One member’s thoughts in support of today’s strike

Not all of you come from heavily unionized areas like Southeast Michigan, and not all of you think well of unions in general.  But one way or the other you will be taking a side on Thursday if there is a strike. . . . (continued)

Some of us are in dire need of some of the contract improvements in our strike platform, and some of us are not.  If you break your fellow GSI’s picket line you are actively fighting against their attaining improved healthcare, their improved wages, their improved protection against discrimination.  By entering a university building during a strike you are not “sitting this one out” – you have taken a side against those who need
these protections.

We do not have healthcare because the university is generous and wanted us to have it.  The reason we have healthcare, the reason we get paid as much as we do, the reason we can’t be made to work 50 hours a week for a professor, etc is because some grad student or construction worker that we probably don’t know stuck her neck out years ago and wrestled it from the administration. In our last round of negotiations, one of the skilled trade unions took a couple hundred dollars each in pay cuts rather than cross our line.

Some will try to tell you that taking a job action means that you don’t care about the education of your students.  That is a lie. This union has consistently fought for better GSI training, smaller classes and other improvements to undergrad education. Our contract is a huge reason that this public university attracts great graduate student teachers.  Your
students have skipped class before, and it won’t ruin their education to miss one more.

Whether you are teaching or not, or whether you agree whole-heartedly with every proposal our union has made or not is immaterial.  I ask you to honor the picket line and, even better, spend some time walking it.

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GEO ON STRIKE THURSDAY

Tonight, the Graduate Employees’ Organization (GEO) voted to carry out our planned walkout Thursday, March 24. We ask all members of the UM community to stay out of UM buildings from 6am-6pm.

1. STRIKE CENTRAL: in front of Haven Hall (Diag side)
2. RALLY: 4:30 at the MI Union

If you have already signed up for a picket shift, please report to Strike Central (at the Diag entrance to Haven Hall) 15 minutes before your shift.
If you haven’t yet signed up, please show up anyway!

Because of our sincere desire to find a resolution without walking out, the Bargaining Team has gone back to the table tonight in a last ditch effort to come to agreement. [In the event of last-minute breakthrough significant enough to call off the walkout, the info will be posted on the website and over email].

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GEO Position on Non-Union UM Staff During the Walkout

We ask all members of the UM community to support us. Recognizing the risks of retaliation faced by unbargained-for staff, we ask them to support us to the extent they feel able. For some, that will mean not coming to work, for others picketing with us during lunch and joining us at the rally. Any staff member who feels that they need to cross the line in order to avoid retaliation should approach the picket captain at that building and explain the situation. Picket captains will have “I support GEO” buttons for people to wear to signal their support and have been informed of the complexities facing non-union staff.

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Members authorize strike

The GEO membership overwhelmingly approved a job action plan including a one-day walkout on Thursday, March 24 and a possible open-ended strike beginning April 4. The vote was counted Sunday and approved the plan by a 550-55 margin.

There will be a membership meeting at 7pm Wed, March 23, where GEO members will assess the administration’s last offer and decide whether or not to follow through with the walkout. If the union calls a walkout, all members of the campus community will be asked to stay out of UM buildings and join the picket lines from 6am-6pm on Thursday.

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Thursday Strike Plans (6am – 6pm)

The GEO membership has authorized a one-day walkout for Thursday, March 24. The membership will meet Wednesday at 7pm (Nat Sci Auditorium) to assess the administration’s final offer and make a final decision about whether or not to carry out the walkout.

If GEO walks out, all UM community members will be asked to support the union by respecting our picket lines and staying out of campus buildings from 6am-6pm. Supporters can sign up for a picket shift or other tasks by contacting the GEO office or can come to “strike central” in front of Haven Hall on the Diag Thursday.

A rally will be held at 4:30 at the MI Union, to which all community supporters are encouraged to attend. A final announcement will be posted on the website Wednesday evening and sent out over email to GEO members.

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Dec 17 Rally Against Anti-Gay Prop2; It Goes Into Effect Today; Support International Student Demands to Administration

Protest Against Prop 2: Support Platform Language for Designated Beneficiaries

FRIDAY, DEC. 17 IS THE LAST DAY OF BARGAINING FOR THE TERM.

WHERE WILL YOU BE TODAY?
click to see the schedule

9:30-12 : BARGAINING SESSION 1
JOIN US IN 2455 MASON HALL FOR ANY AMOUNT OF TIME!

