Media Advisory: Angry Parents Call Out UM Negotiators

Media Advisory

For Immediate Release
Friday 12/16/11

Contact:
Mellisa Sanders - Graduate Employees’ Organization Parents’ Caucus Chair - melissa.r.sanders@gmail.com

 Jim McAsey – Graduate Employees’ Organization (GEO) Staff Organizer – jim.mcasey@geo3550.org – 734-995-0221 (office)

 

WHAT:  Press conference

WHEN:  1pm, Monday 12/19/11

WHERE:  Lobby of the Administrative Services Building, University of Michigan (1009 Greene St. Ann Arbor)  Directions.

WHO:  Parents’ Caucus of the Graduate Employees’ Union, AFT #3550

WHY:  As part of contract negotiations last year between GEO and UM, a committee was created of GEO members and UM administrators to evaluate the childcare subsidy policy for graduate employee parents.  $150,000 was allotted to implement recommendations made by this committee.  Unfortunately, the administrators’ are dragging their feet – they have not presented any ideas or data to move this process forward. They have nearly missed one meeting and cancelled the next, which was supposed to be at the time we are holding this press conference.  GEO finds UM’s lack of commitment to this committee and to the needs of graduate worker parents unacceptable.

The Graduate Employees’ Organization (umgeo.org) is the labor union representing ~1,800 Graduate Student Instructors (GSIs) and Graduate Student Staff Assistants (GSSAs) at the University of Michigan.  GEO was founded in 1970 and we won our first contract in 1975, making GEO the oldest certified graduate employee union in the United States.

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News roundup: GSRA campaign makes the headlines

Tuesday’s decision by MERC to order an expedited hearing to determine the facts regarding GSRAs’ status as employees made the news around the state, and a national publication profiled the campaign and how a union would affect the lives and work of science grad researchers. Check out the links below for more info, or to comment on them.

Kellie Woodhouse @ AnnArbor.com: with link to GSRA Jeremy Moore’s video profile:“Judge to decide if U-M graduate student researchers can unionize”

Tia Ghose @ The Scientist profiles GSRAs’ fight for an election and what a union would mean for them: “A Graduate Student Union?”

David Jesse @ The Detroit Free Press: “Judge to weigh bid for unionization from University of Michigan graduate student research assistants” 

U of M’s Record Update: “State agency orders hearing on status of GSRAs”

@ AFT National (our parent union): “Research Assistants one step closer to election in Michigan”

 

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GEO’s response to MERC’s decision to order a hearing

For immediate release:

The Graduate Employees Organization is pleased by today’s Michigan Employment Relations Commission (MERC) decision to order a hearing—expected to takeplace in January 2012–in the case of GEO’s election petition for Graduate Student Research Assistants (GSRAs) at the University of Michigan.

“We’re gratified that we’re going to have the opportunity to prove that the GSRAs are employees with the right to vote,” said GEO President Samantha Montgomery, a graduate student in psychology and women’s studies.

GEO filed an election petition—with signed membership cards from a majority of GSRAs—in April 2011.

“We just want the right to vote,” said Christie Toth, a GSRA in the Sweetland Center for Writing at UM. “It’s up to employees whether to form a union.”

GEO, an affiliate of AFT Michigan, is the labor union representing approximately 1800 graduate teaching and staff assistants at UM. GEO is the second-oldest graduate employee union in the United States, having won its first contract in 1975

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Michigan Daily: “GEO responds to Michigan Attorney General’s motion”

December 6, 2011 – 4:12pm

GEO responds to Michigan Attorney General’s motion

BY RAYZA GOLDSMITH

Yesterday, a lawyer representing the Graduate Employees’ Organization at the University filed a legal brief, continuing the struggle of GEO to get a vote on Graduate Student Research Assistant unionization.

The brief was in response to a motion filed on Nov. 29 by Michigan Attorney General Bill Schuette, in which he described his intent to intervene at the Michigan Employment Relations Commission’s meeting on Dec. 13. At the meeting, the commission will decide whether to allow the vote on GSRA unionization.

The brief filed yesterday by GEO’s lawyer Mark Cousens, claims Schuette should not be allowed to intervene at the meeting and that his request should be “promptly and decisively denied.”

“Allowing intervention for the reasons proffered by the AG would cause chaos and compromise the Constitutional autonomy of the University of Michigan Board of Regents,” the brief stated.

Continue reading

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VIDEO–GSRAs speak out: We need a union election

Text:

Hi, I’m Jeremy Moore, and I am a Graduate Student Research Assistant in the Electrical Engineering and Computer Science Department at the University of Michigan.

