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March 2023 Newsletter

Thank You for a Successful 50th Anniversary Conference

We thank all of the speakers, moderators, and conference attendees for a very successful 50th Anniversary Conference of the National Center for the Study of Collective Bargaining in Higher Education and the Professions on March 26-28, 2023. In particular, we are grateful to philosopher Michael Sandel for his wonderful keynote address.


The theme of this year's annual conference was Collective Bargaining in Higher Education Looking Back, Looking Forward, 1973-2023, which celebrated a half-century of labor-management engagement through collective bargaining.


To learn more about the National Center's history, see an article recently published in the Journal of Collective Bargaining in the Academy. We look forward to the next 50 years, as we continue the study and analysis of collective bargaining and unionization on campus and among professional employees in other industries.


The success of the conference would not have been possible without the support and assistance of President Raab, along with the staff of Hunter College, Roosevelt House and Kaye Playhouse, Hunter College Ambassadors, and conference staff and volunteers.


We also must thank the sponsors of our 50th anniversary conference along with the unions, businesses, institutions and law firms that purchased advertisements in our conference brochure.

50th Anniversary Conference Sponsors


Bates College: Combined Unit of Faculty and Staff Reject Representation

Bates College, NLRB Case No. 01-RC-284384      


In December 2021, NLRB Region 1 Director issued a decision and direction of election concerning a petition filed by Maine Service Employee Association – SEIU Local 1989 (MSEA-SEIU Local 1989) seeking to represent a combined bargaining unit of 652 non-tenure track faculty and staff working for Bates College. In her decision, Region Director Laura Sacks rejected the college's objections to the unit composition, and concluded that the following was the appropriate unit: 


Included: All non-tenure and non-tenure track faculty and all staff.


Excluded: All tenured and tenure track faculty, confidential employees, managers,

guards and supervisors as defined in the Act.


A mail ballot was conducted with bifurcated voting in January 2022. Professionals voted on whether they wanted to be included in a unit with non-professionals and whether they wanted representation by MSEA-SEIU Local 1989. Non-professionals voted solely on the question of representation by MSEA-SEIU Local 1989. However, the ballots were impounded after Bates College filed a request for review with the NLRB Board to the Regional Director's uniting decision.


On March 17, 2023 the NLRB Board issued a decision granting a motion by MSEA-SEIU Local 1989 seeking an order mandating the opening and counting of the ballots.


A ballot count of the 109 professionals who voted showed that 62 voted in favor of being included in the same unit of staff. The second tally found that in the combined unit of 487 non-tenure track faculty and staff at Bates College, 254 voted against MSEA-SEIU Local 1989 representation, while 186 voted in favor.

Miami University: Visiting Professors and Librarians Excluded from Unit

Miami University, OSERB 2022-REP-06-0069


On March 9, 2023, the Ohio State Employment Relations Board (OSERB) issued a decision, with a dissent, adopting the findings of fact, analysis, and conclusions of law of a hearing officer's report and recommendation concerning a representation petition filed by Faculty Alliance of Miami, AAUP-AFT that sought the following bargaining unit with approximately 1,059 employees:


Included: All full-time faculty at all campuses of Miami University, including tenure and tenure-track faculty; teaching, clinical professors and lecturers (TCPL faculty), visiting faculty; instructors; librarians; musician and collections directors and curators; and program, center, or institute directors and assistant directors.


Excluded: All managerial employees including the president, vice president, provost, associate and assistant provosts, deans, associate and assistant deans, and department chairs.


Following a hearing, the OSERB hearing officer concluded that then tenure-track faculty and the TCPL faculty are appropriate for inclusion in the proposed bargaining unit based on the fact they share a community of interest. In contrast, the hearing officer found that the visiting assistant professors, visiting instructors, librarians and others lacked a community of interest with the tenure track and TCPL faculty because of substantial differences in terms and conditions of employment. In addition, the hearing officer found that individuals holding multiple appointments were supervisors.


Upon review, OSERB affirmed that visiting assistant professors, visiting instructors, librarians, and employees holding multiple appointments are to be excluded from the petitioned-for unit along with managerial employees including the President, Vice Presidents, Provost, Associate and Assistant Provosts, Deans, Associate and Assistant Deans, and Department Chairs.

Miami University: AAUP Files to Represent Librarian Unit

Miami University, OSERB 2023-Rep-03-0024


On March 17, 2023, the Faculty Alliance of Miami, AAUP-AFT filed a petition with the Ohio State Employment Relations Board seeking to represent a unit of 30 full-time librarians at the Miami University. The petition was filed following OSERB's decision discussed above.


The following is the proposed unit:


Included: All full-time Librarians at all campuses of Miami University.


Excluded: All faculty' all managerial employees, including the President, Vice Presidents, Provost, Associate and Assistant Provost, Deans, Associate and Assistant Deans, and Department Chairs; all supervisor employees; and all other employees of Miami University.

