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Los Angeles Times
Los Angeles Times
National
Grace Toohey

Low pay, rising costs push 48,000 University of California academic workers to the picket line

In a historic strike of around 48,000 academic workers across the University of California system, unionized employees are pushing for better compensation and protections, as their work stoppage on Tuesday continued to cause noticeable disruptions to campus research, teaching and grading.

After the first day of the strike — which has no set end date — university officials Monday evening called for a "neutral private mediator" to help reach a compromise. Union leaders, however, continue to call on UC officials to come back to the table to bargain.

"We really want to get to negotiations as soon as possible; our teams are ready around the clock," said Nick Geiser, a bargaining team representative with the Student Researcher Unit — the only one of the four guilds that university officials met with Monday. He said in two hours of bargaining, they were able to reach tentative agreements on three priorities about recruiting and educating new members — but progress was not made on high-priority demands, like increasing compensation or improving support for working parents.

"The biggest sticking point, both today and in previous sessions, centers on compensation," said Rafael Jaime, a UCLA doctoral candidate and president of United Auto Workers Local 2865, which represents 19,000 teaching assistants, tutors and other academic workers. "The University (of California's) proposals do not adequately address the affordable housing crisis confronting our members."

Ryan King, a University of California system spokesperson, said UC believes its current offers are sufficient.

"These employees make meaningful contributions to the university's teaching and research mission in both part-time and full-time roles, and we believe our offers of fair pay, quality health and family-friendly benefits, among other proposals, are fair, reasonable, and responsive to the union's concerns," King wrote in a statement.

The 48,000 workers make up four different UAW bargaining units, which each represent a different group of academic workers: postdoctoral scholars, academic researchers, graduate student researchers and academic student employees, which includes teaching assistants and tutors. The employees span UC's 10 campuses and its Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory.

So what are the main issues motivating workers on the picket line?

Better compensation

Union leaders are asking for large wage increases for academic workers, noting that housing costs on and near many UC campuses have continued to rise, making majority of their members "rent-burdened," which means spending more than 30% of their income on rent.

They want to see graduate student workers earn a base salary of $54,000, which amounts to an increase of more than double these workers' average current pay of about $24,000, according to the union. For postdoctoral employees, the union has called for a minimum salary of $70,000, which would be, on average, a $10,000 increase, Jaime said.

Surveys by the UAW found that 92% of graduate workers and 61% of postdoctoral scholars were rent-burdened.

UC officials have offered a salary scale increase of 7% the first year for certain graduate student workers and 3% in each subsequent year — an offer that union leaders say falls short.

But King also noted that some graduate employees are working part-time while earning a graduate degree.

"Compensation is just one of the many ways in which they are supported as students during their time with the University," King said.

But union leaders point out that graduate workers deserve a living wage while powering UC's cutting-edge research and premier coursework. They want to see the totality of workers' compensation detailed in the contract to ensure it is transparent and fair.

More support for parents

Union leaders are demanding $2,000-a-month reimbursement for childcare, full tuition subsidies for UC childcare programs and expanded paid family leave options.

"A lack of support for parent-workers forces too many people out of academia and contributes to a crisis in gender equity at UC," UAW leaders said on their website. "Primary caregivers, many of whom identify as women, are disproportionately impacted by UC's lack of reasonable childcare subsidies and other family benefits."

University officials have proposed a new childcare reimbursement program that would provide up to $2,500 a year for eligible postdocs and, for graduate students, an increase of $750 per academic year, from $3,300 to $4,050. The university is also offering to increase paid pregnancy and family leaves, with different proposals for different bargaining units.

Reduced costs for international student workers

The UAW bargaining platform also asks for university officials to add the Non-Resident Supplemental Tuition fee — which can be up to $15,000 annually — to tuition remission for international academic workers. One PhD student from China recently wrote on Medium.com that UC was the only school out of the seven to which he was admitted that charged the additional tuition fee to international students.

University officials have not made an offer on this point, noting that eliminating the fee to non-resident academic workers would be "a financial benefit not afforded to other students."

Commuting and disability support; bullying protections

Unionized workers have also demanded free public transit passes for academic workers, cash incentives to commute sustainably and subsidies to purchase and maintain bikes and e-bikes, as well as improved campus cycling infrastructure, according to the UAW.

They also want to see easier access to accommodations for workers with disabilities, as well as better job protections, like funding programs that can support researchers with gaps in funding.

The one major point that university and union officials have reached a tentative agreement on is protections against bullying and codifying a reporting and grievance system for such mistreatment.

But additional progress seemed unlikely, at least Tuesday, as university officials had made no offer to meet again with the bargaining teams.

"That's 24 wasted hours that the university is refusing to come to the table with the union," said Geiser, who sits on one of the bargaining committees. "We are ready."

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