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California faculty from three campuses vote to join SEIU

December 30, 2014 | By |

Adjunct organizing finished 2014 on a high note in California, as more than 900 adjuncts voted to join SEIU at three campuses right before the new year. On Dec. 29, roughly 400 contingent faculty at St. Mary’s College in Moraga and almost 300 at Dominican University in San Rafael voted with sizable majorities to join Local 1021. The following day, faculty members at Otis College of Art and Design voted for their union, making approximately 250 instructors the newest members of SEIU Local 721. “This is an exciting day for the entire Otis community,” said instructor Andrea Bowers. “By forming a union at Otis, we’ll have the ability to advocate for students and our colleagues. We will all benefit from a supported and empowered faculty at all levels, and Otis will be able to maintain its standards of artistic and educational excellence.”

Read more about the growing movement for education and economic justice in the Los Angeles Times.

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December 21, 2014

The National Labor Relations Board Issues Far-Reaching Decision Expanding Union Rights for Faculty Nationwide

December 21, 2014 | By |

In a precedent-setting decision, the National Labor Relations Board affirmed the right of faculty at Pacific Lutheran University to form their union with SEIU Local 925, expanding the ability of faculty at many religiously-affiliated institutions to have a voice in the decisions that matter for their profession and their students.

The Board addressed two Supreme Court cases that universities have cited in blocking faculty unionization. It ruled that the Board doctrine developed under the 1979 Catholic Bishop case — a doctrine which had been invoked by religiously-affiliated schools to block Board jurisdiction — did not preclude the NLRB from taking jurisdiction over the petition filed by contingent faculty at Pacific Lutheran. Second, it ruled that neither full-time nor part-time contingent faculty at PLU have managerial status at the University and therefore could be included in the bargaining unit. In reaching this decision on the managerial status of faculty, the Board revised its framework under the 1980 Supreme Court decision in Yeshiva University, greatly simplifying a complicated, confusing test that was out of step with the realities of the business of higher education. The new tests in these two key areas of law will reverberate across the country, and advance and secure organizing rights for all higher education faculty.

Importantly, the Board cites the “corporatization” of higher education which has dramatically changed how our colleges and universities are run. By acknowledging this new reality, this decision will allow thousands of faculty members to unite their voices and form a union who previously would have faced hurdles in exercising their right to organize under the law.

“Today, institutions of higher learning look increasingly like big businesses because corporate boards and administrations have marginalized the most important job on campus — teaching,” said SEIU International President Mary Kay Henry. “We welcome the NLRB ruling as a step towards justice for faculty and the students they teach.”

“While our journey to form a union began over two years ago, my adjunct and contingent faculty colleagues had been working to address our working conditions long before that,” said Dr. Jane Harty, Lecturer in Music at Pacific Lutheran University. “With the National Labor Relations Board ruling, I hope our administration will finally choose to talk to us about our working conditions rather than continuing to spend tens of thousands of education dollars pursuing an anti-union legal strategy. We are ready to work with them to help PLU be successful in fulfilling its own remarkable mission.”

“This decision is a victory for Pacific Lutheran University faculty, students and for the democratic process at colleges and universities all across the country because it will allow faculty to have a stronger voice to re-focus resources on student learning,” said Henry.

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December 17, 2014

Activists Call on States to Take on For-Profit Colleges

December 17, 2014 | By |

“Activists have turned to state governors in a battle over the fate of students at Corinthian Colleges, the massive for-profit college chain that is in the process of being shuttered by the federal government.”

Adjunct Action/SEIU has partnered with Higher Ed Not Debt to bring greater accountability to the for-profit higher education industry, including delivering a petition today to ECMC in Minnesota calling for students to be protected during the sale of Corinthian College, a for-profit that was sanctioned by the Dept. of Education for major violations.

Read more about the renewed focus on state-level change here.

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December 15, 2014

Minnesotans Calling for Justice Re: For-Profit Corinthian

December 15, 2014 | By |

Corinthian Colleges, a for-profit company which operates 107 colleges under Everest, WyoTech, and Heald brands, is closing or selling their schools after the Department of Education found the company ripped off students by manipulating job placement rates.

One of Corinthian’s holdings, Everest College in Minnesota, falsified job placement rates and tricked students into thousands of dollars of debt, while leaving them without a usable degree. Everest was just bought by ECMC Group, an entity that’s never run a school before and currently makes its money ensuring that students can’t declare bankruptcy on their student loans.

In conjunction with Higher Ed Not Debt and SEIU, on Wednesday Minnesotans will be delivering a petition to the ECMC group calling for justice for Minnesota students.

Sign a petition calling for justice for those students and read more here.