Ohio State University (Marion Campus): AFSCME Petition Dismissed

Ohio State University (Marion Campus) OSERB Case No. 2022-REP-03-0030


On March 9, 2022, the Ohio State Employment Relations Board (OSERB) issued an order, with a dissent, adopting the findings of fact, analysis, and conclusions of law set forth in a report and recommendations of an agency hearing officer. The hearing officer recommended dismissal of a petition filed by AFSCME Council 8 that sought to represent a unit of all tenured and tenure track faculty at the Ohio State University’s Marion Campus. OSERB concluded that a single campus faculty bargaining unit within a centrally controlled university system and structure was not appropriate. The agency noted that the petition sought to carve out 35 faculty on the Marion Campus from the approximately 2,800 faculty employed by the university on other campuses. 

MIT: NLRB RD Rules Graduate Fellows Are Not Employees

Massachusetts Institute of Technology, NLRB Case No. 01-RC-304042


On March 13, 2023, NLRB Region 1 Director Laura A. Sacks issued a decision dismissing a representation petition filed by UE Local 106 seeking to represent a bargaining unit of graduate fellows at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. The union already represents a separate bargaining unit of graduate assistants.


The Regional Director concluded that unlike graduate assistants, graduate fellows are not covered by the the National Labor Relations Act because fellows do not meet the common law standards to be an employee.


Although the Regional Director acknowledged that the work performed by fellows is "indistinguishable from academic work and the direction [they receive] is indistinguishable from academic direction," she reasoned that their compensation "is not directly tied to completing particular tasks, as directed; rather, it is tied to maintaining academic good standing. While fellows conduct academic research alongside [research assistants] they also conduct research alongside students who are self-funded. All are required to conduct thesis research to earn their degrees, but only the [research assistants] are under the direct supervision of a faculty member who controls their funding and makes certain that that their [research assistant] work aligns with the objectives" in the applicable contract.


It is likely that UE Local 106 will seek review of the decision by the NLRB Board.

The following is the description of the proposed graduate fellows unit at MIT:


Included: All graduate fellows enrolled in Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) degree programs who are employed to provide instructional or research services.


Excluded: All other employees; undergraduate students; graduate student resident advisors; hourly graders who are not also graduate fellows; graduate students not seeking MIT degrees, including visiting students; office clericals; managers; guards and supervisors as defined in the Act.

University of Chicago: UE Certified to Represent Graduate Assistant Unit

University of Chicago, NLRB Case No. 13-RC-307974


On November 30, 2022, Graduate Students United-UE filed a petition with the National Labor Relations Board seeking to represent a bargaining unit of approximately 3,200 graduate assistants at the University of Chicago.


On March 16, 2023, NLRB Region 13 tallied the ballots in the representation case. The tally demonstrated that in a bargaining unit of approximately 3,200 graduate assistants, 1,696 voted in favor of Graduate Students United-UE representation, and 155 voted against.


Following the election, NLRB Region 13 issued a certification on March 24, 2023 to Graduate Students United-UE to represent the following bargaining unit:


Included: All graduate students enrolled in University of Chicago degree programs

who are employed to provide instructional or research services, including but not limited to

Teaching Assistants, Research Assistants, Course/Teaching Assistants, Graduate Student

Instructors, Graduate Student Lecturers, Instructional Graders, Language Assistants,

Preceptors, Research Interns, Teaching Consultants, CCTL Teaching Fellows, Teaching

Interns, Teaching Lab Assistants, Tutors, Writing Interns, and Writing Lectors, in the

Divinity School, the Crown Family School of Social Work Policy and Practice, Division of

the Social Sciences, Division of the Humanities, Division of the Biological Sciences, Division of the Physical Sciences, Booth School of Business, Irving B. Harris School of Public Policy, and the Pritzker School of Molecular Engineering.


Excluded: undergraduate students, graduate students who are not employed to

provide instructional or research services, Workshop Coordinators, Peer Mentors, office

clerical employees, managers, guards and supervisors as defined in the Act.

Syracuse Univ.: Non-NLRB Representation Agreement with SEIU

On March 1, 2023, Syracuse University, Syracuse Graduate Employees United (SGEU) and SEIU Local 200 United entered into an election agreement under which the American Arbitration Association will conduct a secret ballot election to determine whether a majority of graduate assistants in an agreed-upon bargaining unit wish to be represented by SGEU-SEIU Local 200 United.


If the vote by the graduate assistants is in favor of representation, the University has agreed to recognize the union. Disputes concerning compliance with the agreement will be resolved by a named arbitrator.


The following is the description of the bargaining unit under the agreement:


  • All University Ph.D. students who are: (i) matriculated in a doctoral degree program in the College of Arts & Sciences, Whitman School of Management, S.I. Newhouse School of Public Communications, School of Education, Falk College of Sport & Human Dynamics, Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs, iSchool, or College of Engineering and Computer Science; (ii) awarded a stipend and a condition of receiving the stipend is the performance of research, instructional, or other speciality services that are related to the student’s academic program as duly appointed Teaching Assistants (“TA”), Research Assistants (“RA”), or Graduate Administrative Assistants through the Graduate School (collectively “Ph.D. Academic Graduate Assistants”).


