Campus Equity Week – The Fairness for Adjuncts Act needs you

Date posted: October 19, 2015

Date: 10/16/2015 01:40 PM
From: “NEA Higher Ed eAdvocate” <mflannery@email.nea.org>
Subject: The Fairness for Adjuncts Act needs you

Campus Equity Week!
October 26-30
Check out NEA’s CEW resources.

Sign here!
Support the Adjunct Faculty Fairness Act of 2015.
Help adjunct faculty to access public service loan forgiveness
just like full-time faculty do.
It’s only fair.

Ask Congress to support U.S. Sen. Dick Durbin’s bill
to make adjunct faculty eligible for the
federal public service loan forgiveness program.
The Do’s and Dont’s of Being an Ally

We all need to be allies – non-tenured and tenured faculty alike, aswell as students – in the fight for what it takes to provide a high-quality higher education forstudents. Read these tips from NEA Higher Ed and New Faculty Majority leaders Judy Olsonand Anne Wiegard.

Let the world know where you stand!

Download the equity poster and let the world know where you stand on issues of campus equity. Creating more equitable and just conditions on campus doesn’t just benefit faculty – it benefits students too.

Organizing for Equity!

Where do adjunct or contingent faculty get treated more fairly? In places where they’ve organized into NEA-affiliated unions that collectively bargain for fairer wages, and for the workplace conditions that underlay student learning.

WNYLaborToday.com

Date posted: October 14, 2015

 

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Welcome/Welcome Back Picnic 2015

Date posted: September 23, 2015

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State Fair Labor Day Parade 2015

Date posted:

Cortland Chapter at the State Fair Labor Day Parade-2 Anne Wiegard Dave muzzled Secretary Eileen Landy and Dan Harms

Tompkins County Labor Day Picnic 2015

Date posted:

UUPer Nancy Kane and John Fracchia staff voter registration-2 TC3 Adjunct Faculty representatives receive award (including UUPer Robert Earle, with daughter Harper at left)

Date posted: September 21, 2015

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2015 UUP Negotiations Survey

Date posted: September 20, 2015

The purpose of this survey is to gather information from members of United University Professions.  Your responses are of great importance to UUP’s efforts to identify member needs and concerns. This survey will close at midnight Wednesday, December 9, 2015.  Click Here for Survey

Two Cortland lecturers fight for TC3 adjunct union

Date posted: September 8, 2015

By Darryl McGrath

The history of unionism in the United States is filled with stories of people who took great personal risks to seek justice not only for themselves but their fellow workers.

UUP knows that personal risk still plays a role in unionism.
In recognition, UUP annually presents the Fayez Samuel Award for Courageous Service by Part-time Academic and Professional Faculty.

RobertEarle2015  WeatherbyGregg2015

Robert Earle                                   Gregg Weatherby

This year’s co-winners—Robert Earle and Gregg Weatherby—share the award for serving as founding members of the organizing committee for the proposed TC3 Adjunct Association at Tompkins Cortland Community College in Dryden, Tompkins County. In addition to their work as adjunct faculty at Tompkins Cortland, both men are also UUP members and lecturers at SUNY Cortland—Earle in the philosophy department and Weatherby in the English department. And it is their awe-struck UUP colleagues there who nominated them for the award.

Exemplifying excellence
“Mr. Weatherby speaks to labor issues at every opportunity,” wrote Bill Buxton, a former Cortland Chapter president, in his nominating letter. He described Earle in a related nomination as a catalyst for change at TC3 “by virtue of his optimism and also his training as a philosopher, which enable him to envision and strategize a way forward.”

The formation of the prospective NYSUT local for TC3 adjuncts is before the Public Employment Relations Board, following a protest by the college, which asserts that its adjunct faculty should instead join the existing local for full-time faculty. Because a majority of the adjunct faculty signed cards—more than 200 did so, in fact—NYSUT was able to seek recognition without an election, but the college’s subsequent protest of the adjunct local will delay the outcome until the fall.

“Both of these members exemplify what it takes to be a unionist in these tough times, when national and well-funded forces are trying to destroy the rights of working people, and that attitude trickles down to a local level in the workplace every day,” UUP President Fred Kowal said. “We are proud to claim these two courageous leaders as our own, and even more gratified that they want to empower others.”

