Professional Documents
Culture Documents
PARBUDYAL SINGH
York University, Toronto, ON M3J 1P3 Canada
DEBORAH M. ZINNI
Brock University, St. Catharines, ON L2S 3A1 Canada
ANNE F. MAcLENNAN
I. Introduction
There has been a growing academic and practitioner interest in graduate student unions
in the United States, catalyzed by the unprecedented unanimous decision by the
National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) in 2000 to recognize the graduate student
union at New York University (NYU) (Saltzman, 2000). This decision, which marked
a significant reversal in the treatment of graduate student unions at private universities by the NLRB, was subsequently overturned by a 3-2 decision in Brown University
v. NLRB in July 2004. In the four-year interval since the NYU decision, there was a
spurt of organizing drives at other major universities, including Yale, Penn State, Ohio
State, and the University of Pennsylvania, all of which may be adversely affected by
the Brown decision.
The most recent NLRB ruling comes at a time when graduate students unionization was on the rise in the United States. Universities with recognized graduate student unions have grown from ten to at least 30 over the past decade. The new bargaining units have included major universities such as Temple, Michigan State,
University of Rhode Island, and Columbia. With an estimated 20 percent of all gradJOURNAL OF LABOR RESEARCH
Volume XXVII, Number 1
Winter 2006
56
uate employees now covered by collective bargaining agreements (Lafer, 2003), and
renewed interest in faculty unionization (Metchick and Singh, 2004), higher education might become a new frontier for organized labor (Chaison and Bigelow, 2002).
The unionization of graduate students is especially important for the labor movement in the United States, given the current union density rates of less than 14 percent, the lowest since workers gained collective bargaining rights through the National
Labor Relations Act in 1935. Furthermore, the organization of student unions extends
beyond the contemporaneous work of the local to provide ideological training of future
labor leaders. In fact, the current leader of the powerful Hotel Employees and Restaurant Employees International Union, John Wilhelm, who many view as potentially
the next national president of the AFL-CIO, is also a Yale graduate and previous chief
negotiator of white-collar workers on campus (Greenhouse, 2003b).
Despite the importance of graduate student unions, and with the exception of the
literature in labor law, there is a paucity of research in industrial relations on this
issue. Herein, we trace the origins of the graduate student union movement, discuss the
related law, analyze pertinent collective bargaining and strike issues, describe the
Yale case, discuss the rationale and opposing views for graduate student unions, and
suggest areas for future research.
II. An Overview of Graduate Student Unions: The Nature
of the Employment Relationship and the Law
Graduate students attend university to learn and gain relevant degrees. Increasingly,
they are employed while enrolled in their programs of study as research assistants
(working primarily to help faculty with their research), teaching assistants (working primarily to tutor students or teach courses or parts thereof), and administrative assistants
(working primarily with administrators in clerical and other duties). They seek employment for two primary reasons. First, many graduate students need the extra income to
defray the costs of higher education, which can exceed $18,000 per year at some institutions (Ehrenberg et al., 2003). Second, some universities require their graduate students to teach or assist administrators. While administrators posit that this is a requirement of a comprehensive education, especially when the students are being trained for
faculty positions, others argue that this strategy is a deliberate effort to reduce the costs
of instruction in and out of the classroom (Lafer, 2003). As Cavell (2000) notes, there
was a significant increase in the use of teaching assistants at colleges and universities, with the number of faculty members who were also graduate teachers growing by
35 percent, and that "this is largely a result of cost reduction efforts" (p. 1).
Whether students are being employed for pedagogical or economic reasons, the
trend seems incontrovertible: An increasing number of graduate students are required
to work. Furthermore, the workload is becoming heavier (Hayden, 2000). The Coalition of Graduate Employee Unions (CGEU) reported that part-time faculty had grown
from 22 percent in 1970 to 41 percent in 1995, with graduate students providing 18 percent of all teaching in institutions of higher education (CGEU, 2000). Data collected
57
from major universities indicate that from 50 to 70 percent of all contact hours are
performed by graduate students and contingent faculty (Digest of Education Statistics, 1999). Moreover, student labor is relatively cheap. For example, senior faculty can
earn an average of $80,000 per year, while a graduate assistant/teacher has the potential to earn from $5,000 to $20,000 per year (Digest of Education Statistics, 1999).