I support the union for GSRAs because I believe that research assistants at U of M are employees, and as employees, we have a right to negotiate the terms of our employment with the university, just like GSIs already do.

Recently, outside political organizations have been trying to stop our election. I feel that this is unfair and inappropriate, and that the decision to form a union should be left up to a democratic election, free of intimidation or interference.

With all these outside groups attacking our rights, I’d like to specifically urge GSRAs to get involved:  Share this video on facebook, visit us at gsracampaign.org, and come with us to the MERC [Michigan Employment Relations Commission] hearing on December 13th.

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Michigan Liberal blog: “Bill Schuette wastes taxpayer dollars trying to stop a union election”

By Eric B.: Bill Schuette wastes taxpayer dollars trying to stop a union election

I don’t remember Mike Cox being so overty partisan, which means that all huffing and puffing aside, Bill Schuette is establishing a pattern that would make him the most partisan attorney general in Michigan history.

Allowing University of Michigan graduate student research assistants to unionize would “significantly damage” U-M and harm all Michigan residents, Michigan Attorney General Bill Schuette said in a brief filed this week to the Michigan Employment Relations Commission.

Schuette wants MERC to uphold a 1981 ruling that the GSRAs are students, not employees, and shouldn’t be allowed to form a union when the commission decides on the issue later this month.

Let’s break this down, okay.

First off, contrary to the tenor expressed in this morning’s Detroit News editorial, there are lots of graduate assistant unions across the country. And, there are even a bunch of them in the state of Michigan. CMU’s graduate assistants organized themselves a couple of years back while the university’s temporary faculty (adjuncts, to all of you over the age of 30), for example. And, graduate assistants overall on U of M’s campus are themselves organized.

Second, the fact that U of M’s president objects to the formation of yet another bargaining unit is neither novel nor a compelling argument in opposition to letting these people organize. Despite lofty rhetoric about valuing their employees, university administrations have the same long history in opposing the formation of new unions as everyone else. They just don’t call in the Pinkertons or turn loose private security with fire hoses.

Third, the attorney general’s office isn’t representing the interests of the state of Michigan here. The state has no compelling interest to get involve. This involves 2,200 people, many of whom probably get pay and benefits from research that is ultimately privately funded. Because U of M is much more research intensive a place than most of the state’s universities (U of M is constitutionally one of three research universities with Stinking Cow College and Wayne State), the odds that you’re going to have new bargaining units pop up all over the place are incredibly remote.

Fourth, what the attorney general’s office is trying to stop here isn’t actually the formation of the union, but an election. Why? Because the numbers are pretty clear … given a shot at self-determination, U of M’s research graduate assistants would form a union. To stop the union, you have to stop the vote. So, they filed a brief with the Michigan Employment Relations Commission to prevent self-determination.

Fifth, thanks to declining state support for its university system (and for this you can thank forty years of misplaced legislative priorities that cut appropriations for the state’s public universities), university administrations have increasingly relied on temporary faculty and graduate assistants to do grunt work. They get paid slave wages, slave benefits, and are expected to do the work of tenured and tenured-track faculty. That very clearly makes them employees, and since it is a trend that has increased since the MERC last decided on this means that the MERC would be well within the bounds of reality to define graduate student research assistants as employees.

In short, the News’ editorial headline “Leave U-M lab assitants alone” is correct. The problem is that the News is ordering U of M’s lab assistants to leave themselves alone, while providing cover for the attorney general’s office to pre-empt their right to self-determination in the workplace. The News we can laugh at. Schuette, well he’s doing that on your dime.

 

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Letter of support to Prof. Brown & the UC Davis English Deptartment

Last week, the Stewards’ Council voted to send the following letter of support to Prof. Nathan Brown, a faculty member who spoke out about the violence against students at UC Davis, and the UC Davis English Department, which has joined in condemning these events. The letter was sent on Friday.

Dear Professor Brown and Faculty Members of the UC Davis English Department:

We, the members of the Graduate Employees’ Organization (GEO) at the University of Michigan, are writing to offer you our fullest support in light of events at the University of California-Davis. We stand in solidarity with the letter that Professor Brown wrote to Chancellor Linda Katehi asking her to step down. We are appalled by her attempts to quell peaceful protests
by violent means while hypocritically purporting to care about fostering a safe and friendly atmosphere on campus. We feel strongly that what happened at UC Davis is not an isolated event, but rather a nationwide attempt to use fear and physical force to silence opposition. What happened at UC Davis affects us all.