  • All University Masters’ students who are (i) matriculated in a doctoral degree program in the College of Arts & Sciences, Whitman School of Management, S.I. Newhouse School of Public Communications, College of Visual and Performing Arts, School of Education, School of Architecture, Falk College of Sport & Human Dynamics, Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs, iSchool, or College of Engineering and Computer Science; (ii) awarded a stipend and a condition of receiving the stipend is the performance of that in certain semesters these master’s students will provide research, instructional, or other specialty services that are related to the student’s academic program as duly appointed Teaching Assistants (“TA”), Research Assistants (“RA”), or Graduate Administrative Assistants through the Graduate School (collectively “Masters Academic Graduate Assistants”).


  • Ph.D. and Master’s Academic Graduate Assistants (collectively, “Graduate Assistants”) will be included in the Unit only during those semesters in which the student is duly appointed Graduate Assistant holding at least a 10-hour per week appointment.


  • Excluded from the bargaining unit are: Fellows, Ph.D. students receiving an institutional training grant from external funding agencies; student who are not compensated on an hourly basis; all undergraduate students; all other faculty; supervisors, managerial employes, office clerical employes, confidential employees; and all other employees

Duke Univ.: A New Challenge to Graduate Assistant Employee Status

Duke University, NLRB Case No.10-RC-313298


On March 3, 2023, SEIU filed a petition to represent a unit of 2,500 graduate assistants at Duke University. According to media reports, Duke University will be using the case as a vehicle to challenge the NLRB's 2016 Columbia University decision finding that graduate assistants are employees under the National Labor Relations Act.


The question of graduate assistant employee status at private sector institutions has been a subject of NLRB decisional oscillation since the agency rejected Adelphi University's 1972 effort to have graduate assistants included in a proposed faculty bargaining unit.


The success of Duke University's legal strategy will depend on a number of factors including the evidence it produces at hearing, the preclusive effect of the prior NLRB Regional Director decision rejecting the university's argument, the result of the representation election, and the composition of the NLRB Board when or if it is asked to review the legal issue again.


The following is the description of the bargaining in the pending representation petition:


Included: All PhD students in Duke University departments housed at its campuses in Durham and Beaufort, North Carolina, who are working toward PhD degrees offered by the Duke Graduate School and who are employed by Duke University to provide instructional services in undergraduate or graduate-level courses or labs (including, but not limited to, Teaching Assistants, Graduate Assistants, Instructors, and Graders) or to provide research services (including but not limited to Research Assistants and Graduate Assistants).


Excluded: All students at Duke Kunshan University and Duke-NUS Medical School, all students not working towards PhD degrees offered by the Duke Graduate School and all other employees, guards and supervisors as defined in the Act.

Fordham University: Resident Advisors Vote for Union Representation

Fordham University, NLRB Case No. 02-RC-312116


On March 21, 2023, NLRB Region 2 tallied the ballots in an election concerning a representation case filed by OPEIU Local 153 to represent a bargaining unit of resident advisors at Fordham University. In a unit of 101 resident advisors, 47 voted in favor of representation and 19 voted against.


The following is a description of the resident advisor bargaining unit at Fordham University:


Included: All Resident Advisors at the Rose Hill Campus who were on the Employer’s payroll as of February 24, 2023.


Excluded: All other employees, including confidential employees, managers, guards, and supervisors as defined in the Act.

University of Pennsylvania: Resident Advisors Seek Representation

University of Pennsylvania, NLRB Case No. 04-RC-313979


On March 14, 2023, OPEIU Local 153 filed a petition with the NLRB seeking to represent a bargaining unit of 218 resident advisors and graduate resident advisors at the University of Pennsylvania. The following is a description of the proposed unit:


Included: All resident assistants and graduate resident assistants employed


Excluded: All other staff, confidential employees, managers, guards, and supervisors as

George Washington Univ.: Interns and Residents Seek Representation

George Washington University, NLRB Case No. 05-RC-314527


On March 3, 2023, the Committee of Interns and Residents-SEIU filed a petition seeking to represent a unit of 466 interns and residents at George Washington University. The following is a description of the unit sought:


Included: All House Staff employed by the Employer at George Washington University Hospital in the following classifications: interns, residents, chief residents, and fellows.


Excluded: All other employees, directors, managers, and supervisors as defined in the Act.

University of Pennsylvania: Interns and Residents Seek Representation

University of Pennsylvania Health System, NLRB Case No. 04-RC-313858


On March 13, 2023, the Committee of Interns and Residents-SEIU filed a petition seeking to represent a unit of 1,566 interns and residents at the University of Pennsylvania Health System. The following is a description of the unit sought in the petition:


Included: All interns, residents, chief residents, and fellows employed by University of Pennsylvania Health Systems who work at the Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania and Pennsylvania Hospital.