Stepping up; fighting back
Weatherby joined the organizing effort at TC3 when he tried to return to his adjunct faculty job at the college following a medical leave and learned that his illness—from which he was by then recovered—was cited as the reason that the college almost did not rehire him. Earle joined the organizing effort after the TC3 college president watered down an amendment to the college’s bylaws that Earle had drafted; the amendment would have allowed for greater inclusion of adjunct faculty in the college’s governance.

Both have been outspoken about the struggle to organize their colleagues at TC3.

“Imagine working two full-time jobs and still not making a livable wage,” Weatherby told the Tompkins County Board of Legislators as he asked for their support. “What message does this send to our students? What does it say about how much we value education?”

Both believe that the organizing effort will prevail.

“Because of the widespread support for union representation, there is no question that TC3 adjuncts will have a union,” Earle said in a statement last fall to the college’s board of trustees. “The TC3 Adjuncts Association looks forward to a cordial and productive relationship with the college and, of course, we also look forward to continuing our hard work and dedication in serving the needs of our students.”

Negotiations Team named

Date posted: August 11, 2015

UUP President Fred Kowal has announced the members of UUP’s Negotiations Team. The 18-member Team will negotiate a new bargaining agreement with New York state; the current contract expires July 1, 2016.

Statewide VP for Professionals Philippe Abraham will serve as chief negotiator.

Members of Team are:

Bret Benjamin, Albany
Douglas Cody, Farmingdale
Raymond Dannenhoffer, Buffalo HSC
Jennifer Drake, Cortland
Patricia Ghee, Buffalo State
Carolyn Kube, Stony Brook HSC
Michael Lyon, Upstate Medical University
Pamela Malone (Assistant Chief Negotiator), ESC
Michael Smiles (Associate/Deputy Chief Negotiator), Farmingdale
Jason Torre (Assistant Chief Negotiator), Stony Brook
Idalia Torres, Fredonia
Thomas Tucker, Buffalo Center
William Tusang, Cobleskill
Paula White, Downstate Medical Center
Anne Wiegard, Cortland
Beth Wilson, New Paltz
Ezra Zubrow, Buffalo Center

Kowal will contact chapter presidents regarding the formation of the Negotiations and Ad Hoc Negotiations committees, and to set up Team meetings with these committees.

UUP advocacy gains momentum

Date posted: July 14, 2015

Marc.Dave.Jen.Lifton

Assembly members put their stamp of approval on one of UUP’s top legislative priorities when they passed Maintenance of Effort legislation, 146-1.

Now, UUP advocates are working hard to convince state senators to bring the MOE bill to the floor for a vote before the legislative session tentatively ends June 17.

The June 9 Assembly vote came after two weeks of face-to-face advocacy by dozens of UUPers during a series of regional advocacy days in June. Cortland Chapter members Marc Dearstyne, Jen Drake and Dave Ritchie were among those who came to Albany to ask lawmakers to change the MOE language to include SUNY hospitals and inflationary and mandatory costs. The current MOE only requires the state to provide the same level of funding and fringe benefits of the prior state fiscal year. They thanked Assemblywoman Barbara Lifton (D-Ithaca), left, for her vote in support of the MOE.

But they’re not finished yet.

“It’s important for us to remember that our work isn’t done,” UUP President Fred Kowal said. “We can be proud that our advocacy helped convince the Assembly to pass an important piece of our legislative agenda. But we must continue to make our case to members of the Senate that a genuine Maintenance of Effort is one of the necessary steps to move SUNY forward.”

Making the case for SUNY

In all, more than 55 UUPers from 17 chapters came to the Capitol in June to urge lawmakers to pass legislation that would move SUNY forward and make public higher education accessible to all New Yorkers. Key among them: Create a SUNY endowment, and make campus and research foundations more transparent.

The advocacy days follow other visits to lawmakers in Albany and in district offices. UUP’s efforts this legislative session led to increases in the state budget for EOP and EOC; the Legislature raised funding for EOP by $5.7 million and for EOC by $1.5 million.