Even though universities increasingly depend on graduate students to perform
teaching assignments, practically speaking, graduate students need money to live and
so this collaboration of sorts can be beneficial to both the universities and to graduate
students. Compared to undergraduate students, they are typically older, less likely to
have family support, and more likely to have family responsibilities of their own (Task
Force, 1999). They are also likely to have depleted savings and possibly incurred significant debts in the course of their undergraduate studies. Without offers of funding,
usually in the form of academic assistantships or scholarships, few could choose to
pursue graduate studies on a full-time basis (Task Force, 1999).
Although graduate students may depend on this type of temporary work to support their studies, they do not occupy a core position in the academic framework making their positions transitory and precarious. Cranford et al. (2003: 455) posit that
precarious employment is characterized by atypical employment contracts, "limited
social benefits and statutory entitlements, job insecurity, low job tenure, low earnings, poor working conditions, and high risks of ill health." Essentially, the issue is
the quality of employment. The conditions of employment for graduate students share
many of the dimensions of precarious employment. Nonunion graduate students in a
precarious employment situation are challenged by limited access to job security and
tenure, lower wages, limited benefits, and increased risks of ill health due to stress.
Given the foregoing, graduate students across North America are increasingly seeking collective action through unionization to remedy real and perceived inequities.
However, the unionization process is fraught with legal hurdles. As with other
sectors in the United States, there are different industrial relations frameworks and
laws governing the public and private sectors. In public universities, state laws govern the unionization process and the acquisition of collective bargaining rights. The
University of Wisconsin became the first university to recognize its graduate student
union in 1969, albeit voluntarily, as there was no state law at that time that protected
the students' right to collective bargaining--that came much later in 1986. Currently,
there is no uniformity at the state level in dealing with student unions. While at least
ten states guarantee this right, including Massachusetts, Kansas, Florida, and California, others do not. Essentially, as with other legal initiatives, political and other forces
drive the legislation at the state level. In Florida and Kansas, the relevant statutes
were adopted after spirited opposition by those who felt that students were not employees and, therefore, should not be guaranteed the right to organize and bargain collectively (Hayden, 2000). Moreover, many of the states that guarantee this protection do
not permit the students to strike, a situation not unlike that of other state employees
(Leatherman, 2000).
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JOURNALOFLABORRESEARCH
The situation at private universities has its own peculiarities. At first, the NLRB
refused to hear the cases, arguing that they were not within its jurisdiction. Essentially, it was determined, in part, that student employment does not affect interstate
commerce and that it is educational or charitable in nature, which does not trigger
the provisions of the NLRA. For instance, in the 1951 Columbia University ruling, the
NLRB held that without significant commercial activity and with an educational
focus, a private university can bypass the NLRA (Trustees of Columbia University,
1951). This argument was reversed in 1970 when the NLRB accepted the Cornell
University case. It was held that given the changing economic realities, with the lines
blurred between business and education, and between commercial and noncommercial activities, the NLRB "can best effectuate the policies of the Act by asserting jurisdiction over nonprofit, private educational institutions.., whose operations have a
substantial effect on commerce" (Cornell University v. NLRB, 1970: 334). Now, the
central debate at the labor board and courts revolves around the issue of whether students are employees under the law. The relevant section of the NLRA (s. 7) states that,
"employees shall have the right to self-organization, to form, join, or assist labor organizations, to bargain collectively through representatives of their own choosing, and
to engage in other concerted activities for the purpose of collective bargaining or other
mutual aid or protection." The definition of "employees" then becomes crucial. Section 2(3), in a somewhat circular manner, defines employees: "The term employees
shall include any employee, and shall not be limited to the employees of a particular
employer, unless [the Act] explicitly stated otherwise." Evidently, the Act does not
specifically exclude students.
