




Date posted:
Date posted: January 12, 2021
Old Business:
Date posted: January 11, 2021
Items of Collegiality:
New Business:
Old Business:
Date posted: December 9, 2020
Items of Collegiality:
Old Business:
campus put into practice this MOU, in terms of communication and implementation?
New Business:
Date posted:
Items of Collegiality:
New Business:
Old Business:
1. April 30 Memorandum of Understanding on Tenure Clock Stops and Personnel Actions:
campus put into practice this MOU, in terms of communication and implementation?
Date posted:
Items of Collegiality:
New Business:
Date posted: December 7, 2020
by Jo Schaffer, Art and Art History Emerita –
Union Strong is our call to members to remind them that we all win when we hang together. It also reminds them, more subtly, that we are only as strong as our weakest link, and as such, we need to support the weakest among us. So it was warming and heartening to see that not only were we UNION STRONG but UNION COMPASSIONATE during this past year’s call for donations to the Holiday season Food Bank. This year UUP worked closely with Catholic Charities of Cortland to be the distributor of the boxes of food and personal items donated.


Not only were there boxes at sites across the campus but two off-site locations, at Henry Steck and Jo Schaffer’s homes, for drop off for retirees and others who did not feel comfortable coming to campus because of the pandemic.
According to past drives, this year’s contributions were the largest ever received. Many of you were extraordinarily generous and thoughtful in your anonymous contributions. Some donated mittens and gloves, hair products, plush toys, games and much more than cans of beans and tuna, boxes of cereal and spaghetti. These contributions will make some families enjoy moments of joy beyond the necessity of food.
UUP thanks to all of you who made this year’s FOOD BANK drive so successful.
To all, have a warm, healthy and happy holiday season.
Date posted:
by Dan Harms, Vice President for Academics – Last week, I had no idea what I was going to write about in the newsletter. So much uncertainty and change has swirled around us in the nation, state, campus, and home – what would be relevant by the time you read this?
One fact is evergreen: UUP employees work hard and pull through. We have had the messiest, most chaotic semester in living memory, and academics and professionals, tenure-track and contingent faculty, all pulled together to teach and assist our students under grueling conditions hitherto-unimagined. Further, not one employee at Cortland has, according to our dashboard, been hospitalized or lost their life to this disease. So, first, let me offer my congratulations on our survival and success.
Most of us haven’t had an opportunity to ask how our fellow campuses are doing. Let’s take a look.
The New York Times created a nationwide map of college campuses to show the number of COVID cases reported on each (https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2020/us/covid-college-cases-tracker.html). It seems most of the data is self-reported as of November 19, so we should take the numbers with caution. Also, there’s considerable variation in certain metrics, such as whether the campus counts number of positive tests or number of positive individuals, and county health departments might make different requests of the campuses within them.
If you zoom in and out of the map, the names of different campuses appear and disappear. When zoomed out entirely, however, only one campus’ name appears over our state: SUNY Cortland. To be fair, this seems to be a product of how the map is generated; on the list further down the page, SUNY Oneonta edges out Cortland for the most reported cases in-state. Yet according to the SUNY COVID dashboard (https://www.suny.edu/covid19-tracker/ ), we have had more cases than Oneonta, ranking first in the system. This is in a state with colleges of staggering size, some of which have been in veritable COVID-19 hotspots.
Have our colossal efforts to repeatedly test the campus ratcheted up our numbers? Positivity of tests administered may be a better indicator of spread within a population. We do not have figures for colleges across the state, but as of today, Cortland (2.7%) ranks at third on the SUNY dashboard, behind Upstate Medical (3.9%) and Oneonta (3.5%).
I am not any sort of specialist on health or statistics. Some sources of data are contradictory, and many colleges may not be as forthright as ours about their numbers. We will certainly see an accounting later detailing how accurate or representative these measures have been, or if any measures we took as a campus might have made a difference.
No matter what we might find later, however, students will be returning to Cortland in less than two months. A cold Central New York winter will constrain more students to indoor settings, leading to greater possibility of transmission.
Cortland has been asked to submit a plan to SUNY for review for the February re-opening. I hope that whatever plan we present takes lessons from our campus, and successful efforts pursued at others, in order to preserve the safety of employees and students alike.
