Adjunct Faculty Conflict Heats Up

By Kari Lydersen
In These Times – read original

Union members and supporters picket, as negotiations with administrators continue

Seven months after their contract expired, adjunct faculty at Columbia College in Chicago spent Friday negotiating with administrators they say have violated labor law and unfairly cut adjuncts’ teaching hours while replacing them with less-senior instructors.

Members of the P-Fac union and supporters picketed outside the college administration building as negotiations went on inside. P-Fac spokesperson Nancy Traver said pay isn’t the main issue for adjunct faculty, but rather job security and respect for adjuncts who in many cases have been teaching for a decade or more at the arts-oriented private college with multiple buildings in downtown Chicago. Continue reading

Officer Election Committee

The term of our current USofCC officers is coming to an end next September, and two union members have stepped into the role of Election Committee Co-Chairs for our 2011 Officer Elections. Jamila Jones, Marketing and Communications Director of Columbia’s Sherwood Community Music School, and Yolanda Kincade, Assistant to the Director of Early Childhood Education and Secretary of USofCC, have begun to coordinate the candidate nominating process.

This spring, under the union’s bylaws, we will be nominating fellow staff members for the role of President, Vice-President, Treasurer, and Secretary of USofCC for the 2011/2012 term. Elections are targeted for the end of Spring 2011 semester, with training of the elected leadership team scheduled over the summer.

If you feel that you, or someone you know, would be a strong union leader for Columbia staff, please submit a nomination. You may nominate as many staffers as you wish.

For more information, contact Jamila Jones or Yolanda Kincade through the USofCC email address: usofcc@yahoo.com

Next Up: Annual Wage Re-Opener to Negotiate Pay

paycheckThe USofCC might appear on your radar screen only a few times a year, perhaps when there’s a discussion or a vote involving our union.  But our union volunteers are working throughout the year on many  issues to ensure the college is always improving as a place to work.

One of our major efforts for 2011 is the annual “wage re-opener.” While our current contract with the college runs for three years, we have the option of negotiating for changes in wages and bonuses during each year of the contract. As a result of last year’s wage re-opener, college management and union negotiators forged an agreement that union members voted to accept: the 1 percent pay raise and 1 percent bonus for full- and part-timers.

This spring, USofCC negotiators plan to enter talks with management on wage issues. We welcome your input. Please come to the next general membership meeting to learn more about this year’s pay negotiations and to voice your ideas and concerns.

Join Us as an Association Rep

People PowerSome college staff members have decided to step into the role of Association Representative (AR) to assist USofCC members across the campus. ARs are the union’s feet on the street, there to share information and help you.

New ARs are being trained to 1) share USofCC information and news with you, 2) answer questions about our union and our contract with the college, 3) gather your input about union, contract, and workplace matters, and 4) respond to any bargaining unit member who believes he or she might have a grievance under our contract or who requests representation in a disciplinary meeting. Continue reading

Notes from the Cheddar Revolution

by J. Burger, IEA, USofCC

I had just started my work helping the USofCC when, Wisconsin Proteston February 11th,  Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker announced his plan to take away the union rights of more than 250,000 people. In response, I headed up to Wisconsin to lend a hand to unionized teachers in La Crosse.

Up north, unions are racing to get contract extensions with their employers (city, county, school board). Statewide, they announced they would take concessions, yet Walker rejected this. His budget bill would stifle democracy in the workplace and damage Badgercare (low-income health care assistance) and other widely popular programs. Walker’s rhetoric couched his bill in terms of “fair share” and “budget repair,” but the bill has been revealed as nothing more than a power grab and straight-up union busting.  Unable to pass the budget side of the original bill, in March, Wisconsin legislators maneuvered and — with Walker’s signature — have  removed most collective bargaining rights of many of Wisconsin’s state employees. Continue reading

Annual Staff Performance Reviews

Written performance evaluations are required for all full-time and part-time staff.

Forms and more info from the college – Click Here.