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December 11, 2014

Adjunct Faculty Discuss Union, Future on VPR

December 11, 2014 | By |

Adjunct faculty at three colleges in Vermont, Burlington, St. Michael’s, and Champlain, voted in the past month to form a union with Adjunct Action/SEIU. Today, Genevieve Jacobs, an adjunct faculty member at Champlain College and Sean Witters, a lecturer in the English Department at the University of Vermont, spoke to VPR about their experiences.

Click here to listen to the full interview.

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December 3, 2014

Must Read: Seattle U. Tenured Faculty Member Writes “We Are All Faculty”

December 3, 2014 | By |


Getting to the heart of our movement for higher standards, Dr. Theresa Earenfight’s, a professor at Seattle University, reflects on contingency, budget cuts and transparency, and the future of academic instruction in SU’s social justice publication, The Catalyst.

“I have been thinking about faculty with contingent contracts for well over the last decade, when it became increasingly clear that the President and Provost of Seattle University began to hire an increasing number of faculty with precarious short-term contracts. Of course, SU is not alone in this move. A quick look at recent articles published in both the mainstream press such as The New York Times or specialized publications such as The Chronicle of Higher Education or Inside Higher Ed will reveal a very troubling trend. The arbitrary establishment of a two-tiered faculty has not gone unnoticed by professional organizations, with the lead taken by the Modern Language Association and the American Association of University Professors in trying to stem the tide and protect the integrity of the profession.

Like many colleagues across the country, I have come to conclude that this is bad for all universities, but it is particularly pernicious here at SU. Our very weak faculty governance bodies have made faculty vulnerable to all sorts of initiatives that weaken the university. Faculty can only advise, complain, and simmer while decisions such as the move to Divison-1 athletics to the termination of the German program affect our work, our lives, and the futures of our students.”

Read the rest of the essay here: https://seattleucatalyst.wordpress.com/2014/12/01/we-are-all-adjunct/

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December 1, 2014

St. Michael’s Adjuncts Vote to Form a Union

December 1, 2014 | By |

Adjunct professors at St. Michael’s College in Vermont today voted strongly in favor of forming a union with SEIU/Adjunct Action. By a margin of 64% in favor (46 yes to 26 no), the adjuncts at St. Michael’s join their colleagues at Champlain College and Burlington College, who voted overwhelmingly to form adjunct unions at their respective colleges last week.

The adjuncts at St. Michael’s join their colleagues at Champlain College and Burlington College who last week voted overwhelmingly to form adjunct unions. Taken together, the three votes represent a significant step forward for adjuncts in Vermont who are working to improve the working conditions of the increasing numbers of part-time and contingent faculty in higher education in the state and across the country.

“We join all of our colleagues around country in raising standards, in knowing each other and being able to work towards a better life for all of us,” said Sharyn Layfield, an adjunct faculty member at St. Michael’s College. “I’m 65 and started in teachings in my 20s, and for me this is a culmination of a life’s work. I’ve always been an adjunct. I’m not sure how much longer I’ll be doing this, but it means a future for other people who do what I’ve been doing all this time. It’s important to me to see this go on. It’s a movement forward.”

Throughout the campaign, adjunct faculty at St. Michael’s received an outpouring of support from Vermonters. Senator Bernie Sanders sent a letter of support to the faculty at the college, as did a number of city council members, state legislators, and the AFT/AAUP-led union representing faculty at the University of Vermont. Hundreds of students and community members signed a petition supporting the organizing efforts, which was delivered to school administrators.

“With the victory today, adjuncts at St. Michael’s can be more focused as a group, as we join together and move forward,” said Anne Tewksbury-Frye, an adjunct faculty member at St. Michael’s College and Champlain College. “The union will serve to improve best practices, and help us learn as educators and teachers in a way that will benefit our students directly. And that’s our goal — to improve education for our students at these very fine colleges and universities.”

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November 25, 2014

Students at Bankrupt For-Profit Deserve Better

November 25, 2014 | By |

This week, Corinthian Colleges, a for-profit higher education company, announced the controversial sale of 56 campuses to one of the Department of Education’s largest loan guarantors and debt collectors, Educational Credit Management Corporation. Earlier this year Corinthian nearly went bankrupt and the Department of Education decided it was too big to fail. Through emergency aid worth $35 million, the Department of Education saved Corinthian from financial collapse. In exchange, Corinthian agreed to sell or close the 97 campuses in an orderly manner.

Unfortunately, the company purchasing 56 Corinthian campuses, ECMC, is no saint itself. The NY Times reported accusations that the guarantor engaged in “ruthless” collection tactics and Bloomberg reported criticism that the collection agency is “reaping a bonanza from former students’ pain.”

As concerned educators and members of a coalition to build a just and more equitable environment for students, we have two simple demands:

  1. Students should have a choice. We believe students should be given an opt-out option with loan forgiveness;
  2. ECMC should not get a “Clean Break.” In efforts to provide justice and relief for students, the acquirer should carry the responsibility for pending investigations against Corinthian Colleges.