Excluded: All other employees, directors, managers, and supervisors as defined in the Act.

April 11 Webinar: An Online Report from Florida

On April 11, 2023, from 7 p.m.- 8 p.m. EST, our friends from Historians for Peace and Democracy will be hosting an online forum with Paul Ortiz, President, United Faculty of Florida, University of Florida. Professor Ortiz will be describing the efforts by United Faculty of Florida (UFF) and its allies to resist the attacks in Florida on academic freedom, education on all levels, libraries, and the rights of much of the state’s population.

Click here to register



The National Center is pleased to announce publication of volume 14 of the Journal of Collective Bargaining in the Academy. The title of the volume is "Learning from the Past to Enhance our Future."


The Journal's Editors-in-Chief are Jeffrey Cross, Eastern Illinois University (Emeritus) and Gary Rhoades, University of Arizona


Introduction:


Volume 14 of the Journal of Collective Bargaining in the Academy (JCBA) is partly a selection of new articles, practitioner perspectives, and op-eds, which we briefly preview below. It is also partly a special issue celebration of the 50th anniversary of Hunter College’s National Center for the Study of Collective Bargaining in Higher Education and the Professions (National Center), featuring a selection of thirteen papers from the annual conference proceedings over the years. Our volume’s title, “Learning From the Past to Enhance Our Future,” echoes this year’s annual conference theme, “Looking Back, Looking Forward.”


In this issue, we happily welcome a new co-editor of JCBA, Dr. Karen Stubaus, Vice President for Academic Affairs at Rutgers University, to join Dr. Jeff Cross (now “retired,” but formerly Associate Vice President for Academic Affairs at Eastern Illinois University and Ferris State University) and Dr. Gary Rhoades Professor of Higher Education, University of Arizona. The 50 years of the National Center’s existence corresponds roughly to the academic lives of the co-editors, as students and employees. Indeed, Karen and Gary have each spent almost their entire professional lives at their respective institutions, having started in 1986. Jeff began his service and work in higher education a decade earlier. Collectively, that affords us a unique vantage point from which to look back on and learn from the selected papers from 50 years of the annual conference’s proceedings.


Building on the closing paragraphs of National Center Director Bill Herbert’s article in this volume, we believe that collective bargaining is “a form of workplace democracy,” and that it is “an important means for advancing higher education and the working conditions at colleges and universities as well as other industries.” (National Center Mission Statement)


As Herbert notes, that marks quite a shift from the National Center’s original, neutral mission to “take no position for or against collective bargaining,” What is continuous, though, is a commitment to the National Center bringing to bear “information and understanding” regarding collective bargaining. Thus, we also believe, as the current National Center Mission Statement indicates, that,


"[T]he study of collective bargaining is essential for a knowledge-based dialogue concerning labor-management and educational issues, and is critically important for reasoned societal debate that will lead to social progress."


That is at the heart of our work with JCBA. And that is what we hope this special issue contributes to and provides.


Volume 14 includes two articles, two new interview articles, an op-ed, and a practitioner perspective. Together, they reflect and address longstanding issues in collective bargaining as well as provoke thought and discussion on the ongoing, pressing issues of today and the foreseeable future. Richard Boris provides an op-ed from his perspective as immediate-past Executive Director of the National Center. He repeats and expands upon several critical observations and suggestions as possible guides for the National Center’s future. From his perspective as Senior Labor Advisor, American Association of University Professors, Mike Mauer traces the AAUP’s history of advocacy and protection of academic freedom through collective bargaining. Bill Herbert has written a history of the National Center tracing events leading to its creation at the City University of New York (CUNY), and then summarizing the National Center’s evolving leadership, programming, research, and publications. Giovanna Follo’s practitioner perspective is an autoethnography describing personal dilemma that led her, a pro-union advocate, to cross the picket line.


We also introduce a new format with this issue—interviews with practitioners (and authors), which apropos of the volume’s theme, provide rich historical perspective to inform the future path of collective bargaining in the academy. The first, “Centering anti-racism and social justice, toward a more perfect union,” is a conversation with Cecil E. Canton (former Associate Vice President) and Charles Toombs (current President) of the California Faculty Association, based on work each has published about about the historical progression and future work of CFA in moving towards a more social justice- centered union. The second, “Power despite precarity,” is a conversation with longtime contingent faculty labor activists and scholars, Joe Berry and Helena Worthen, about their recent book, which looks at the history of the contingent faculty labor movement, provides an in-depth exploration of the case and contract of the California Faculty Association in regard to contingent faculty, and identifies strategies for the future.


