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Education United States

Successful Strike at University of California Sparks Organizing Surge Among US Academic Workers (msn.com) 55

An anonymous reader shares this report from the Los Angeles Times: The University of California strike is over, culminating last month in significant improvements in wages and working conditions after 48,000 teaching assistants, tutors, researchers and postdoctoral scholars walked off their jobs in the nation's largest labor action of academic workers. But the effects of the historic strike still reverberate across the nation, helping energize an unprecedented surge of union activism among academic workers that could reshape the teaching and research enterprise of American higher education.

In 2022 alone, graduate students representing 30,000 peers at nearly a dozen institutions filed documents with the National Labor Relations Board for a union election. They include USC, Northwestern, Yale, Johns Hopkins, the University of Chicago, Boston University and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Caltech plans to officially kick off its organizing campaign this month, and other academic researchers are working to form unions at the University of Alaska, Western Washington University, the National Institutes of Health and such influential think tanks as the Brookings Institution and Urban Institute.

A confluence of several factors has propelled the burst of labor activism: disaffection with rising inflation, unaffordable housing, limited healthcare, growing student debt, university treatment of academic workers during the pandemic, and a more union-friendly Biden administration. But students and labor experts also point to the influence of the UC strike, which drew national attention by marshaling four UAW bargaining units on all 10 campuses and the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory to pull off a massive walkout that shut down classes, suspended research, roiled finals and upended grading — ultimately winning some of the largest wage gains ever secured by academic workers.

In the article there's examples of stipends recently increasing at other universities, either as a result of student strikes or the need "to remain competitive" in attracting top talent.

A Cornell senior lecturer/director of labor education research also cites some interesting statistics from a 2021 Gallup poll: 77% of people between the ages of 18 and 34 support unions — the largest level of support among all age demographics.
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Successful Strike at University of California Sparks Organizing Surge Among US Academic Workers

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  • by rsilvergun ( 571051 ) on Sunday January 08, 2023 @09:52PM (#63190824)
    But it's tough because there's a shitload of retirees will remain anti-union despite benefiting heavily from Union activity during their working lives. Those retirees vote and they've helped businesses gut to protections for unionization. Nurses in red states are particularly getting hit hard with businesses just outright threatening them if they unionized.
    • by willoughby ( 1367773 ) on Sunday January 08, 2023 @10:18PM (#63190860)

      "... there's a shitload of retirees will remain anti-union despite benefiting heavily from Union activity during their working lives..."

      As a retired Union (IAMAW) member I have to ask: What are you talking about?

      • by ranton ( 36917 )

        "... there's a shitload of retirees will remain anti-union despite benefiting heavily from Union activity during their working lives..."

        As a retired Union (IAMAW) member I have to ask: What are you talking about?

        He is likely referring to while over 2/3rds of those age 18-29 think unions have a positive effect on the country, less than half of those over 65 feel the same way. He is obviously being far too general with his remarks, with a significant amount of hyperbole.

        • "... there's a shitload of retirees will remain anti-union despite benefiting heavily from Union activity during their working lives..."

          As a retired Union (IAMAW) member I have to ask: What are you talking about?

          He is likely referring to while over 2/3rds of those age 18-29 think unions have a positive effect on the country, less than half of those over 65 feel the same way. He is obviously being far too general with his remarks, with a significant amount of hyperbole.

          So to you, over 27 million people is not "a shitload"? Pray tell us where "shitload" begins in your lexicon so we can not give a fuck

        • 2/3rds is a big deal. Especially in light of the constant barrage of anti-union propaganda. You have billions being spent to make those 2/3rds hate and fear unions. That kinda money usually gets results.
        • As someone that was a Teamster when I was young I suspect that the actual answer is quite different. People that have never been in a union think that they are a good idea. People that have been in a union, in this case, old people, know that they suck. They especially suck for young, ambitious people, or people who are exceptionally, skilled, intelligent, or experienced. Coincidentally these are exactly the sort of people that most businesses want to hire.

          As an example, when I was a Teamster I paid a

      • Re: (Score:1, Troll)

        by rsilvergun ( 571051 )
        If you run around unions circles it's not going to make much sense but there's a lot of anti-union sentiment in America. Especially among IT workers who have never had unions and didn't really need them because of the tech booms. It's only in the last few years with the huge influx of cheap labor from overseas that IT workers are really starting to see themselves screwed and the older IT workers have generally moved into management roles of one kind or another so they don't really notice it. You think they
        • You think they would since 60 or 70% of their teams are here on work visas from India but well they don't.

          There's a lot of ego involved in not seeing it. It's like the myth of the self-made man. Mostly people in tech are simply adequate and placed to have been bourne up by a massive boom. But what kind of a narrative is that? You're the middle of the pack, but lucky with circumstance.

          It's a much nicer story to think of yourself as an exceptional individual, who through your own brilliant cunning have become

      • As a retired Union (IAMAW) member I have to ask: What are you talking about?

