Los Angeles Times

Grad students on strike f ired

- By Suhauna Hussain

Teaching assistants at UC Santa Cruz had withheld grades amid calls for higher pay.

UC Santa Cruz fired 54 graduate student workers who were on strike demanding higher pay to afford the area’s high cost of living.

As part of a “wildcat strike” not backed by their union, about 200 teaching assistants in December withheld grades after months of back and forth with campus administra­tors. They demanded an increase in pay of $1,412 a month.

Tension between student workers, the campus and University of California administra­tors heightened dramatical­ly in recent weeks as talks floundered. Students escalated the grade strike in early February to a full work stoppage, declining to teach, hold office hours, conduct research or post grades.

Seventeen students were arrested at a campus protest Feb. 12, and officials published a series of letters online warning student workers they would face discipline.

On Monday, UC Santa Cruz told teaching assistants it would check for the withheld grades later in the week. The campus sent letters of intent to dismiss Friday around noon to 54 students. An estimated 30 other students who had yet to secure spring teaching jobs were told they would not be eligible for the positions, student activists said.

Housing is expensive in Santa Cruz, and student workers have a difficult time living on the typical stipend of $2,400 a month before taxes, said Veronica Hamilton, vice president of UC Santa Cruz’s graduate student associatio­n and chair of the campus’ unit of UAW Local 2865, the union for more than 19,000 student workers at the UC system.

The student labor movement has spread to other UC campuses.

UC Santa Barbara graduate students voted Monday for a full strike, and UC Davis students decided Thursday to withhold student grades for the winter quarter until the university raises their housing supplement.

UC Santa Cruz spokesman Scott HernandezJ­ason said in a statement that 96% of grades were submitted and the “vast majority” of graduate students have returned to work, but 54 students continued to “disrupt campus by withholdin­g grades for undergradu­ate students in a way that unfairly impairs their education.”

Among those fired Friday was Brenda Arjona, a third-year doctoral student in anthropolo­gy who has a 10-year-old son and lives in student family housing. She’s still trying to figure out what being fired will mean for her status as a student.

As a teaching assistant, she doesn’t pay tuition, and Arjona said there’s no way she can pay thousands of dollars of tuition out of pocket.

“I’m struggling for basic needs such as toilet paper, buying my son milk,” said Arjona, who pays about $1,700 a month in rent out of the $2,200 she receives after taxes. “If there’s an emergency, I have truly nothing to fall back on.”

She had known losing her job was a possibilit­y but wanted to keep pushing on with the strike. “I should not have to live this way,” Arjona said.

Hernandez-Jason said UC Santa Cruz’s administra­tion has worked to hear and address teaching assistants’ concerns.

“UCSC leadership is well aware of the housing crisis in Santa Cruz and has made numerous good faith efforts to offer solutions and assist our TAs,” Hernandez-Jason said in an email.

Those efforts include an annual $2,500 housing supplement until more campus housing becomes available for graduate students and two temporary housing assistance programs for graduate students.

The campus’ chancellor also announced a joint working group to develop “appropriat­e and sustainabl­e” graduate student support, Hernandez-Jason said.

Hamilton said the $2,500 supplement offered by the university after negotiatio­ns this year provides students with only an extra $200 a month, which does not do much to fix the problem. She said students shouldn’t have to relinquish their only leverage for the university to come to the table.

“They shouldn’t fire anybody,” said Hamilton, who is a graduate student teaching assistant but was not among those fired. “People are telling them they’re homeless, and they won’t have a substantiv­e conversati­on.”

UC’s four-year contract with the union, which expires in 2022, includes “fair pay and excellent benefits,” UC spokesman Andrew Gordon said in a statement.

“Reopening the contract would defeat the purpose of a signed agreement and would be unfair to all the other UC unions as well as nearly 90,000 represente­d employees at the University who do adhere to collective bargaining agreements,” he said.

Hamilton said the contract’s terms were inadequate and that although it was ratified UC-wide, 83% of student employees at UC Santa Cruz voted against it at the time.

On Feb. 14, UC President Janet Napolitano sent a letter addressed to faculty, staff and students saying teaching assistants would be fired if they continued to withhold grades.

“Holding undergradu­ate grades hostage and refusing to carry out contracted teaching responsibi­lities is the wrong way to go. Therefore, participat­ion in the wildcat strike will have consequenc­es, up to and including the terminatio­n of existing employment at the University,” Napolitano wrote.

The UC system filed an unfair-labor-practice charge against UAW 2865 on Tuesday alleging that the union failed to take the steps required by the collective bargaining agreement to stop the strike by teaching assistants at UC Santa Cruz.

In response, UAW 2865 filed its own unfair-laborpract­ice charge Thursday against the UC system, alleging that it refused to meet with the union to negotiate a cost of living adjustment that has been the focus of actions across the state and the wildcat strike at UC Santa Cruz.

“I’m staying optimistic that we can continue to galvanize people on other campuses and spread this movement,” Arjona said.

 ?? Dan Coyro Santa Cruz Sentinel ?? POLICE SURROUND demonstrat­ors Feb. 12 at UC Santa Cruz during a labor protest by graduate teaching assistants on strike demanding cost-of-living raises.
Dan Coyro Santa Cruz Sentinel POLICE SURROUND demonstrat­ors Feb. 12 at UC Santa Cruz during a labor protest by graduate teaching assistants on strike demanding cost-of-living raises.

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