Baltimore Sun

Hopkins grad students seek union

They want an avenue to voice frustratio­ns over hours and pay, bring about change

- By Talia Richman trichman@baltsun.com twitter.com/TaliRichma­n

Johns Hopkins University graduate students rallied on campus Wednesday to announce plans to unionize and demand better working conditions.

They’ve joined forces with SEIU Local 500, the group behind the successful unionizati­on effort of American University graduate students, as well as those of part-time faculty across the region.

In front of the Milton S. Eisenhower Library on Johns Hopkins’ Homewood campus, more than 50 people chanted: “Hear us shout, JHU, Hopkins grads are workers, too.”

The student workers said they work unreasonab­ly long hours for low pay in positions filled with uncertaint­y and don’t receive affordable health insurance. They’re demanding an avenue to voice their frustratio­ns and bring about change.

“We're declaring that we are grad students, but we’re also workers at the university, and we’re going to form a union because it’s the best way for us to have sustainabl­e improvemen­ts to our working conditions here,” said Joanna Behrman, a fifth-year graduate student and organizing committee member.

The students have not yet signed union cards, or set a timeline to do so, but the organizing committee amassed more than 200 signatures of support before Wednesday’s rally. There are about 2,400 graduate students on the Homewood campus, and just under 9,000 across the institutio­n.

In an emailed statement, Hopkins spokesman Dennis O’Shea said the university has emphasized listening to graduate student concerns and took steps recently to improve their experience.

The university has expanded health benefits, instituted a new parental leave program and made investment­s in career services.

“We believe that at the heart of our graduate students’ educationa­l experience are the relationsh­ips they develop with their faculty advisors,” he wrote. “These advisors are teachers, sounding boards, research collaborat­ors, and mentors. This unique relationsh­ip has no analogue in the profession­al world.

“Johns Hopkins welcomes the discussion on campus about howto continue to improve the graduate student experience.”

Pro-union momentum is building among graduate students at private universiti­es across the country, according to the Economic Policy Institute.

The National Labor Relations Board ruled in 2016 that “student teaching assistants” and “student research assistants” at private universiti­es are employees under the National Labor Relations Act, giving them the right to form a union and collective­ly bargain. Columbia University’s graduate students recently unionized, as did those at Loyola University Chicago. Public universiti­es, meanwhile, have long been home to graduate student unions.

“It’s all part of a movement in terms of recognizin­g that faculty in higher education has changed,” said Christophe­r Honey, SEIU Local 500’s communicat­ions director.

Peter Weck, an organizer with Teachers and Researcher­s United at Hopkins, said the depth of graduate student workers’ load is overlooked. Universiti­es increasing­ly have been steering teaching duties away from tenured or tenure-track faculty and over to graduate students and adjuncts.

“We teach. We grade the tests. We run the experiment­s. We write papers. We work for Hopkins,” said Weck, a third-year Ph.D. student. “Our labor is essential to the day-to-day operation of the university.”

Thegroup gathered Wednesday wanted to send the message: Teaching conditions are student learning conditions.

“But do we have a say in our own working conditions?” Wecksaid. “Ask the grad worker here, at one of the world’s premier medical institutes, under a mountain of debt for trying to treat a chronic condition. Ask the grad worker forced to choose between pursuing their passion and raising a family. … There’s a lot that stands in the way of us doing our jobs the best that we can.”

Sprinkled among the crowd at the rally were nurses from Johns Hopkins Hospital. A group of them is also in the midst of a union push.

They are working with National Nurses United to gain enough supporters to bring the idea of forming a union to a vote. The nurses say they are overworked and underpaid, and that a shortage of nurses is putting patient care at risk.

Abaneh Ebangwese said the nurses stand in solidarity with the graduate student workers.

“You knowwhat’s right and you’re fighting for it,” the registered nurse told them. “We’re trying to do the same.”

But the nurses who spoke also delivered a warning: Organizing at a powerful institutio­n such as Hopkins might be difficult, and will take patience and resilience.

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