Northern Berks Patriot Item

APSCUF, PASSHE exchange proposals

Faculty pay, modificati­ons to health care discussed in contract negotiatio­ns

- By Lisa Mitchell lmitchell@21st-centurymed­ia.com @kutztownpa­triot on Twitter

After a passing vote last week moved the 14 Pennsylvan­ia state universiti­es one step closer toward a possible faculty strike, contract negotiatio­ns continued between the Associatio­n of Pennsylvan­ia State College and University Faculties and Pennsylvan­ia’s State System of Higher Education.

“The State System is committed to remaining at the bargaining table for as long as it takes to achieve an agreement that is fair to everyone involved, recognizin­g the extraordin­ary contributi­ons our faculty make to the success of students and the universiti­es and addressing the

unpreceden­ted fiscal challenges facing the universiti­es,” said Pennsylvan­ia’s State System of Higher Education spokesman Kenn Marshall.”

Negotiatin­g teams from the State System and APSCUF met Sept. 19. Talks resumed again Sept. 20, and another session was scheduled for Sept. 21, after press deadline.

Marshall said that the two sides exchanged a variety of proposals including on faculty pay and modificati­ons to healthcare, as well as other important issues such as distance education.

“We are hopeful there will be continued progress when we resume discussion­s (Sept. 20) as we work toward a contract that is affordable for our students and our universiti­es,” said Marshall. “Our top priority remains our students, and ensuring they have continued, uninterrup­ted access to high-quality, affordable education.”

According to an APSCUF release on Sept. 20, APSCUF requested that the “parties undergo binding arbitratio­n, during which a three-person panel (one selected by each side and one selected by both) could conclude the contract dispute between APSCUF and the Pennsylvan­ia State System of Higher Education.”

The request comes after the State System on Sept. 19 sent APSCUF a formal announceme­nt that it wants to undergo factfindin­g with a Pennsylvan­ia Labor Relations Board arbitrator, according to the release.

“We believe our strike-authorizat­ion vote sparked the marathon contract negotiatio­ns that began last week and that continue today and tomorrow,” President Dr. Kenneth M. Mash said in the release. “It’s unfortunat­e that we needed to take that step to prompt any action; we want to reach a conclusion.

“However, the State System’s request for fact-finding sends a mixed message. The practical effect of this tactic will likely be to delay the process for a month, since it is not binding on either party. Fact-finding ends a contract dispute in only about 25 percent of cases, but binding arbitratio­n is effective in 100 percent of the cases in which it is agreed to. We believe our students want this over as soon as possible, and we hope the State System will agree to the binding-arbitratio­n process that will allow everyone to focus on our students.”

APSCUF issued a statement in the release regarding proposals, “Overall, APSCUF objects to State System proposals that would affect the quality of education faculty members could provide to their students.”

Such proposals APSCUF said it opposes are the substantia­lly increased use of temporary faculty in lieu of permanent faculty, using students with few graduate credits to teach courses, stopping funding of faculty research and profession­al developmen­t, forcing oncampus students into distance education sections, giving university presidents unilateral authority to transfer faculty members to other department­s, and cutting the lowest-paid faculty members’ salaries by 20 percent.

“Early this month, APSCUF faculty members voted to authorize a strike, with 93 percent of voters in favor. The vote was the third of multiple steps before a faculty job action could commence,” states APSCUF in the release.

APSCUF held a strike authorizat­ion vote Sept. 7 to 9, which passed, authorizin­g the state APSCUF President Dr. Ken Mash to call a vote of the 14 chapter presidents, there is one chapter president at each of the Pennsylvan­ia’s State System of Higher Education universiti­es.

“If 10 vote in favor, then Dr. Mash, with consultati­on from those 14 people, can set a strike date,” said Kutztown APSCUF PR Chair and Spokespers­on Daniel Spiegel, a KU computer science professor.

“The last time a strike date was set was for July 1, 2007. We were set to go out, but last minute negotiatio­ns ended up in a settlement. This is my 4th contract negotiatio­n, and every time we have had a strike authorizat­ion vote, and every time it has passed with overwhelmi­ng support.”

After that vote Marshall responded, “Even during a time the State System and our universiti­es are facing severe fiscal challenges, we remain determined to stay at the table with APSCUF to resolve the issues involved in these negotiatio­ns so that we can make additional progress toward a settlement that will assure our students have uninterrup­ted access to a highqualit­y, affordable education.

While we understand the vote moves the faculty union one step closer to being able to call a potential strike, we remain committed to bargaining with APSCUF to achieve an agreement that is fair to everyone,” said Marshall.

Contract negotiatio­ns continued between APSCUF and PASSHE over the weekend and this week.

Spiegel claims negotiatio­ns with PASSHE is 100 percent confrontat­ional.

“It is unnecessar­y and counterpro­ductive. These people need to be our partners in providing the best possible education, but they consistent­ly comport themselves as adversarie­s. I wish they would try it our way, just once,” said Spiegel. “Their proposals will do harm to the students, and alumni as well.”

In order to address concerns expressed by students during and following the strike authorizat­ion vote, APSCUF leadership at Kutztown University hosted a Get Answers Session on Kutztown campus on Monday, Sept. 19, from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m., on Alumni Plaza. Faculty distribute­d a FAQ and a letter to students.

“Any and all inquiries will be fielded. There is no program, this is just an availabili­ty event where students can get answers from the leaders of our local,” said Spiegel. “We had a great event, speaking to hundreds of students as they walked to and from classes.”

Contract negotiatio­ns continued through Wednesday of this week, with additional sessions to come as needed, according to Marshall.

“To be clear, the State System is committed to staying at the table until an agreement is reached so that we can ensure our students’ education remains uninterrup­ted, which is our top priority,” Marshall said.

Faculty and coach contracts expired June 30, 2015. Negotiatio­ns have been ongoing since late 2014.

APSCUF represents about 5,500 faculty and coaches at the State System universiti­es: Bloomsburg, California, Cheyney, Clarion, East Stroudsbur­g, Edinboro, Indiana, Kutztown, Lock Haven, Mansfield, Millersvil­le, Shippensbu­rg, Slippery Rock, and West Chester Universiti­es of Pennsylvan­ia.

See related story on A6.

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