General Membership Meeting

Please join us from noon to 1 p.m. or from 1 to 2 p.m. (presentation and discussion repeated), on Thursday, March 31, in the Quincy Wong Center, First Floor, 623 S. Wabash Ave.
Light lunch will be provided.

Agenda:
• Kick-off campaign for 2011 pay raise
• Updates on USofCC officer elections,
• Recent College layoffs,
• P-Fac rally on Friday April 1st.

We welcome you to come and voice your ideas and concerns.

Chicago Reader on PFAC Charges

from Chicago Reader March 3, 2011

Labor Unrest at Columbia College, Northeastern
Adjuncts, unions at local schools fight for contract, job security

Over the last couple weeks, while the eyes of the nation have been on the workers’ rights standoff in Madison, Wisconsin, two normally quiet Chicago colleges have seen their own labor uprisings. At Columbia College and Northeastern Illinois University, faculty and students are protesting what they call dictatorial governance and exploitation. In both cases, the plight of adjunct teachers—the dirt-cheap, dispensable day laborers of academe—is at issue.

read full article at ChicagoReader.com

On Recent Layoffs

pink slipDear USofCC Bargaining Unit Members:

Our hearts go out to all Columbia College employees and contractors who have lost their jobs in the restructuring announced by Human Resources Vice-President Ellen Krutz yesterday.  We understand the serious — and potentially devastating — impact this will have on the lives of these workers, their families, and their communities.

The United Staff of Columbia College has submitted an urgent request to bargain with the college over the impact of these job changes. We have also requested detailed information from Human Resources regarding the extent of the staff reductions and job restructuring and the exact reasons why the college deems these changes to be necessary.

With regard to unit members whose positions have been eliminated, we will monitor their situations to ensure that each receives the required 90-day notice and other accommodations in accordance with the contract – see http://usofcc.org/the-contract/#a5

In regard to existing positions that are being combined or vacant positions that are being frozen, the union will discuss these issues when we meet with Human Resources.

The staff union will do everything in its power to ensure that the contract is followed and that bargaining unit staff who have been affected by these changes are treated fairly and with respect.

As we receive information, we will provide further updates to members of our bargaining unit.

Sincerely,
United Staff of Columbia College Officers

Mike Bright, President
John Murray, Vice President
Yolanda Kincade, Secretary
Linda Naslund, Treasurer
Shelia Brady, Communications Chair
Joan Mcgrath, Membership Chair

Rightwing Moves to Dismantle Unions

This is a resource for learning more about the Wisconsin protests against its Governor’s attempt to strip away collective bargaining rights for workers who serve the public.

Wikipedia on Wisconsin Protests

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The Betrayal of Public Workers

Robert Pollin and Jeffrey Thompson (The Nation) | February 16, 2011

The Great Recession and its aftermath are entering a new phase in the United States, which could bring even more severe assaults on the living standards and basic rights of ordinary people than we have experienced thus far. This is because a wide swath of the country’s policy- and opinion-making elite have singled out public sector workers—including schoolteachers, healthcare workers, police officers and firefighters—as well as their unions and even their pensions as deadweight burdens sapping the economy’s vitality. …read more…

Someone Has To Stop This Shameful Attack on Public Employees

Robert Reich (Business Insider) | Jan. 6, 2011

In 1968, the sanitation workers of Memphis tried to form a union. The city resisted. The Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr. came to support them. That was where he lost his life. Eventually the sanitation workers got their union. And in subsequent years millions of public employees across the nation got similar protection. …read more…

Wisconsin Play by Play – TPM

Chronicle from the front line by Talking Points Memo

Paul Krugman on Wisconsin and what Naomi Klein calls “Crises Capitalism”

Maybe Madison, Wis., isn’t Cairo after all. Maybe it’s Baghdad — specifically, Baghdad in 2003, when the Bush administration put Iraq under the rule of officials chosen for loyalty and political reliability rather than experience and competence. …read more…

Voice or No Voice? That’s the Choice

Petition to Stop “Fair Share” Fees Designed to Cripple Union
(posted first 12-3-2010)

A petition to stop requiring payment of dues or representation fees for Columbia staff is now being circulated by proponents of an “open shop”. Those spreading the petition (called a de-authorization petition) claim that it is simply a matter of allowing employees the choice about paying dues, and that the vote will NOT impact the union.  This is not true. De-authorization is a tactic promoted by national anti-union groups such as the Right to Work Committee that aim to weaken, and eventually eliminate, the power of the Union.