Selections from 50 years of annual conference proceedings. Working with the National Center’s Director, Bill Herbert, the co-editors selected papers from each of the decades of the conference proceedings, for a baker’s dozen of papers. Inevitably, such a small selection of (thirteen) papers from such a long span of time means that many valuable and interesting papers have been left out. As we go through a brief discussion of the papers we’ve selected and why, we will also refer the reader to some examples of other such papers that we feel are particularly noteworthy, and/or that are authored by folks who have made important academic contributions in other professional conferences and academic journals as well. Further, we note and encourage you to search on the JCBA website, which has a tab to connect to the most downloaded papers.


A half century spans a long period of time encompassing many developments in higher education collective bargaining and society. In making our thirteen selections, we have sought to include conference papers that were timely, as markers of key historical developments, as well as timeless, pointing to enduring issues in collective bargaining. As we elaborate a bit below, it is striking how many issues have re-emerged or been in play in an ongoing way throughout the decades. At the same time, even so, as with the successive, iterative negotiation of collective bargaining agreements, which involves debate, deliberation, and negotiation around similar issues, each negotiation builds on the foundation of previous ones. History, then, informs, is there to be learned from, and is always carried in some manner into the present, even as it is newly negotiated for the future.


In collective bargaining in higher education, as in society, what may once have seemed settled law and/or practice can become surprisingly unsettled decades later. Here we are, fifty years after Roe v Wade, more than ever (re)litigating, negotiating and navigating issues of gender and women’s reproductive, medical, and travel rights in ways that directly implicate universities. So, too, over six decades after a civil rights movement and landmark Supreme Court decisions and legislation, we continue to (re)negotiate and navigate the rights of minoritized and marginalized people in ways that play out in and shape higher education. Just as we continue to (re)legislate, litigate, and negotiate the right to vote, so we see similar ongoing struggles in regard to the collective bargaining rights of different categories of (academic) employees in different sectors of higher education. For the National Center’s entire history, and each decade of the editors’ collective experience, higher education has been in the midst of and subject to an austerity agenda. The polarized politics of the 1960s and 1970s are present again in current attacks and legislation regarding, assaulting, and banning Critical Race Theory, LGBTQ+ rights, and more, violating the academic freedom, human rights, and dignity of members and institutions in the higher education world, more than five decades after Stonewall. As the saying goes, plus ça change, plus c’est la meme chose.


As with collective bargaining negotiations, issues keep cycling back, as we see in selected papers of the past 50 years of conference proceedings. Yet it is not negotiated on the same territory by the same players with the same expectations as Nicholas DiGiovanni’s 2015 conference paper nicely articulates, and history and the future are not stories of linear, relentless, progress. Yet, if there is this ongoing back and forth, of two steps forward and one or more step(s) back, we hope and work towards that being in the context, as Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., said, of a larger trajectory of and arc of the moral universe that bends towards justice. So, we see it is in higher education collective bargaining, with new groups of employees at the table and with a more expansive range of issues being negotiated to intersect workplace and social justice.


The conference papers we have selected are bookended by Sidney Hook’s 1973 essay on “The academic mission and collective bargaining,” and Thomas Auxter’s 2016 retrospective analysis, “Collective bargaining and labor representation for higher education in a ‘right to work’ environment.” The matters they address look to learn from the past and enhance the future of higher education, as characterizes our special issue.


As an NYU Emeritus Professor of Philosophy, Hook reflects on competing philosophers and perspectives on how to organize academic work(ers), contrasting the views of John Dewey and Arthur Lovejoy, the first President and first General Secretary of the American Association of University Professors. Whereas Dewey was also a founding member and early officer of the American Federation of Teachers (and held membership card number 1), and strongly supported unions, Lovejoy was a proponent of professional associations as the preferred organizing model, opposing unions, and juxtaposing the idea of a job to a calling. The differing views, and the contrasting perspectives they offer on being a “professional” continue to play out in different forms in higher education. Indeed, that difference has been of ongoing relevance in the AAUP. And in a full circle moment, interestingly, this past year, the AFT and AAUP have formed an affiliation arrangement that appears to give the former the lead role in collective bargaining and the latter an ongoing, lead role in academic freedom and policy. Notably, the position that Hook comes to is an important one in looking to the future.


"I conclude from these and related considerations that intelligent choice today is not between acceptance or rejection of the principle of collective bargaining but between the different forms of collective bargaining. … [W]e must ask: under what form of collective bargaining can the academic mission best be preserved and strengthened?"


That is something for us all to consider.


Yet, as Auxter’s 2016 analysis considers, the question of whether and to what extent employees have collective bargaining rights continues to be a vexed and contested matter. In light of the Harris v Quinn and Janus v AFSCME Supreme Court decisions, effectively making all states in some regard “right to work,” Auxter provides a history of how the United Faculty of Florida, first established in 1976, has navigated this environment, and the transformations it has undergone in the process. A central part of the story is its experience and developed capacity to effectively navigate state-level politics with legislatures and governors that had anti-union and anti-faculty agendas. Given how developments in Florida are currently unfolding, that is a particularly relevant historical context with valuable lessons for action.


