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FarCenter

(19,429 posts)
Thu Apr 26, 2018, 07:24 PM Apr 2018

Columbia University Graduate Students Go on Strike

Teaching assistants from the Graduate Workers of Columbia University–United Auto Workers (GWC-UAW Local 2110) went on strike Tuesday (April 24). Union members began picketing on the university’s main quad after a 10 AM deadline the union set for the university to agree to enter into bargaining talks passed with no word from the administration.

“We won a union election with 72 percent of the vote 16 months ago—and the law is clear. Columbia must bargain with us. As long as they refuse to respect our legal rights, we will take action to take our power back,” teaching assistant Olga Brudastova of Columbia’s engineering department says in a statement.

Art history and archaeology graduate student Natalie McCann tells The Columbia Spectator that she wants the university to recognize her status as a worker. “What it means to me is that we are workers but that hasn’t been acknowledged,” she says. “It’s below the level of an unpaid internship, we’re basically treated as serfs here in the University in exchange for them waving our tuition. And all we want them to do is just acknowledge that we contribute, that we work, and give us humane working conditions.”

In August 2016, the National Labor Relations Board ruled that graduate research and teaching assistants have the right to unionize (via Inside Higher Ed). The ruling triggered a wave of organizing efforts at universities around the country.

In December 2016, Columbia graduate students voted 1,602 to 623 to unionize and join the UAW, but university administrators have thus far refused to negotiate with them (via The New York Times). In February 2018, Columbia Provost John Coatsworth announced the university would seek review of the National Labor Relations Board’s decision in federal court (via The Harvard Crimson).

Coatsworth sent a letter last week (April 18) to the Columbia community in which he writes, “Student teaching and research assistants who come to Columbia to earn degrees are not University employees.” He contends that unions threaten “individual autonomy” with a “one-size-fits-all” approach to collective bargaining. He also argues that because the NLRB has repeatedly changed its position on graduate student workers’ status, the matter should be settled by the courts.

https://www.the-scientist.com/?articles.view/articleNo/52438/title/Columbia-University-Graduate-Students-Go-on-Strike

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Columbia University Graduate Students Go on Strike (Original Post) FarCenter Apr 2018 OP
Coatsworth thinks the matter should be settled by courts. 3Hotdogs Apr 2018 #1

3Hotdogs

(12,394 posts)
1. Coatsworth thinks the matter should be settled by courts.
Thu Apr 26, 2018, 07:38 PM
Apr 2018

I guess it will be settled on the picket lines when there are few, if any people to teach and grade.

On the other hand, courts could enjoin and/or fine the university.

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