Date posted:
by Jaclyn Pittsley, President –
To say that it’s been a difficult semester is to understate just how challenging this fall 2020 semester has been. I will not patronize you or fob you off by saying that it has been otherwise. Everyone has been working around the clock to try and deliver the education our students need throughout this semester. We are all exhausted. We are all worried about the financial health of Cortland and SUNY. We are worried about our jobs. We are worried about enrollment. We are worried about our students. We are worried about the safety of our families and friends, and, of course, we are concerned about our own well-being.
We have been dealing with difficult issues:
And our members have been facing a multitude of other issues that, while too plentiful to list here, are in need of real recognition and appreciation.
As your UUP Cortland Chapter President, I want to thank everyone, most sincerely, for every thing you have done, major and minor, acknowledged and unacknowledged, to keep our students healthy and as happy as possible in such a restricted environment.
If our members had not risen to the occasion and voluntarily gone above and beyond the call of duty, without compensation of any kind, then SUNY Cortland would not have operated as successfully as it has this fall.
Some of our members who have been working at Cortland for more than a decade, have no position in the winter/spring 2021 semester. They will have no classes to teach, no athletics to coach; they will have no health insurance, and they will be facing personal financial crises that I can hardly imagine, but with which I absolutely empathize.
Some of you are struggling to cope with loss of loved ones, whether from complications related to COVID 19, from other illnesses, catastrophes, or accidents. You have my thoughts and prayers.
UUP has worked very hard to be sensitive to the issues you have all been facing, the fear and frustration you have been feeling.
In order to insure that your voice is heard and that you are receiving all the assistance your union can offer, we have been holding both open house virtual meetings, and targeted membership meetings. We want to thank our members who have participated in these meetings, as we need to be kept aware of your concerns so that we can continue to fight to maintain and, indeed, improve your terms and conditions of employment through our Labor Management meetings with the administration. If we are not informed, we cannot keep our dialogue with management progressing, and I thank you. Although most of our members are not comfortable visiting the UUP Chapter office, now located back in Moffett Room 001, our officers have been readily available using virtual platforms to meet and discuss individual issues and member needs.
We have been reaching out to our newly hired members and other non-members to continue to develop and increase our membership. We thank every member for remaining committed as a member of UUP, and we welcome new members every day. Please do consider signing up to be a member of your union, if you have not already done so. The benefits are immeasurable, and the downside nil. UUP is our union.
UUP has hosted an insightful Fall Membership meeting, at which we were able to have fellowship at a safe distance, and hear words of inspiration and friendship from our leaders statewide.
Our UUP Statewide affiliates have been working diligently with the Chancellor and in Labor Management meetings to keep us all safe with mandatory surveillance testing provided for free to UUP represented employees; they have worked to keep the aggregation of our scholarship, research, and work safe with the Agreement to Adjust the Tenure Clock; and they have worked to establish our ground-breaking Telecommuting Pilot Program to keep density on campuses at a minimum and prevent the spread of COVID 19.
I have personally met Chancellor Malatras, and I know he is aware of our concerns, and our issues, and he is in daily contact with our UUP President Fred Kowal to try and balance the needs of the campuses and our communities with the needs of those who live and work there.
The Cortland Community is facing financial meltdown as well, their businesses having not been patronized by the campus community. This has resulted in the loss of uncountable jobs and income. In an effort to assist the local community, UUP has conducted a food drive to benefit customers at Catholic Charities of Cortland County, from November 4-December 4. We have collected non-perishable food items, hygiene items, and unwrapped gifts to be donated before the end-of-year holiday season.
UUP wishes the Cortland Community well and will continue to support its citizens in any way we can.
What else can we do as we look ahead to the spring, when we know, as it has this semester, the campus will not be able to operate successfully in the spring if we do not continue our heroic work?
First, take a break! Management has been very receptive in conversations with UUP about taking some time over the winter break for self-care and recharging for the spring semester.
Second, reach out. Please reach out to your UUP leadership with issues and concerns. We are doing and will continue to do our best to communicate with our members and work to protect their jobs and their interests. We will continue to reach out to others who need us more than we need them.
Third, remember what is good. I will not bore you with platitudes, and sometimes, some days, there is nothing good.
But, other times, there is. For me, there is putting on the outfit I picked out the night before and taking extra care with makeup. There is the one day I get home before dark. There is hugging my niece, tickling my nephew, petting a cat, and chasing my dog around the yard. There are my few close friends upon whom I rely, a lot these days, for solace and succor.
There is UUP, and the solidarity that binds us together. We will never stop fighting for you.
Be Safe,
Jaclyn Pittsley