        Shitload doesn't mean all. It doesn't even mean most, just in this context, a lot. When it comes to politics, a significant majority is all that's required to make a big difference.

    • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

      by ranton ( 36917 )

      You are in a massive bubble if you think no working adults are anti-union. You do realize votes for unions are still both being won and lost, and those losses are because of the votes of working adults, don't you?

      If you're actually curious, a little over half [pewresearch.org] of working age adults think unions have a positive effect on the country. Since one of our two primary parties is so anti-union, that is still a decent number, but no where near all working adults

      You appear to have no idea just how strong the anti-unio

      • Perhaps I misunderstood or it was written poorly but it read like he was saying retired Union members have flipped and were now anti-union. If that's so, I haven't met any.

        This discussion is boring.

      • You appear to have no idea just how strong the anti-union feelings are in this country.

        There are very, very good reasons for this feeling in education. The basic root problem is that there are separate unions for educators and administrators, and administrators are the ones fucking over the schools big-time. Not only do they tend to command outsized salaries themselves (why should executives make more than even the most highly paid educators?) but they tend to contract in more overpaid executive staff which further drains the coffers. Hiring one ed consultant for a year might well cost as muc

      • not because people don't want a Union. And gallop says 2/3rds [gallup.com] support Unions. You're numbers are out of date. The rapid retiring of the baby boomers means surging support among working Americans for Unions. It's not a surprise. Younger generations make a fraction what the boomers made. One of the great tricks the 1% did was make sure they took care of the boomers while they laid the groundwork to screw Gens XMZ
    • But it's tough because there's a shitload of retirees will remain anti-union despite benefiting heavily from Union activity during their working lives. Those retirees vote...

      ...while the working demographic most impacted by anti-union mentalities refuses to get off their ass and vote. Also known as how you address that problem.

      Nurses in red states are particularly getting hit hard with businesses just outright threatening them if they unionized.

      Patients dying due to lack of proper staffing at a hospital, can generate billions in lawsuits. We'll see who actually has the power to threaten someone out of existence.

      The certified LPN/RN can throw their resume with a rock in any random direction and land a much needed job right now, while the greedy anti-union hospital administrator that threatened

    • ORLY? Clearly, you've never had to deal with them. Try doing a trade show in a non-right-to-work state without it costing a large fortune. Want to plug something into a power strip? You can't do that yourself. You have to put in a work order, wait around for hours for the union guy to show up, watch while two other guys stand there supervising, and feel your wallet get lighter during the process.

      • i had to wait 6 hours for a union goon to move a ladder 3 feet to the left once when i was working in theater. It was an abolute nightmare anytime i had to work in NYC or westchester
        I learned quickly that sometimes you just gotte be "clumsy" oops, i tripped and knocked down that ladder, ill put it back (3 feet to the left)
      • Flashback to Comdex, and being unable to power up our display until the Union guy came over and plugged in our power supply.
      • ORLY? Clearly, you've never had to deal with them. Try doing a trade show in a non-right-to-work state without it costing a large fortune. Want to plug something into a power strip? You can't do that yourself. You have to put in a work order, wait around for hours for the union guy to show up, watch while two other guys stand there supervising, and feel your wallet get lighter during the process.

        Try working in a university and realizing that you're severely underpaid and management is trash because the board has effectively been captured by a handful of rich donors.

        Sure you can quit, but that means you and your family moving to another city or maybe even another country because of how the academic job market is designed.

        Some professions probably shouldn't be unionized, others, like academia, need strong unions because of the market structure.

    • having worked side by side with unions over multiple industries, I can tell you I am much happier not in the unions . I do believe unions were needed in the past, however today they (generally based on my interactions with them) are no more than a useless bureaucracy that enables bad employees to remain in their jobs while making it more difficult for the avg to good employees to get promoted. This may not be true in all industries, but in the auto industry, the stage and theater industry and the IT industr
    • I'm in a union. I'm anti-union. The union staff are absolute idiots. Example: they once sent a union steward to a planning meeting for network security measures-2FA, etc. They union steward, a Janitor, didn't like that they'd have to do extra things to login. He thought it wasn't necessary. Don't even get me started on massively lazy co-workers who cannot be fired.
  • Why is this on Slashdot ? How is it Technology related ?

    I used to visit this site multiple times a day. Jesus how it's fallen.

    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by rsilvergun ( 571051 )
      This is a site for nerds. Nerds are kind of big on education. And these are University employees. A lot of people here on this forum have probably worked as a tutor or a TA for a university. So yeah this is very much in line with this website.

      Not everything that's news for nerds is gadgets and programming.
      • We also tried to get a union also when I was a grad student. Most of it wasn't to get more pay, but to be treated like employees; ability to get a day off, not being required to work until 2am (yes, one prof of a friend was that way), etc.

    • Yes, yes.

