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Chicago Sun-Times
Chicago Sun-Times
National
Lisa Philip | WBEZ

Columbia College Chicago adjunct faculty to strike Monday

Adjunct faculty at Columbia College Chicago plan to walk off the job on Monday, October 30, 2022. (Facebook)

More than 600 adjunct faculty members at Columbia College Chicago plan to walk off the job Monday morning, potentially disrupting the class schedules of many of the school’s 6,500 undergraduates.

Leaders of CFAC, the union representing Columbia College’s part-time professors, say members make up about two-thirds of the teaching staff at the arts-focused South Loop school. They estimate about 1,000 classes will be impacted.

The group last went on strike in 2017 over contract disputes related to job security and benefits. That walkout lasted two days.

The most recent conflict between the union and the college’s leadership began in August when administrators proposed cutting up to 350 course sections to address a $20 million budget deficit. That prompted the union to file a complaint with the National Labor Relations Board. The board has yet to rule on the unfair labor practice complaint.

Columbia College spokesperson Lambrini Lukidis said the administration is targeting under-enrolled classes. Lukidis said school leaders have already made $40 million’s worth of spending cuts, including eliminating 124 positions, to bridge a budget shortfall that she said began after the start of the pandemic.

“These efficiencies have been mostly on the administrative side, and now we must look at the instructional side and continue to look for additional administrative efficiencies as our Board of Trustees has directed the college [to] further address [the] deficit,” she said in an email. “Accordingly, given some decline in enrollment, the college is adjusting its course offering and some class sizes.”

CFAC President Diana Vallera estimates about a third of the union’s members could be impacted by the proposed course section cuts through decreased workload and reduced pay  or through increased class sizes and workload without additional pay.

“They went after the most marginalized of faculty, right after a pandemic,” said Vallera, who has taught photography at the school since late 2006. “And they went after our students right after a pandemic, after everything that we’ve been through.”

Union leaders announced plans to begin their strike on Monday after an unsuccessful bargaining session on Oct. 26. Leaders say nearly nine out of 10 voting members authorized a strike before voting closed on Oct. 25. About eight in 10 members took part.

In a statement last week, Columbia College officials said they “are disappointed that the union’s leadership has called a strike. We remain committed to good-faith bargaining with the union, and hope union leadership will remain at the table with concrete proposals.”

According to an update posted on the college’s website, students will not be held accountable for attendance or progress in classes canceled because of the strike. But they will be marked absent for missing classes that meet as scheduled.

The CFAC strike appears to be part of a recent upsurge in labor organizing on American college campuses detailed in a new report from the City University of New York’s School of Labor and Urban Studies.

Columbia College has a long history of hiring working professionals to teach students because they “bring the most contemporary, innovative thinking to the structure and delivery of our curriculum,” according to the school’s website.

Full-time faculty members at the school are barred from unionizing by a 1980 Supreme Court decision.

College leaders argue that the course section cuts are necessary to make a $2 million dent in a $20 million budget deficit. But Vallera and other union members reject these claims, saying other measures should be taken to rein in expenses that do not compromise student learning.

In response, John Holmes, chairman of the Columbia College Board of Trustees wrote in a letter to Vallera, “I must stress in no uncertain terms that the measures you seek to reverse, chief among them changes to some course offerings and to the enrollment of some courses, are the direct result of Board mandates to the college administration.”

Holmes is chief executive officer of AAR CORP, an aviation company, and was elected Columbia College’s board chairman in July. He has served as a trustee since 2012.

“This is a top priority for me as incoming Board chair, and we will not deviate from this direction,” Holmes wrote. “I am concerned that your proposed approach would aggravate, and not ameliorate, the problems we are required to solve.”

Vallera said she hopes the college’s leaders retract the cuts to course sections and offer more protections for adjunct faculty, including health insurance.

“But every indication from that letter from the Board of Trustees is the opposite,” she said.

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