Joel M. Douglas’ 1981 paper, “The Yeshiva case: One year later,” addresses an earlier, defining Supreme Court decision that has had profound effects on collective bargaining in higher education. If Douglas’ perspective is of one year later, we know now its ongoing ripple effects on the bargaining rights of faculty. That is particularly true in the independent sector of higher education, where Yeshiva has inhibited the growth of tenure-stream faculty units in private colleges and universities. It is true as well of contingent faculty with influence on governance. And the ripple effect has extended into public sector higher education as well. For example, in 2010, following Wisconsin’s attack on public sector employees’ bargaining rights (excepting police and firefighters) a piece of state legislation in Ohio that was signed and then repealed in a referendum, included Yeshiva-like language eliminating full-time faculty’s collective bargaining rights if they had a role in governance.


Going back to the 1973 conference proceedings, we also have selected Margaret Chandler and Connie Chiang’s paper, “Management rights issues in collective bargaining in higher education.” The paper provides a thorough, empirical, and what can serve for us now as a baseline analysis of management rights and faculty rights in ninety-one collective bargaining agreements (seventy of which were in community colleges, reflecting the predominance of this sector in higher education collective bargaining), modeling what has become a more consistent part of the National Center’s work under Bill Herbert’s leadership. Thus, now, we see the National Center not only collecting and cataloging contracts, but also detailing and analyzing developments in collective bargaining, expanding now to include data on strikes.


From almost a quarter century later, we selected Ernst Benjamin’s 1997 paper, “Faculty, unions, and management,” which provides a faculty perspective on faculty and management rights in collective bargaining. In contrast to Chandler and Chiang’s piece, this is not a detailed analysis of collective bargaining agreement language. Rather, it offers a thoughtful take on the subject that focuses on court cases, and particularly on shared governance, which, as Benjamin says, “can and often does coexist successfully with collective bargaining, to the benefit of the academic mission of the institution.” Although it is important to place this issue in the context of the early days of debating whether shared governance in the form of faculty senates and collective bargaining can coexist, it is also a matter of enduring significance in the adjudication of faculty’s collective bargaining rights, particularly in private institutions. We also direct attention in the papers of the 1997 proceedings to the related institutional governance and partisan politics issue, which we see much of today, in the form of “activist” trustees and the role of faculty unions in response to them in governance matters, in papers by a SUNY trustee, Candace deRussy, and by UUP President, William E. Scheuerman.


Two other papers, in 1988 Edward R. Hines’ “State support for higher education: A twenty year contextual analysis,” and in 1994, Christine Maitland’s “Collective bargaining and technology,” address issues of enduring significance. Hines’ paper offers historical perspective from Illinois State’s Grapevine report that tracks the fundamental shift in public higher education in relative declines in state appropriations versus significant increases in tuition and fees. The combined framing of a policy context in terms of an austerity agenda with climbing college costs for students has for half a century been at the center of collective bargaining negotiations.


So, too, as it is for all workers and industries, the introduction of new technologies, in this case, instructional and delivery technologies is an enduring focus of negotiations between labor and management. Maitland’s thorough empirical analysis of collective bargaining agreements nationally speaks to patterns in the workload, compensation, and intellectual property provisions that have been negotiated. The broad pattern is of provisions being more “defensive” in giving some protections to faculty and ensuring compensation and some level of claims on copyright for distance education courses than they are proactive in ensuring faculty voice in decision making around instructional technology issues. Contract language was more common and extensive in community college contracts, but overall was still limited in terms of the number of contracts with provisions and their scope. For a more current perspective, nearly two decades later, in a 2016 conference paper, “Copyleft, copyright, and copy for the public interest,” and in a 2015 JCBA article, “What are we negotiating for: Public interest bargaining,” Gary Rhoades details the more extensive incidence of contract provisions on technology issues, and offers examples of contract provisions that proactively address public interest issues surrounding technology use and training, and distance education intellectual property rights that go beyond the immediate interests of the two parties at the bargaining table.


On another matter of enduring significance, two of the papers we selected focus on contingent faculty employment. One, by Frank Costco, in 2008, “Vancouver Community College, New models of contingent faculty inclusion,” features what for many in the contingent faculty labor movement, serves as one of the gold standards of collective bargaining agreements. It also is an example of the several papers over the years addressing collective bargaining in Canada. Further, it focuses on the institutional realm of community colleges that ironically, given its predominance in terms of union density, is under-emphasized in the papers.


A second paper, in 2015 by Karen Stubaus, “The professionalization of non-tenure track faculty in the United States: Three case studies,” details the history and current status of non-tenure track faculty, whose numbers have been expanding considerably. Through the vehicle of three cases, Stubaus provides significant insight into the different configurations by which, within and beyond the collective bargaining agreement, non-tenure track faculty have negotiated improved, more professional working conditions that have incorporated them more into the academic life of their institutions and academic units. The cases of Rutgers University, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign, and the University of Oregon each provide quite a different take in the configuration of the bargaining units, which speaks to significant differences in institutional history and state law. And yet in each case, similar issues are addressed.