At the same time, we are inspired by your courage to stand up for students, faculty, and staff who want to make their voices heard.

Thank you for so forcefully and eloquently speaking our on our behalf.

In solidarity,

The Graduate Employees’ Organization (GEO)
AFT Local 3550, AFL-CIO

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Free Press, Chronicle & others cover Michigan Attorney General’s attempt to delay GSRA election

Michigan Attorney General David Schuette’s attempt to intervene in MERC’s upcoming decision about whether GSRAs are employees has made news. Detroit Free Press writer David Jesse reports on Schuette’s statement and responses by GEO members and GSRAs.

Schuette is echoing the views of a group of 370 GSRAs who say they don’t want to unionize. They are being represented by the conservative Mackinac Center for Public Policy. In a release, the group said it was pleased to have Schuette involved.

His involvement isn’t playing well with those GSRAs seeking to unionize.

“I think GSRAs have a right to make this decision for themselves, without interference from outside parties,” Christie Toth, a GSRA, said in a news release.

That group had argued they are paid from the university, do research that brings money in to the university and get benefits like employees. They say the facts have changed since 1981 and they deserve to be treated like employees.

Jesse also notes that this is not Schuette’s only politically motivated attempt to interfere with MERC’s decisions:

Schuette’s involvement continues a pattern of intervening in political and social-issue cases. For example, he has filed a brief supporting Julea Ward, a former Eastern Michigan University graduate counseling student who claims she was kicked out of the program when she sought to refer a gay client to another counselor, saying her religious beliefs wouldn’t allow her to counsel a gay person.

Read more at freep.com!

Other articles:

Peter Schmidt at the Chronicle of Higher Education: State AG Seeks to Thwart Union for U of M Graduate Researchers

Mark Brush @ Michigan Radio: Should UM research assistants unionize? Michigan Attorney General weighs in

Kellie Woodhouse @ AnnArbor.com

and a post by blogger Pete Larson

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Press release: GEO response to Attorney General’s motion to intervene

Graduate Student Research Assistants (GSRAs) at the University of
Michigan continue their effort to restore their collective bargaining
rights even as the Attorney General attempts to delay or prevent a union
election by filing a motion to intervene at the Michigan Employment
Relations Commission (MERC).

MERC will make a decision on GSRAs’ request for a union election at
their meeting on December 13.

GEO strongly believes that the decision to form a union should be free
from interference. “I think GSRAs have a right to make
this decision for themselves, without interference from outside
parties,” stated GSRA Christie Toth.

The Graduate Employees’ Organization (GEO/AFT/AFL-CIO) is the trade union
representing Graduate Student Instructors (GSIs) and Graduate Student
Staff Assistants (GSSAs) at the University of Michigan. Graduate
employees founded GEO in 1970, making GEO one of the oldest graduate
employee unions in the United States.

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Letter from the GSRA Campaign: The Next Step

We’re writing with good news: on Tuesday, the Michigan Employment Relations Commission (MERC) set December 13 as the date for the next step in our path to a vote to form a union.

In a positive move, comments from a majority of commissioners indicated that the motion we presented in early October for reconsideration of our election petition has merit, and that MERC is likely to order a hearing on the merits when they meet on December 13.

The same majority expressed dismay over the efforts of the Mackinac Center for Public Policy to intervene in the election, stalling the process since a majority of GSRAs requested an election in April 2011, and indicated that they are likely to reject those efforts.

We are working to make sure that the remaining steps to the election go rapidly.

As Christie Toth, a GSRA at the Sweetland Center for Writing, says: “Whether or not any one of us wants to be represented by a union, I believe all GSRAs should have the opportunity to vote.”

GSRAs and GEO members are continuing to reach out to fellow graduate assistants with whom we haven’t yet spoken; every day, we’re meeting GSRAs who are excited to join the union and get involved.

We’re also beginning to prepare for the MERC hearing that’s likely to be ordered on December 13, in which we’ll need to present evidence about what GSRAs do and how we meet the legal requirements to be considered employees. We’ll continue to update you roughly once a week about the progress of the campaign.

If you’ve got questions or concerns about your GSRA position, about the progress of the campaign, or about what forming a union means to you–or if you want to get more involved in the campaign–please contact us at gsracampaign@geo3550.org. (Also, you can visit us at www.gsracampaign.org, friend us on Facebook–we’re UM GEO–and follow us on Twitter, where we’re @geo3550.)

 

Yours truly,

Alix Gould-Werth
GSRA Campaign Organizing Committee Chair

 

Samantha Montgomery
President, GEO

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