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November 24, 2014

Vermont Adjunct Faculty Vote to Form a Union

November 24, 2014 | By |

Adjunct professors at Burlington and Champlain colleges have voted overwhelmingly to join adjunct faculty at schools across the country in SEIU/Adjunct Action, with 80% at Champlain College (118 to 30) and 85% at Burlington College (23 to 4) adjunct faculty voting yes to a union. The vote was a significant step forward for adjuncts in Vermont who are working to improve the working conditions of the increasing numbers of part-time and contingent faculty in higher education in the state and across the country.

Over 40 percent of faculty at Vermont’s private, non-profit colleges and universities work part time and 72 percent of all faculty are not on the tenure track. Adjunct faculty, now the majority of teaching faculty across the country, typically have no job security, no benefits and low pay that forces adjuncts to string together jobs at multiple colleges and universities to make ends meet. At the same time, revenues and tuition have increased steadily over the last two decades while spending on instruction has declined – and it’s adjuncts and their deeply-in-debt students who are suffering as a result.

Throughout the campaign, adjunct faculty at both schools received an outpouring of support from Vermonters. Senator Bernie Sanders sent a letter of support, as did a number of city council members, state legislators, and the AFT/AAUP-led union representing faculty at the University of Vermont. Hundreds of students and community members signed a petition supporting the organizing efforts, which was delivered to school administrators.

“Ever since we started the process of forming our union, I’ve been feeling more and more empowered. I’m already noticing that we adjuncts are talking to each other a lot more, and we have a much greater sense of collegiality. I no longer feel marginalized on campus,” said Betsy Allen-Pennebaker, who teaches at Champlain College. “I think that this victory today is a wonderful thing for adjuncts, not only in terms of pay and job security, but also in how we feel about ourselves and our profession. Throughout this election, we’ve been talking about all the positive things that will come out of having a union, and that’s what we’ll continue to focus on as we move forward. I really believe that this union is a win-win for everyone. What’s good for adjuncts will also be good for Champlain College as an institution – and improving adjuncts’ working conditions is going to create an even better classroom experience for our students.”

Vermont adjunct faculty are following in the footsteps of adjuncts at more than a dozen universities who have joined Adjunct Action in the past year, including The College of St. Rose in Albany, New York where adjuncts voted to join SEIU Local 200United this summer. They join faculty at the Howard University and Georgetown University in Washington, DC, Antioch University in Seattle and Northeastern University in Boston who have all voted for unionization in order to strengthen their voices and improving working conditions for all part-time faculty in America.

“I am thrilled by the results of the vote and I am looking forward to what is to come for Burlington College and the wider teaching community in Vermont,” said Jonathan Auyer, who teaches at Burlington College. “The campaign aimed at highlighting the need for sustainable pay, access to benefits and stable working conditions for the adjunct faculty, and this vote is one step on the path to making these things happen. I really am excited to work with the administration, my fellow adjuncts and the full-time faculty in the hopes of continuing to better Burlington College by bettering the teaching conditions, which will undoubtedly result in bettering the learning conditions for our students.”

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November 24, 2014

Bringing Adjunct Power to Washington DC

November 24, 2014 | By |

Respect. Visibility. Security. Adjunct Action unites professors at campuses across the country to build power and change the broken systems. On October 28, SEIU Associate General Counsel Maryann Parker and Adjunct Action Policy Director Steve Hill brought one element of the broken system to the attention of the U.S. Department of Labor.

They were joined by New Faculty Majority’s Maria Maisto and representatives of the other unions that represent adjunct faculty to meet with Portia Wu, the newly confirmed Assistant Secretary who oversees the Unemployment Insurance program. Together, we offered a solution to one long-standing problem that plagues adjuncts: clear access to unemployment insurance.

The Department of Labor last issued guidance on the eligibility of education workers for unemployment insurance in 1986—nearly 30 years ago. This was before the adjunctification of higher education; before there were more than one million contingent faculty; before the majority of professors experienced job insecurity from semester to semester.

Not surprisingly, those rules issued in 1986 are completely silent on the eligibility for unemployment benefits of adjuncts and other contingent faculty.

We came armed with your stories. The adjunct professor from Boston who has lost classes in each of the last three years when they were transferred to a full-time professor who needed the full course load. The adjunct professor from St. Louis who doesn’t receive a contract until after the semester begins. The community college professor who doesn’t know until the last days whether a class will meet the enrollment requirements. The adjunct professor from Ohio who received unemployment insurance in 2013, but in the exact same circumstances was denied in 2014.

They listened, and were shocked to learn of the realities of uncertainty that you experience behind the ivory towers.

There is more work to be done. One meeting does not change nearly 30 years of inaction and invisibility. But now they know, and we won’t stop. Read the letter to Department of Labor Assistant Secretary Wu here.

 

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