The Record (Troy, NY)

Grad student union hopes fading under Trump

- By Karen Matthews

NEWYORK » Graduate teaching assistants at private universiti­es had high hopes 18 months ago when a federal labor board ruled that they had a right to collective bargaining, but after the election of President Donald Trump, some schools are taking another shot at halting the burgeoning unionizati­on movement.

Columbia University announced in a university­wide email Tuesday that the school wouldn’t bargain with the graduate students who voted more than 2 to 1 for union representa­tion, and would instead appeal to a federal court. Yale and Boston College, among others, have also filed legal appeals, rather than begin negotiatin­g with newly unionized students.

It may be a sign that administra­tors are anticipati­ng that the National Labor Relations Board, now being reconstitu­ted with appointees of the strongly pro-business Republican president, will reverse the decision it made in 2016 and declare that graduate students are not employees after all.

“It’s not a crazy strategy to stall because it is very likely that this board with a number of appointees from Trump will return to the idea that graduate students are primarily students,” said Harry Katz, a professor of collective bargaining at Cornell University’s School of Industrial and Labor Relations.

Unions have represente­d teaching and research assistants at public universiti­es for decades, but New York University is the only private university in the U.S. with a collective bargaining agreement with graduate students.

Universiti­es have generally argued that even though graduate teaching assistants are paid — their mean annual pay was $35,810 in 2016, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics — treating them like employees would disrupt the mentoring relationsh­ip between budding scholars and the professors supervisin­g their academic pursuits and research.

The NLRB’s position on whether students have a right to unionize has shifted.

In 2004, during the pres- idency of George W. Bush, a Republican, the board ruled that graduate student instructor­s are not employees. The board reversed itself in 2016 under President Barack Obama, a Democrat.

The five-member NLRB currently has four members who are split evenly between appointees of Trump and Obama. Trump’s nominee for the fifth seat, management-side labor lawyer John Ring, awaits Senate confirmati­on.

Chaz Lee, a graduate student in music history at the University of Chicago, said a pro-union vote there in October was “a really heartening moment for all of us.”

He had hoped it would lead to better pay and health insurance coverage. Many graduate students struggle to find affordable housing near the university, he said.

“Some depar tments give raises; some don’t,” he said. “None of these are enshrined in a contract that ensures that our compensati­on would go up to stay in line with the cost of living.”

After the unionizati­on vote, the university filed a motion urging the NLRB to reverse its 2016 ruling and once again designate graduate students as students, not workers.

“Our concern here is simply about the potential effects of unionizati­on on our ability to provide our students with the individual­ized support they need to flourish in their research and teaching,” University of Chicago Executive Vice Provost David Nirenberg said in a letter to graduate students.

Columbia administra­tors voiced a similar concern after teaching assistants voted to join the United Auto Workers.

“We remain convinced that the relationsh­ip of graduate students to the faculty that instruct them must not be reduced to ordinary terms of employment,” Columbia University Provost John Coatsworth said in his email to the university community Tuesday.

Julie Kushner, the re- gional head of the UAW, said the union hopes to mobilize community opposition to Columbia’s decision not to bargain.

“People expect that from a Walmart,” Kushner said. “They don’t expect it from a prestigiou­s university.”

Randi Weingarten, head of the American Federation of Teachers, which is working with graduate students at the University of Chicago and elsewhere, accused administra­tors of “trying to run out the clock,” on the unionizati­on movement, “cynically calculatin­g that a Donald Trump-appointed board will move to trample it.”

Some universiti­es have not said outright that they won’t bargain with graduate students but have filed appeals challengin­g the validity of elections.

Boston College has argued that the NLRB rulings don’t apply because it is a Roman Catholic institutio­n.

Other universiti­es, including American University in Washington, D.C., and Tufts and Brandeis in the Boston area, have agreed to negotiate with newly unionized students.

 ?? NATE WAGNER ?? Demonstrat­ors advocate for a union at Columbia University in New York on Thursday after the school announced earlier in the week that it won’t bargain with students who voted overwhelmi­ngly for union representa­tion more than a year ago.
NATE WAGNER Demonstrat­ors advocate for a union at Columbia University in New York on Thursday after the school announced earlier in the week that it won’t bargain with students who voted overwhelmi­ngly for union representa­tion more than a year ago.

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