2:30-3 : SOLIDARITY RALLY
COME TO THE CUBE (BETWEEN THE MICHIGAN UNION AND THE FLEMING BUILDING)

PROTEST AGAINST PROP. 2: IT GOES INTO EFFECT
TODAY
JOIN INTERNATIONAL STUDENTS AS THEY PRESENT
DEMANDS TO UNIVERSITY
SUPPORT PARENTS’ RIGHTS AND EQUALITY
STAND BEHIND THE GEO BARGAINING TEAM–
THE UNIVERSITY WILL RESPOND TO DOMESTIC
PARTNER/DESIGNATED BENEFICIARY BENEFITS
TODAY

3:30-6 : BARGAINING SESSION 2
PIZZA FOR MEMBERS AT 3:15!!! COME TO 2448 MASON HALL

8-11 : GEO Partyat CAFÉ OZ!!
HAVE A DRINK AT CAFÉ OZ TO CELEBRATE THE END OF THE TERM! CAFÉ OZ IS LOCATED AT 210 S. 5TH ST. (BETWEEN LIBERTY AND WASHINGTON)

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NOV 12, GEO DAY, BARGAINING KICK-OFF RALLY

GEO CONTRACT NEGOTIATIONS START NOV.12!
All GEO members are invited to all events! Wear your GEO button all day long!

FRIDAY, NOV. 12, 2004
9AM-12PM
BARGAINING SESSION ONE – 2448 MASON HALL

12PM-1PM
BARGAINING KICKOFF RALLY !!!!!
COME OUT TO THE DIAG AND SHOW YOUR SUPPORT!

3:30PM-6PM
BARGAINING SESSION TWO – 2448 MASON HALL

6PM-11PM
GEO BASH @ ARBOR BREWING COMPANY

JOIN US IN THE TAP ROOM TO CELEBRATE THE KICKOFF!
ABC IS LOCATED AT 114 E. WASHINGTON ST. (BETWEEN MAIN ST. AND 4TH STREET)

(QUESTIONS? CONTACT THE GEO OFFICE AT 734-995- 0221 or at umgeo@umich.edu)

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Re-elect Olivia Maynard & Martin Taylor to UM Board of Regents

The GEO Stewards’ Council has voted to endorse Olivia Maynard and S. Martin Taylor, both Democrats, as candidates for the UM Board of Regents.

In their tenure as Regents, Maynard and Taylor have consistently supported the right of workers to organize, defended academic freedom, and pushed to make this public university accessible to all.

The League of Women Voters has posted info on all the candidates:

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GEO Membership Meetings: Vote on the Platform

North Campus: Wednesday, October 27, 7pm, Family Housing Community Center

Central Campus: Thursday, October 28, 7pm, Michigan Union Ballroom

********************

GEO CONDITIONAL PLATFORM 2004
FAIR & EQUAL ACCESS TO EDUCATION, HEALTH, & EMPLOYMENT !!

This is GEO’s conditional platform, to be finalized over the next week, based on member input. Our final vote on the platform will be conducted at the membership meetings on October 27 & 28. Make sure your voice is heard! Come to one of the membership meetings! Questions? Write to geo.bargaining@umich.edu or call the office, 995-0221…….

GEO CONDITIONAL PLATFORM 2004:

HEALTHCARE…GEO is committed to eliminating barriers to healthcare: include mental health parity, eliminate discriminatory language and exclusion, and ensure that we all have access to the services that we need!

* NO PREMIUMS on healthcare & full buy0in (access) to UM vision/dental coverage!
* Healthcare buy-in (access) for all UM students!
* Full healthcare coverage for low fractions.
* No co-pay increase, lower out-of-pocket annual maximum, and fair tier structure for prescription drugs!
* Full coverage of all medically necessary services (e.g. procedures, treatment, equipment, mental health), as determined by the provider, including access to out-of-network services!
* Eliminate transgender exclusions, ensure full inclusion of all necessary transition services.
* Eliminate disparities in eligibility for domestic partnership coverage, include all partnerships (regardless of sex/gender).
* Expand dental coverage
* Ensure coverage for the entire calendar year
* Hire a GEO patient advocate (GSSA position), improve health appeals and grievance process
* Ensure full disclosure of all benefits provided by UM insurance carriers.
* No changes to healthcare (services, premiums, or co-pays) during the life of the contract!

COMPENSATION… GEO demands a living wage for students in Ann Arbor. We must strengthen our contract to protect us from UM fees, and ensure that we are all fairly compensated for the work that we do!