On the issue of adjunct faculty, we also want to call attention historically to the 1982 conference proceedings with one of the first discussions of the increased use of adjunct faculty. Nancy L. Hodes, Deputy Director of the Governor’s Office of Employee Relations in New York provides a frank discussion of the political and economic rationales (“Use Justified”) for the hiring of larger numbers of “part-timers” (the dehumanizing and inaccurate term is in itself a marker of the times), entitled, “The use and abuse of part-timers-I: Casual employees, scabs, or saviors?” The companion, Part II piece is written by Nuala McGann Drescher, President of the United University Professions, who speaks to the legitimacy and quality of these faculty, and the need to strengthen collective bargaining rights and working conditions for them, integrating them into bargaining units. She also importantly draws attention to the “affirmative action” dimension of exploiting these faculty, given the larger proportions of them who are women. At this point, both contributions center a claim or a concern about the erosion of full-time faculty. To give a sense of the changing times, a recent contribution to JCBA (Rhoades, 2021) points to contingent faculty’s centrality to and leadership in the academic labor movement.


One of the papers we selected addresses another employment segment, graduate employees, that, as with contingent faculty, has experienced dramatic increases in the growth of new bargaining units in the 2000s, as detailed in Bill Herbert’s 2016 JCBA article, “The winds of changes shift: An analysis of recent growth in bargaining units and representation efforts in higher education.” The 1999 conference paper, “The Current Status of Graduate Student Unions: An Employer's Perspective,” by Daniel J. Julius provides a turn-of-the-century summary of graduate employee unionization. He offers an extensive review of national patterns and issues in relation to this realm of organizing, from a management perspective as well as of someone who has published on these issues. The timing of this review is noteworthy, as in the next two decades graduate employee unionization proliferated, particularly in the private sector, as the National Center’s Bill Herbert’s 2016 JCBA piece, “The winds of changes shift,” documents. Moreover, the subsequent decades have seen several NLRB rulings and reversals, as well as state-level employment board rulings that have also influenced patterns of graduate student unionization. Further, that realm of organizing and negotiation has seen a significant expansion of the sorts of issues addressed in collective bargaining, centering social justice issues, a point nicely captured in another paper we refer you to, Jon Curtiss’ 2015 history and discussion of important current issues, in bargaining for one of the earliest and most important graduate student unions, the Graduate Employees Organization at the University of Michigan.


On the latter matter, we have selected two papers that address social justice issues. The first is a 1993 paper by Rachel Hendrickson, “Sexual harassment on campus and a union’s dilemma.” It is part of an entire section of papers on discrimination, including several papers on the Americans with Disabilities Act and on pay equity. Hendrickson offers an analysis of national data on collective bargaining agreements, first noting that relatively few address sexual harassment in any great detail, and then providing some examples of contracts that in contrast contain extensive language. As well, she walks through the various questions that surround how to address sexual harassment in relation to the campus policies and procedures that are being developed and applied outside of collective bargaining. Notably, Hendrickson closes by encouraging labor and management “to institute training for all supervisors and faculty and to provide it on an ongoing basis.” That suggestion is all the more relevant today, three decades later. It is also notable that although much attention is directed in the paper to campus-based processes, one of the almost universal demands of graduate and postdoc unions today, after decades of largely unsatisfactory experience of institutions’ handling of such matters, is for access to independent external arbitration in matters of harassment and discrimination.


A decade earlier, the 1984 conference also had a series of papers on sex discrimination. Although it is not as focused on collective bargaining, there are some good contributions, including an overview by Bernice Resnick Sandler addressing the “times that try men’s souls.” There are also contributions on case law, and on comparable worth and grievance claims. A paper that is focused on collective bargaining is Nina Rothchild’s case study of the Minnesota experience in relation to the state’s collective bargaining law and comparable worth legislation.


A second paper we have selected on social justice issues is a 2015 conference paper by Derryn Moten, of Alabama State University, addressing social and labor justice in the context of HBCUs, in “The history of collective bargaining in higher education: The case of HBCUs.” In an historical review of HBCUs that intersects with racial justice and class-based justice through unionization issues, Moten calls our attention to the fact that Howard University was the site of the AFT’s first higher education affiliate, Local 33, in 1918 (though it disbanded in 1921).


