AFGJ

Mail to:
ActionLA / The Peace Center
8124 West 3rd Street, Suite 104
Los Angeles, California 90048
(All donations are tax deductible)

*to join the immigrant Solidarity Network daily news litserv, send e-mail to: isn-subscribe@lists.riseup.net
or visit: http://lists.riseup.net/www/info/isn

*a monthly ISN monthly Action Alert! listserv, go to webpage http://lists.riseup.net/www/info/isn-digest

Please join our following listservs:
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or visit: http://lists.riseup.net/www/info/api-la

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or visit: http://lists.riseup.net/www/info/nyc-immigrantalert

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or visit: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Border01/

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.

Faculty votes no confidence in Carson-Newman president

WATE 6: Faculty votes no confidence in Carson-Newman president

A majority of the faculty at Carson-Newman College Thursday voted no confidence in the leadership of President James Netherton.

The vote of 129-71 was announced by Dr. David Nowell, the senior vice president for advancement and administration.

UW, faith group go to court

Milwaukee Journal Sentinel: UW, faith group go to court

Can religious student organizations in the University of Wisconsin System limit their leadership to students of a particular faith? Can a Christian organization prohibit homosexuals from serving among its leaders?

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.

Virginia: College Students Sue Over Coed Move

Star News: College Students Sue Over Coed Move

A group of students at Randolph-Macon Woman’s College sued the school Friday, challenging its decision to begin admitting men next fall.

New York: Mayor criticizes Columbia students who stormed stage

New York Daily News: Mayor criticizes Columbia students who stormed stage

Mayor Michael Bloomberg said Friday it was an “outrage” that Columbia University students stormed a campus stage while the anti-immigration founder of the Minuteman Project was speaking, and he urged the school’s president to prevent such incidents in the future.

Jury Convicts Former Student of Bribery in Grade-Buying Scandal at Southern U. at Baton Rouge

The Chronicle: Jury Convicts Former Student of Bribery in Grade-Buying Scandal at Southern U. at Baton RougeA former student at Southern University at Baton Rouge was convicted of bribery on Wednesday after a former associate registrar at the university, who had pleaded guilty to accepting thousands of dollars to change grades for dozens of students, testified against her.

Oregon: College president goes on leave after months of campus strife

The Oregonian: College president goes on leave after months of campus strife

Clackamas Community College President Joe Johnson went on leave Monday after months of turmoil among the school’s top leaders.

Ruling Worries Academic Labor

Inside Higher Ed: Ruling Worries Academic Labor

A ruling by the National Labor Relations Board on Tuesday — changing the definition of which workers have enough supervisory roles to be disqualified from collective bargaining — could hurt efforts to unionize faculty members.

New York: When Ugliness Visits a Campus

Inside Higher Ed: When Ugliness Visits a Campus

Every once in awhile on university campuses, the unthinkable, even the unutterable, happens. A scrawled message shows up on a bathroom stall, a religious symbol is defaced — and administrators and faculty members are left to try to contain the fallout and forestall another explosion.

Pace University, in New York, has been plagued by a series of three racially charged incidents, beginning with the discovery of a library-owned copy of a Koran in a toilet on its main campus in Manhattan September 20. Just four days later, a car parked at Pace’s location in the suburb of Briarcliff, N.Y. was found strewn with litter, the word “nigger” written in the condensation on the windshield, and, on September 29, the same racial epithet and a swastika were found scribbled on a bathroom stall door at the Manhattan campus. No suspects have been identified, although campus officials are operating under the assumption that the perpetrators are insiders, students or employees with access to the buildings.