* Living wage campaign!
* Lump sum at the beginning of semester to offset initial costs of semester!
* Increase child care subsidy.
* Compensation for substitute teaching.
* Ensure paid medical leave and family leave!
* Pay parity for library employees!
* Full tuition waivers for all fractions!
* Reimbursement for all fees international students must pay to legalize their residence in the U.S. (e.g. Dept. of Homeland Security fees, mandatory int’l student health insurance fees).
* Year-round facility access, including recreation centers and libraries.
* Facility access for family members.
* Summer tuition waiver!

…AND A STRONG CONTRACT! GEO requires non-discrimination and equal access to hiring and employment!

* Include “gender identity” and “gender expression” in non-discrimination clause!
* Make ELI training more flexible and responsive and prohibit threats of deportation!
* Remove “ten-term” rule and “cost of benefits” on eligibility for hiring!
* Require GSI representatives on departmental curriculum committees.
* Mandate uniform hiring procedures, posting dates and notification deadlines for all instructional positions for students!
* Strengthen grievance procedure and create financial sanctions for contract violations.
* Mandate upwards fraction recalculation when precedent is set in grievance.
* Change membership card default to auto-deduct (no need to send checks anymore!)
* Eliminate the no-strike clause!

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Prop 2 Threatens Passage, Join GEO Fight to Protect Domestic Partner Benefits Provided in Contract

Below you will find:
1. The most recent article on Prop 2 heading toward passage.

2. Coalition for a Fair Michigan information and update.

Here’s what you can do:
1. Join GEO in the fight against Proposal 2.

2. Join the GEO TLGB Caucus to advocate for transgender, gay, lesbian, and bisexual issues.

For more info on what you can do, call GEO at 995-0221 or email umgeo@umgeo.org or the group at tlgbcaucus@umich.edu.

The most recent newspaper article on Prop 2:

“Gay marriage ban headed for passage”

BY DAWSON BELL
FREE PRESS STAFF WRITER

October 2, 2004

Buoyed by strong support among people who attend
religious services, a proposal to amend the Michigan
Constitution to define marriage as the union of one
man and one woman is supported by a clear majority of
voters, a Free Press poll shows.

In the poll of 830 registered voters conducted Sept.
22-28, support for Proposal 2 was at 53 percent, with
40 percent opposed and 6 percent undecided. Among
likely voters the margin was even greater, at 56
percent to 39 percent……

Detroit Free Press article continued…..

The amendment would limit marriage to heterosexual
couples and prohibit recognition of similar unions as
well. It is designed to limit the possibility that
courts would find a right to marriage or civil unions
for same-sex couples in Michigan, as they have in
Massachusetts and Vermont.

Support for the measure is strongest among those who
attend regular religious services, men and voters
older than 34, said David Blomquist, Free Press senior
editor for technology and research.

The survey also found that a near majority of voters
(48 percent) view same-sex relationships as always
morally wrong. Even more (54 percent) say local
governments and universities should not provide
benefits, such as health and life insurance, to the
partners of gay and lesbian employees.

Blomquist, who designed and directed the poll, said
attitudes on the issue seem to have hardened in the
last year in the wake of the controversy over same-sex
marriage in Massachusetts, San Francisco and other
communities.

“The more talk about gays and gay rights, the more
polarized voters seem to get about it,” he said.

Dana Houle, spokesman for the anti-Proposal 2 group
Coalition for a Fair Michigan, said he is nevertheless
encouraged by the poll results and continues to
believe that a majority of voters will reject it Nov.
2. Support for controversial ballot proposals often
evaporates as the election nears, Houle said.

But Marlene Elwell, campaign director for Citizens for
the Protection of Marriage, which collected petition
signatures to put the issue before voters, said that
isn’t going to happen this time.

In Missouri and Louisiana, which enacted
constitutional amendments barring same-sex marriage
this year, pre-election polls underestimated voter
support, she said. Measures in both of those states
passed with more than 70-percent approval.

Blomquist said persuading a majority of voters to
reject the Michigan proposal may be difficult because
so many people seem to have made up their minds.
Although there has been little specific news coverage
of the Michigan proposal and no campaign advertising
by either side, Blomquist said an overwhelming
majority of voters believe they know a lot about the
proposal.

Jan Clinger, a 65-year-old retiree who lives near
Brighton, participated in the Free Press poll and
plans to vote for the ban.