Without a strong membership, the union will not be able to bargain good contracts, and have a real voice on the job. According to USA Today, it is no coincidence that “states with open-shop laws [‘Right- to-Work’ states] tend to have fewer people represented by unions.”  Why?

De-authorization is designed to cripple the union by allowing …read more…

pfac: Cast Out in Chicago

Lyn Wolfson knew something was awry when she received her invitation on Dec. 3 to teach spring classes at Columbia College Chicago.

Though she had been at Columbia since 1995, often teaching two or three courses each semester, her schedule of classes had been whittled down from three to one, without explanation, despite what she and colleagues described as positive-to-glowing evaluations.

Just as troubling, the number of students in her remaining class increased without any corresponding raise, she said. If current patterns continue for the remainder of the year, Wolfson’s annual pay from the college will shrink from $28,000 to $9,000, she said.

Continue reading

3 Trainings for all Association Rep’s, Activists & Interested Members

Training 1: Friday, February 11th, 12:30-1:30
Union 101, understanding the basics

Training 2: Friday, February 25th, ←POSTPONED
Reaching out to your co-workers-the “one-to-one” method

Training 3: Friday, March 11th, 12:30-1:30
Columbia College Contract: How to make it work for us

All trainings at Buddy Guy’s  700 South Wabash Avenue

Email: usofcc@yahoo.com
Please email to register:
ina.lloyd@ieanea.org

88% of USofCC Voters Approve Pay Raise and Bonus

After two full days of voting, USofCC union members voted by a clear majority to accept management’s last wage offer. The final vote was 182 in favor of accepting the offer and 24 to reject, or 88% acceptance among those voting.

The large turnout reflected a concerted effort by the union to reach out to our diverse and widely scattered membership. Voting was conducted on site, covering both the north and south ends of campus. Polls were kept open all day.  Publicity was sent out in advance, and employees who did not report to campus on voting days were able to vote via absentee ballot. Seven non-member staff joined the union prior to the vote.

Special thanks go to those who took the time to vote, as well as the 21 USofCC members who volunteered their time to help conduct the vote. One volunteer, Cornell Wright, wrote that “I really enjoyed meeting staff from different departments from all across the campus. Coming together to vote is always a great way of building unity, plus it gave our members an opportunity to have their voices counted.”

The common view of those voting was that management’s offer was at least an increase, and better than nothing. …read more…

Happy to Join, Proud to Contribute

by Paula Brien

As a long-time full-time staffer at Columbia, I am more than happy to join USofCC, our staff union, and pay my dues to help fund the union’s research, negotiations, advocacy, and communications.  My dues are a sound investment in my professional future at this institution I love and labor for every workday.

I have no illusion as to what would have been the response to a salary hike request if I had advocated individually, on my own behalf, without the support of our union. Over the past several years, I and my colleagues in the College Advising Center have relinquished many benefits as we, along with our managers, have had to tighten our belts to help the college’s bottom line. While my office is directed by fair, thoughtful, and creative managers — who work hard to give us the resources to do our jobs — I believe they weren’t in a position to pass a raise to me or my colleagues.

So, what I very likely could not have achieved on my own, my support of, and membership in, USofCC has achieved for me and my colleagues.  Because I’ve talked with the USofCC negotiators, I’ve heard the eye-witness account of how and when the raise/bonus offer was negotiated with management. …read more…