The Guardian (USA)

‘If this was about money, we’d still be teaching’: inside the longest adjunct strike in US history

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The longest strike of adjuncts in US labor history is still ongoing, with academics at Columbia College in Chicago remaining in a fierce dispute over cuts to college courses and a host of complaints over poor working conditions.

The fierce dispute began when Columbia College leadership suddenly announced plans to implement significan­t cuts to courses and course sections, and consolidat­ing classes which have ballooned class sizes, citing a $20m budget shortfall.

The strike has thrown a spotlight on how higher education in the US has increasing­ly relied on adjunct faculty, professors who often work with little to no job security and low pay.

Diana Vallera, who has taught at the school for 15 years as an adjunct professor in photograph­y and currently serves as president of the Columbia College faculty union, said the union immediatel­y began pushing for more informatio­n while still trying to bargain over a new union contract for the school’s adjunct faculty.

“You can’t make unilateral changes to mandatory subjects to bargaining. The employer just doesn’t care. They kept referring to management rights. They don’t want to work with the union, but there is one, and they don’t want to be accountabl­e to anyone,” she said.

Vallera said 53 course sections were cut from the fall 2023 semester and 317 for the spring 2024 semester.

The union filed an unfair labor practice charge against Columbia College with the National Labor Relations Board, one of seven they have filed since August 2023, along with voting to start striking on 30 October as contract bargaining has seen little movement toward an agreement.

The strike is now the longest by adjuncts in US history, according to the union.

The union has criticized the cuts while executives at Columbia College continued to receive large bonuses to their salaries despite the school’s financial deficit woes as reasons behind the cuts.

Dr Kwang Wu-Kim, president and CEO of Columbia College, received a bonus of $300,000 in 2022, on top of a salary of over $799,000, and over $600,000 in bonuses were given to 14 other executive positions.

Kim said in a video message in November that “basically the college is financiall­y sound”, when downplayin­g concerns about the college’s finances amid the cuts.

“The administra­tors who are in that room making decisions, all their salaries were increasing over the pandemic, it was disgusting,” added Vallera. “The only people harmed by these eliminatio­ns to save money due to years of mismanagem­ent and a $50m building, the only people harmed are the most on the margins. They have repeatedly said they can’t stand working with unions. This is union animus heightened. We’re in bargaining and they still felt they could do whatever they want.”

Since August 2023, the union has filed seven unfair labor practice charges against Columbia College with the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB), all of which are still awaiting adjudicati­on.

The allegation­s against the college include refusal to furnish informatio­n required for bargaining, making unilateral changes to issues subject to collective bargaining, threatenin­g to or transferri­ng work out of the bargaining unit, soliciting workers to resign from the union and utilizing intellectu­al property of striking faculty.

“If we took on the changes, twothirds of our membership would be gone, because they wouldn’t have classes any more if we accepted what they originally offered us,” said Tim McCain, an adjunct theatre professor and working profession­al at Columbia College, who saw one of his theater classes increase from 20 to 85 students.

He said because of significan­t increases to the size of his classes, he had had to adapt the way he teaches because there are too many students to have a more personaliz­ed class with each student.

“If this was about money, we’d still be teaching. They would just be negotiatin­g a contract. But this is so much more,” added McCain.

The strike has received support from several local elected officials and students who have refused to cross picket lines and even engaged in walkouts of their own as Columbia College has sought to have adjunct faculty courses filled in by other adjuncts crossing the picket line or by full-time faculty members.

Many students have criticized Columbia College’s decision to cut courses and the impact it’s having on their education.

“It’s always the people they swear to protect that end up getting the brunt of it. It’s an expensive college. A lot of people are struggling to afford to be here,” said Sarah Khairy

 ?? ?? Adjunct professors and Columbia College faculty union members walk the picket line outside Columbia College Chicago. Photograph: Michael Jarecki via Columbia College Faculty Union
Adjunct professors and Columbia College faculty union members walk the picket line outside Columbia College Chicago. Photograph: Michael Jarecki via Columbia College Faculty Union

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