OFFICIAL GEO PRESS CONFERENCE STATEMENT: NOVEMBER 9, 2009,
1:00 pm
from: http://www.uigeo.org/
URBANA-CHAMPAIGN, ILLINOIS: With 92% of
participating members voting yes, the Graduate Employees’ Organization, AFT/IFT
Local 6300, AFL-CIO, the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, has voted
to create and authorize a GEO strike committee to organize and call a
strike. This is the first strike
authorization by a UIUC union local in over 10 years. With over 2600 GEO members, and over 2600 graduate employees
represented in the bargaining unit, the GEO is one of the largest higher
education union locals in the United States.
While I cannot share specific strike plans at this time, I
will say that the GEO strike committee will call upon every member of the GEO
bargaining unit (all TAs and GAs) to withhold all labor pertaining to their
assistantship in the event of a strike. The GEO strike committee also calls upon UIUC faculty to cancel their
classes in solidarity with any GEO strike, and at a minimum to take steps to
ensure that faculty do not teach classes within picketed buildings.
The GEO has been negotiating with UIUC administrators for
over six months. The GEO seeks a contract that will set the minimum
salary for a 50% nine month appointment at the University’s estimate of a
living wage for a graduate student in Urbana-Champaign and protect tuition
waivers for TAs and GAs. While the GEO presented the administration with a full
contract proposal on the first day of negotiations, the UIUC administration
declined to offer a counterproposal until August 11th, just four days before
the GEO’s previous contract expired. The UIUC administration’s initial
contract proposal sought to freeze GEO wages for three years, reserve the right
to furlough and layoff graduate employees in good standing, and to count
“in-kind” compensation such as housing or meal vouchers toward the minimum
salary mandated in the contract. At a November 4th General Membership Meeting that began the
strike authorization vote, over 350 GEO members voted to reject the latest
contract proposal from the administration, which still seeks to freeze GEO
wages, set the minimum salary far below a living wage, refuse to include
contractual tuition waiver protection, reserve the right to lay off graduate
employees in good standing, and prevent the GEO from reopening negotiations
during the term of its contract.
In the Daily Illini today, University spokesperson Robin
Kaler stated that “It’s a very tough year, and I think that’s something
everyone needs to remain aware of—other employees of the University did
not receive any raises at all this year.” I’d like to respond to this now. First, contrary to Kaler’s statement, the GEO stands with other campus
labor unions and organizations. I
will provide a list of GEO supporters at the end of this statement, but to be
clear: campus labor unions are fully supportive of the GEO and its contract
negotiations. The GEO believes
that ALL WORKERS on campus deserve to make a living wage and earn reasonable
cost of living increases.
The GEO understands that the state of Illinois is in dire
economic straits, but as University administrators pointed out in their FY 2010
budget request, this is the result of long standing deficiencies in state level
budget prioritization and not a sudden result of the recent national recession.
Instead of championing the university’s historic land grant mission, UIUC
administrators have embraced the national tendency toward the corporatization
of the public higher education system. Their consequent failure to secure
adequate state funding leaves the social science, humanities, and fine arts
especially vulnerable. Worse, it jeopardizes access to higher education for
many who have the capacity and desire, but not the financial resources to attend
the University. If increased state funding is also necessary to providing
at least a living wage for all campus employees, then the GEO expects the UIUC
administration to forcefully make that case to the Higher Education
Appropriations Committee, other state legislators, and the Governor.
Instead of advocating on the behalf of students and workers,
administrators were granting costly favors to state politicians. In this context, the GEO finds it hard
to trust the UIUC administration when it argues that there is not enough money
to provide a living wage. From the GEO’s perspective, it appears that budget
priorities are simply out of place. When campus revenues rose by 7% in FY
2009, only 0.8% ($2.7 million) went to undergraduate instruction.
Meanwhile, the Chief Information Officer’s budget rose by 10.9
percent ($1.6 million), and the Division of Intercollegiate Athletics budget
increased 6.2 percent ($4.1 million).
GEO bargaining unit members teach 23.1% of all undergraduate
course hours at UIUC, and perform comparably to faculty in official student
evaluations of instructor performance as measured by the University of
Illinois’ Center for Teaching Excellence. Yet our salaries draw only
6.5% of state funding, including salaries for GAs and Research Assistants, who
don’t teach. By contrast, faculty salaries draw over 55% of the
University budget. Graduate employee labor is vital to the fiscally
efficient provision of the University’s core service, academic instruction.
Should graduate employee salaries be set to a living wage, the University would
still have a large pool of inexpensive and high quality instructional and
administrative labor.
GEO members have been working hard to avoid a strike.
Hundreds of GEO members have participated in three major rallies, and GEO
members have also lobbied the Illinois House of Representatives Higher
Education Appropriations Committee, spoken with state legislators from
Champaign, actively informed campus community members about the issues, and
maintained a constant presence in Urbana-Champaign print, radio and television
media. The Illinois Student Senate has passed two resolutions in support
of the GEO and the decision to authorize a strike, and GEO supporters in the
faculty senate are working to pass a similar resolution. GEO members and allies
will hold a rally at the University of Illinois Board of Trustees Meeting in
Springfield, IL on November 12.
As with any labor negotiation, however, the most effective
pressure has been the threat of a strike. Only after GEO members at a General
Membership Meeting voted unanimously to file an “intent to strike” notice did
the University administration offer their first compromise proposals.
Accordingly, the Coordinating Committee and Steward’s Council of the GEO
voted unanimously to hold a strike authorization vote from November
4-6. By voting to authorize a strike, GEO members have taken a vital step
in holding the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign administration
accountable to its stated commitment to excellence in research and
undergraduate education.
FOR MORE INFORMATION, CONTACT: Peter Campbell, GEO
Communications Officer, odell.campbell@gmail.com,
253-222-5861, or the GEO office at geo@uigeo.org,
217-344-8283, 1001 S. Wright Street, Champaign, IL, 61820. Information
about the GEO can also be found on our website at www.uigeo.org.
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