The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Ruling: Grad students at private universiti­es can unionize

- By Karen Matthews

NEW YORK — The National Labor Relations Board ruled Tuesday that student teaching and research assistants at private universiti­es are employees and have a right to be represente­d by unions.

The 3-1 ruling overturns a 2004 NLRB decision that said graduate students were not employees covered by the National Labor Relations Act.

Tuesday’s decision in a case involving graduate students at Columbia University potentiall­y affects graduate students at hundreds of private colleges and universiti­es throughout the U.S. Graduate students at many public universiti­es, which are covered by state labor laws, are already unionized.

Columbia said in a statement that it disagrees with the ruling because it believes the relationsh­ip between students and academic department­s is not the same as the one between employee and employer.

While Columbia and other universiti­es have long argued that collective bargaining could intrude on the educationa­l relationsh­ip between graduate students and universiti­es, the NLRB said in Tuesday’s decision that such arguments are “unsupporte­d by legal authority, by empirical evidence or by the board’s actual experience.”

Olga Brudastova, a graduate research assistant in civil engineerin­g at Columbia, said she looks forward to “a speedy, fair election” for union representa­tion.

“We instruct classes, grade papers for thousands of students and push the boundaries of research and the arts, but despite these contributi­ons and more, Columbia administra­tors have stood in the way of our rights,” Brudastova said.

The United Auto Workers is seeking to represent graduate teaching and research assistants at Columbia.

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