Rose Garden Resident

Cal State workers launch 5-day strike amid salary dispute

- By Elissa Miolene and Hannah Poukish

Faculty members across the California State University system began a fiveday strike Monday, leaving hundreds of thousands of students adrift just as the spring semester begins.

The planned strike from Monday through today is the latest in a series of actions from lecturers, librarians, coaches, social workers and other staff at the nation's largest public university, which includes San Jose State, San Francisco State, and Cal State East Bay in Hayward.

“We have been in the bargaining process for eight months and the California Faculty Associatio­n has shown no movement, leaving us no other option” but to end contract negotiatio­ns, Leora Freedman, the CSU'S vice chancellor for human resources, said in a statement.

The California Faculty Associatio­n, which represents 29,000 staff at Cal State, voted to strike in late October

after the CSU stood firm on its offer of 5% salary increases for faculty starting Wednesday, effectivel­y ending contract negotiatio­ns.

The labor action follows months of talks between the union and the university, with faculty members calling for a 12% pay bump, a higher floor for the lowestpaid staff and expanded parental leave, among other demands. CFA'S contract is set to expire in June.

“As CSU management refuses to listen, we have no alternativ­e but to disrupt the business of the CSU to get their attention,” said Meghan O'donnell, an associate vice president at the CFA.

In December, staff at four CSU campuses walked out of the classroom for one day each. This month's strike is slated to be much longer: It's anticipate­d that the majority of faculty at all 23 campuses will refrain from teaching, grading or answering work emails for an entire week. The staff are also being joined by members of Teamsters Local 2010, a union of over 1,000 trade workers who have also been negotiatin­g with Cal State throughout the last year.

The strike could impact the more than 460,000 students who attend CSUS, resulting in canceled classes and athletic events during the first week of the spring semester at most CSU campuses. It's unknown how many faculty are planning to join the strike, or if some classes will remain open.

At San Jose State, university officials issued a campuswide email informing students that some lessons may be disrupted this week and called on students to report faculty who canceled class.

Estevan Guzman, a sophomore at SJSU and an Associated Students board member, said there is confusion over whether courses are fully canceled or if some will remain in session.

“There is concern on what's going to be happening as a result of that missed week regarding syllabus week, if things are going to need to be pushed back,” Guzman said.

Recently, the Associated Students of San Jose State passed a resolution in solidarity with striking faculty. They also held a Q&A session about the strike for all students.

At Cal State East Bay, student reactions to the strike are mixed. While some students are looking forward to extra days off from class, others are concerned about losing an entire week of learning amid rising tuition costs.

“The strike is only the cherry on top. Right now, our tuition is increasing by 6% for the next five years. Our classes got cut in the spring semester… and enrollment is down,” said Nolan Calara, a junior at CSUEB'S Hayward campus.

In September, university trustees voted 15-5 for an annual 6% tuition increase that starts this fall and will affect hundreds of thousands of CSU students over the next five years. The tuition hikes comes after a working group found the university system was facing a funding gap of $1.5 billion, and only had enough money to pay for about 85% of its costs.

Calara, who's also president of Associated Students

Inc. at Cal State East Bay, plans to join faculty members on the picket lines. He and other ASI leaders released a statement in support of better working conditions for faculty and encouraged students to take part in the strike.

“As a student, education is really important to me. I believe that the faculty that are educating me and teaching me deserve a lot more salary than they're getting right now,” Calara said.

Ray Buyco, a senior lecturer at San Jose State University, is used to working multiple jobs to make ends meet. The history teacher and profession­al musician has been running from lectures to shows for the past 12 years, and while he enjoys the work, the number of gigs it takes to pay the bills is wearing on him.

Over the course of his CSU career, Buyco has made an average of $50,000 per year.

“If you're resourcefu­l and you don't mind working 70 to 80 hours a week or whatever it takes, then you can do it. But you know, the one job isn't enough,” Buyco said.

In their list of demands, the CFA wants to lift the salary floor for full-time faculty, like Buyco, from $54,360 to $64,360, and raise all staff wages by 12%.

But granting this large of a raise to the university's faculty, CSU officials said, would result in $380 million of new spending each year. Still, the union believes Cal State has the money to pay faculty more — while the university says they're facing a massive funding gap.

The university system offered faculty a 15% increase over three years, one broken into 5% annual chunks. But that agreement, union leaders say, would limit the faculty members' ability to negotiate until 2026-2027, and put them at-risk of losing the annual raises if state funding ran out.

“No matter what, we need a contract where raises are guaranteed,” said Jenny Lederer, an associate professor of linguistic­s at SF State, at a one-day strike in December. “Nobody is going to vote for 5% this year, and unknown percentage­s in years two and three.”

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