Nearly 50,000 academic workers at the University of California (UC) launched a historic strike on November 14 after contract negotiations with their employer failed. Postdoctoral scholars, researchers, trainees, fellows, graduate student instructors, readers, and tutors, who are from ten UC campuses across the state and are unionized with United Auto Workers, walked out of their jobs.
Such workers are not traditionally associated with militant labor actions as intellectual work has historically been well-compensated in the United States. But, as universities have increasingly adopted corporate models of operation, the same sort of delineation in pay seen in other industries has taken hold in academia, with administrative executives earning top dollar while rank-and-file workers have seen their wages shrink relative to inflation. At the top of workersâ list of demands is better pay, one that is tied to the cost of living, and especially the cost of housing.
âWhat the UC is proposing in terms of⊠small percent increases in annual salary, essentially that results in a net lossâ to workers, says Joyce Chan, a postdoctoral scholar in neurosciences at UC San Diego. Chan, who serves on the bargaining team for UAW 5810, is referring to the fact that California is one of the most expensive states to live in. She says, âour proposals are not only realistic, but we feel they are necessary.â
Negotiations
The universityâs bargaining position can be boiled down to an expectation that its core academic workers simply have to accept a life of hardship. UC Provost Michael Brown, in a letter responding to the unionâs demand, wrote, âTying compensation directly to housing costs⊠could have overwhelming financial impacts on the University.â
But Chan counters that â30 to 80 percent of our income goes toward making rent alone.â Indeed, Brown did not dispute the fact that rent consumes too much of a graduate studentâs paycheck. He only countered that it would be too hard for the university to do anything about it. In other words, if workers cannot afford to live, thatâs their problem.
According to FairUCNow.org, a website set up by the UAW unions involved in the UC contract negotiations, academic workers âdo the majority of teaching and research at UC, yet UC is refusing to offer us a fair share of the record-setting grant and state funding that our labor brings in.â
Chan points out that âour working conditions are our studentâs learning conditionsâ â a logic familiar to one adopted by unionized school teachers in K-12 public schools. âIf the UC meets our demands for fair compensation, we would be far more able to focus on the teaching, on the research, on everything that makes the University of California great,â she adds.
Brittany Drake, a PhD candidate at UCLA, tweeted in support of the strike, saying, âI do not doubt that many brilliant students research, careers, and health are being compromised due to the added financial stress, and hope that they will receive the support they deserve rather than admonishment.â She points out how, during her first two years in graduate school, she slept on friendsâ couches, in her office, and even in her car. University administrators âadmonishedâ her for spending nights in her office, but, she said, âNo one asked if I was okay or needed help.â
Striking for Better Pay and Better Working Conditions
Union members say the university can indeed afford to pay its academic workers more. âAs Californiaâs biggest [public] employer, the UC has a $46-billion annual budget,â says Chan, adding that âthe [UAW] proposals for graduate workers would end up being less than 3 percent of the UC budget.â That academic workers cannot afford rent on their salaries is tantamount to them paying UC to work, instead of the other way around. In other words, itâs stolen labor.
âWe have the right to demand better pay and better working conditions, and also to be able to demand things and to be heard,â says Chan. âWeâre united and weâre ready to hold them accountable.â
In addition to sending a message to the university that workers demand better than what is being offered, the strike is also alerting the entire university community to the long-standing plight of graduate students and postdoctoral workers. The sight of thousands of UAW members rallying and picketing at UC campuses has inspired solidarity from faculty members who rely on the labor of their researchers and teaching assistants. James Vernon, chair of the Berkeley Faculty Association, addressed a UAW picket on UC Berkeleyâs campus, saying, âThe system is broken and youâre going to help fix it and we are here as faculty to support you in that effort.â
UCâs academic researchers and workers are responsible for ushering critical intellectual work â not only to California, but also to the US and world. âOur students in the sciences, they go on to become doctors, they go on to become engineers, that contribute to infrastructure, and also medicine,â says Chan. âI think it canât be understated how important the universityâs research is in social mobility, in improving peopleâs futures, and also in the arts as well, in creating work that moves people.â
The UC strike is also part of a broader trend of labor actions nationwide. In the same week that the strike began, Starbucks workers in more than 100 stores that have voted to join a union held a one-day strike to protest their employerâs refusal to bargain in good faith. UPS drivers, who are gearing up for a potentially major strike of their own next year, have been informed by their union, the Teamsters, that they can show solidarity with UC striking workers by refusing to cross the picket to deliver packages.
âFor a lot of the academic workers at the UC, we see this pattern of indignity and unfair wages, unfair contracts, as a sort of universal theme, not only in the States but also worldwide,â says Chan. She cites that UC workers have been inspired by the actions of Starbucks workers in the US, as well as other companies and workers throughout the world.
âNot every teaching moment happens in a classroom,â says Chan. âSometimes you have to stand up for yourself.â âą
This article was produced by Economy for All, a project of the Independent Media Institute.
Source: Socialistproject.ca