      But how IS Roger Federer?
    • by skam240 ( 789197 )

      I used to visit this site multiple times a day. Jesus how it's fallen.

      No, Slashdot has always had people whining because this or that post didn't meet their personal definition of what Slashdot should be.

  • Effectively that is what the president of the UC said 3 years ago, but the pandemic delayed the reckoning.
  • I'm glad to see all these parasites are doing their part for raise the cost of education even further.
    • Re:That's great (Score:5, Insightful)

      by GFS666 ( 6452674 ) on Sunday January 08, 2023 @11:21PM (#63190930)

      I'm glad to see all these parasites are doing their part for raise the cost of education even further.

      Vs. the College President parasites who continue to add college administrators, jack up college pricing because the US government is allowing students to borrow money and take on huge amounts of debt that will cripple their ability to contribute to the wider economy and contribute to the eroding of the middle class AND expects a serf class (graduate students) to continue to do nothing and let the colleges f*ck them over by purposely overworking them for its own benefit?

      I much rather prefer that the college serfs fight for their freedom this way. I've seen first hand what happens when there is not an outlet for this dis-satisfaction. I went to San Diego State University in the middle 90's. We had a graduate student who killed 3 Professors (2 of whom I personally knew) because of the stress inflicted on the program. I fully admit he was a bit off and different, but the stress of pursuing a graduate degree I feel put him over the edge. There were also rumors (quite solid ones) that his Graduate advisor was using him as basically slave labor for projects the Professor was doing not related to his graduate program. So don't blame the graduate students for pursuing this. The College Presidents free labor serf class finally rebelled after being pushed too far.

      • Re:That's great (Score:4, Insightful)

        by fph il quozientatore ( 971015 ) on Monday January 09, 2023 @03:00AM (#63191190)
        College presidents? Add football coaches on top of them, that's where most of the money goes unfortunately. As they say, US universities are sport businesses with an education side gig.
        • now look at how much those programs bring in
  • The union makes it very hard to fire incompetent teachers. From https://reason.com/2006/10/01/... [reason.com]
    "The regulations are so onerous that principals rarely even try to fire a teacher. Most just put the bad ones in pretend-work jobs, or sucker another school into taking them. (They call that the "dance of the lemons.") The city payrolls include hundreds of teachers who have been deemed incompetent, violent, or guilty of sexual misconduct. Since the schools are afraid to let them teach, they put them in so-calle

    • The union makes it very hard to fire incompetent teachers. From https://reason.com/2006/10/01/... [reason.com]
      "The regulations are so onerous that principals rarely even try to fire a teacher. Most just put the bad ones in pretend-work jobs, or sucker another school into taking them. (They call that the "dance of the lemons.") The city payrolls include hundreds of teachers who have been deemed incompetent, violent, or guilty of sexual misconduct. Since the schools are afraid to let them teach, they put them in so-called "rubber rooms" instead. There they read magazines, play cards, and chat, at a cost to New York taxpayers of $20 million a year."

      The article is a bit broken, here's the graphic it should have shown on the process: https://reason.com/wp-content/... [reason.com]

    • The union makes it very hard to fire incompetent teachers. From https://reason.com/2006/10/01/... [reason.com]
      "The regulations are so onerous that principals rarely even try to fire a teacher. Most just put the bad ones in pretend-work jobs, or sucker another school into taking them. (They call that the "dance of the lemons.") The city payrolls include hundreds of teachers who have been deemed incompetent, violent, or guilty of sexual misconduct. Since the schools are afraid to let them teach, they put them in so-called "rubber rooms" instead. There they read magazines, play cards, and chat, at a cost to New York taxpayers of $20 million a year."

      That's talking about school teachers, not post-secondary educators.

      Here's the scenario with my partner.

      After graduating high school she did something like 8 or 9 years of education and a 2 year post-doc before starting her actual career as a professor.

      She endured abusive behaviour from her dean until she got some fairly prestigious grants.

      If she didn't get these grants, and perform very well in her job, she wouldn't have been offered tenure, which is basically getting fired. This would effectively mean she'

      • Last year I entered graduate school. For those students who think that this will be easy and fun, I want to say that it is not. It's good if you have a good leader and professor. But often it seems to me that I am doing the most uninteresting and stupid work instead of my professor. Reading volunteering essay [graduateway.com] I understand that many volunteers make this world a better place with their efforts. I dreamed of working on interesting science projects that would change technology, but instead I write reports for a
  • UC Santa Cruz graduate student here. UCSC was the start of the strike due to the rather high cost of living here. The strike wasn't successful because we didn't get a sufficiently good deal, and the strike was terminated early because the other UCs grew tired of the strike and voted to just accept the UC's offer to get things over with. There are allegations of misconduct on the UAW leadership's behalf that influenced the election results, and an appeal is currently being processed.

The last person that quit or was fired will be held responsible for everything that goes wrong -- until the next person quits or is fired.

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