In a revealing analysis of anti-labor laws and policy in the Reconstruction years, and in the 20th century with anti-strike and “right to work” laws in Alabama, Moten intersects labor history with the history of Jim Crow and White Supremacy in the South. The lessons for the academic labor movement in intersecting workplace and social justice should be clear. In addition to pointing to those HBCUs in which faculty are unionized (in most cases, with AAUP affiliates), Moten bookends his piece with two historical quotes. The first, from 1920, is about White paternalism and HBCUs, “Neither the prestige nor the income of any Negro college has ever been appreciably augmented by the administration of a white president,” relating the point to desirable working conditions as well. Moten sets up the second quote with a forward-looking call to current Black presidents and faculty of HBCUs in relation to respecting and not fighting the collective bargaining efforts of employees: “[G]iven the racial history of HBCUs, it might seem ironic that the fight has moved from a struggle between Black folk and White folk over equitable treatment to a struggle where Black folk fight with Black folk over equitable treatment.” The last line of Moten’s paper is a Frederick Douglas quote, “Power concedes nothing without a demand.” Fast forward 100 years, after Moten’s article, and the non-tenure track faculty at Howard University have done precisely that, successfully unionized, affiliated with SEIU Local 500, and signed collective bargaining agreements in 2022.


Finally, we have selected Nicholas DiGiovanni’s 2015 paper, “This much I know is true: The five intangible influences on collective bargaining.” It is among the most downloaded items from the website. And in many ways, it encapsulates the gestalt of academic collective bargaining. Based on nearly four decades of experience, DiGiovanni speaks to the intricacies and subtleties of the bargaining process, each round and cycle of which is somewhat unpredictable. Focusing on the process and performance of negotiating at the table, he identifies five factors that are part of the contingency of how the bargaining will play out—history, expectations, the nature and character of the players, timing, and catharsis. It is a profoundly practical reminder that for all the formal, legal dimensions of the process, collective bargaining is a human process, in which cultural and affective influences play out.


Finally, as a preface to the Baker’s Dozen of exemplary proceedings papers republished in this Volume, Daniel J. Julius has provided a contemporary commentary and a perspective on some academic collective bargaining “small world” observations spanning 50 years of National Center conferences.


We sincerely hope that you enjoy Volume 14, honoring the National Center’s 50th anniversary. We hope as well that this issue (as do the journal, the annual conference, and the Center) serves the goal of enhancing our collective future by sharing and circulating the collective experience, expertise, empirical analysis, insight, and wisdom of our contributors and community. For that is at the heart of the National Center’s mission and work.


Eds.


Op-Ed:


A New Foundation, Revisited by Richard J. Boris


Articles:


Protecting Academic Freedom Through Collective Bargaining: An AAUP Perspective by Michael Mauer


In the Beginning, Long Time Ago: A Brief History of the National Center’s Origin and Evolution by William A. Herbert


Power Despite Precarity: A Conversation with the Authors, Joe Berry and Helena Worthen by Gary Rhoades


Centering Anti-Racism and Social Justice, Toward A More Perfect Union: A Conversation with the Authors, Cecil E. Canton and Charles Toombs

by Gary Rhoades


Practitioner Perspective:


Factors that Led to Crossing the Picket-Line: An Autoethnography of a Faculty Striker by Giovanna Follo


Proceedings Materials:


50th Anniversary: Proceedings of the National Center for the Study of Collective Bargaining in Higher Education and the Professions by Daniel J. Julius


The Academic Mission and Collective Bargaining by Sidney Hook


Management Rights Issues in Collective Bargaining in Higher Education by

Margaret K. Chandler and Connie Chiang


The Yeshiva Case: One Year Later by Joel M. Douglas


State Support of Higher Education: A 20-Year Contextual Analysis Using Two-Year Percentage Gains In State Tax Appropriations by Edward R. Hines


Sexual Harassment on Campus and a Union's Dilemma by Rachel Hendrickson


Collective Bargaining and Technology by Christine Maitland


Faculty and Management Rights In Higher Education Collective Bargaining: A Faculty Perspective by Ernst Benjamin


The Current Status of Graduate Student Unions: An Employer's Perspective

by Daniel J. Julius


New Models of Contingent Faculty Inclusion by Frank Cosco


The Professionalizaton of Non-Tenure Track Faculty in the United States: Three Case Studies From Public Research Institutions: Rutgers, the State University of New Jersey, University of Illinois At Urbana-Champaign, and University of Oregon by Karen Stubaus


This Much I Know is True: The Five Intangible Influences on Collective Bargaining by Nicholas DiGiovanni Jr.


The History Of Collective Bargaining in Higher Education: The Case of HBCUs

by Derryn Moten


Collective Bargaining and Labor Representation for Higher Education in a “Right to Work” Environment by Thomas Auxter


The Journal is an open access, peer-reviewed, online periodical, the purpose of which is to advance research and scholarly thought related to academic collective bargaining and to make relevant and pragmatic peer-reviewed research readily accessible to practitioners and to scholars in the field.


We encourage scholars and practitioners in the fields of collective bargaining, labor relations, and labor history to submit articles for potential publication in future volumes.


The Journal is supported, in part, by a generous contribution from TIAA and is hosted by the institutional repository of Eastern Illinois University.

New Book: Contingent Faculty and the Remaking of Higher Education:

A Labor History, edited by Eric Fure-Slocum and Claire Goldstene

National Center for the Study of Collective Bargaining

in Higher Education and the Professions

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