“It’s just not right. A man and a woman make
children,” she said. “Two men don’t make children.”

Clinger said she rejects the notion that denying gay
couples the right to marry is discrimination.

But Peter Eisinger, a political science professor at
Wayne State University who opposes the amendment,
said: “People ought to be able to do what they want if
they don’t harm others.”

“I don’t see that same-sex unions threaten
heterosexual marriage; they don’t threaten my
marriage,” said Eisinger, the married father of two
grown children.

Support for the amendment among Catholics, which the
poll found was quite strong, is based on the notion
that alternative forms of marriage will undermine the
institution, said Rev. John West, a moral theologian
for the Archdiocese of Detroit.

“Marriage between one man and one woman is part of the
basic structure God built into human nature,” West
said. “The church didn’t create marriage; neither did
the government.”

Voters from the 18-34 group expressed more skepticism
about the marriage proposal than older voters.

Sekou Lucas, a 24-year-old college student from Flint,
said he plans to vote no.

“We don’t have the right to dictate the way other
people live their lives,” he said. “I think this
country should focus on more pressing issues … like
jobs and people that are hungry.”

Opponents of state marriage ban amendments — and of
proposals by President George W. Bush and
congressional Republicans to amend the U.S.
Constitution to ban same-sex marriage — often
criticize the efforts as divisive and diversionary.
But proponents say they are needed to preserve
traditional marriage, which they say is under assault
by gay rights activists and judges who disregard the
will of the people.

Houle said the campaign to defeat Proposal 2 expects
to have enough money to run TV advertising before Nov.
2. But it is at least a week away, he said.

Elwell said proponents plan to begin radio advertising
within a week.

But almost all of the campaign to date has been on the
grassroots level. The petition drive, for instance,
drew substantially on the support of churches.

Analysts said it is difficult to predict what kind of
campaign could turn the tide against the proposal.
Opponents said they will focus their campaign on the
scope of the Michigan proposal, which they say goes
well beyond protecting marriage. The Free Press poll
showed that voters don’t approve of bans on private
sector benefit plans that cover gay and lesbian
partners.

But supporters of the proposal said private
contractual agreements will not be affected by the
amendment anyway, and the language of the proposal
makes no mention of private sector benefit plans.

++
ABOUT THE POLL
Today’s report is based on a Free Press poll of 830
registered voters across Michigan taken Sept. 22-28.

A computer selected telephone numbers from exchanges
throughout the state. Within each exchange, random
digits formed the numbers called so that households
with listed and unlisted numbers were contacted.
Results were statistically adjusted to reflect the
actual turnout in the 2000 presidential election by
county, age and gender.

The poll has a statistical error margin of plus or
minus 3.5 percentage points for results based on the
entire sample. This means that in 19 of 20 cases, the
results will differ by no more than 3.5 percentage
points from what would have been obtained by
interviewing every registered voter in Michigan. The
margin of error is larger for subgroups, such as women
and African Americans.

The poll was designed and directed by David Blomquist,
Free Press senior editor for technology and research.
Interviews were conducted by Consumer Contact, a
research firm based in Toronto.

For more information about the survey, including the
sources and wording of questions, visit

http://www.freep.com/news/politics/marriagepoll2e_20041002.htm.

Contact DAWSON BELL at 313-222-6604 or
dbell@freepress.com.

Copyright ) 2004 Detroit Free Press Inc.

Go to the Coalition for a Fair Michigan website, www.coalitionforafairmichigan.org, to see the following more positive articles and updates:

1. for DETROIT NEWS:
“Vote No on Proposal 2″

2. September 26, 2004
The Detroit News today announced its opposition to Proposal 2. Read On >

3. MEA OPPOSES PROPOSAL 2
Bargaining Rights at Risk

4. September 23, 2004
Warning that it would infringe on the bargaining rights of public employees and threaten partnership benefits statewide, The Michigan Education Association has announced its opposition to Proposal 2. Continued>
Ballot Language>
September 21, 2004

5.
CNN/Gallup Report on Proposal 2:
YES ON 2: 45%
NO ON 2: 51%
Gallup: Michigan Too Close to Call>

6. WHAT ARE THEY TRYING TO HIDE?
September 3, 2004
Court Chooses Confusion Over Clarity in Amendment Language>
Ballot Language>

7. PROPOSAL 2 THREATENS BENEFITS THROUGHOUT MICHIGAN

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