Over time, labor boards and courts have used two tests to ascertain whether students are employees. First, there is a "primary purpose" test, whereby the validity of
a bargaining unit is decided by examining its primary purpose. If the primary purpose
is economic, then the unit can acquire collective bargaining rights; however, if it is
educational, with economic purposes secondary, it is not a valid unit (Gartland, 2002;
Rohrbacher, 2000). For instance, in the Adelphi University case, the NLRB denied
graduate students who were teaching assistants collective bargaining rights. The students were required to work for 20 hours per week and were remunerated with $1,200
to $2,900 per academic year. In coming to its decision, the Board distinguished student
assistants as being different from full-time faculty because of the economic benefits
provided to faculty but denied to students. The Board found that graduate students
worked as part of their educational training in attaining a degree, and the primary purpose was not economic (Adelphi and NLRB, 1972). This line of reasoning was maintained over the next three decades, as exemplified in Leland Stanford Junior University and NLRB (1974) and Cedars-Sinai Medical Center and NLRB (1976). In a
dissenting opinion in the Cedars-Sinai case, Chairman Fanning argued that the Board
was wrong, and asserted that whether or not people are "primarily carpenters" or "primarily students," they are still employees. He further contended that the fact that students received remuneration, or "stipends" for their services, sometimes as much as
$20,000 is evidence that they are employees.
59
This line of argument is the essence of the second criteria in adjudicating the
employment status of students, namely the "service test." Essentially, this test is
grounded in the contention that anyone who provides compensated services is an
employee. In Boston Medical Center and NLRB (1999), the Board ruled that medical
interns, who were also degree-seeking students, were employees under the NLRA. The
house staff/interns received annual compensation from about $34,000 to $44,000 and
were entitled to several other benefits including paid vacation, sick, parental and
bereavement leave, and health, dental, and life insurance, among others. Applying the
service test, the Board held that the house staff worked for an employer within the
meaning of the NLRA, were compensated for their services, and provided patient care
for the Hospital, and that all of these "obviously define an employer-employee relationship" (Boston Medical Center and NLRB, 1999: 14).
This reasoning prevailed in the historic New York University (NYU) decision in
2000 that granted graduate students working as teaching assistants the right to form a
union and bargain collectively. The Board ruled that:
Graduate assistants work as teachers or researchers. They perform their duties for,
and under the control of, the Employer's departments or programs. Graduate assistants are paid for their work and are carried on the Employer's payroll system. The
graduate assistants' relationship with the Employer is thus indistinguishable from a
traditional master-servant relationship (NLRB v. NYU, 2000: 2).
However, the determination that graduate students are employees under the law does
not automatically grant them collective bargaining rights. If they are found to be
employees, the courts and administrative bodies must decide whether or not the relationship gives rise to collective bargaining rights (Hayden, 2000). In the NYU case,
the Board also found that the students had such rights.
The Brown v. NLRB decision, in overruling NYU, reverts to the pre-2000 position held by the NLRB. The NLRB decision was along party lines, with President
George W. Bush's appointees voting against unionization, and the two Democrats
offering a dissenting opinion. The majority ruled that:
we have come to the conclusion that the Board's 25-year pre-NYU principle of
regarding graduate students as non-employees was sound and well reasoned. It is
clear to us that graduate student assistants, including those at Brown, are primarily
students and have a primarily educational, not economic, relationship with their university. Accordingly, we overrule NYU and return to the pre-NYU Board precedent
(Brown v. NLRB, 2004: 5).
The two dissenters argued, among other things, that the majority ignored contemporary
economic realities facing universities and graduate students, as well as empirical evidence showing that collective bargaining would not have a "deleterious impact on
overall educational decisions" and that the NYU decision was correct. They stated
that the majority erred "in seeing the academic world as somehow removed from the
economic realm that labor law addresses--as if there was no room in the ivory tower
for a sweatshop" (Brown v. NLRB, 2004: 13).
60
The Brown decision, which does not affect public universities, is a serious blow
to the graduate student union movement in private universities. However, it does not
imply the demise of the movement. Union leaders have already stated that they will
challenge the decision (AFL-CIO, 2004). It is unclear what form the challenges will
take but there are a few options. First, they can argue that Brown is significantly different from other private universities (this was one of the arguments by the administrators at Brown in challenging the NYU decision; that is, Brown was different from
NYU). The union can also appeal the Board's ruling in federal court, or it could stage
strikes and other labor actions to force voluntary recognition by universities (AFLCIO, 2004; Smallwood, 2004). And, of course, the student union movement can also
wait to file new cases whenever the composition of the NLRB changes in favor of more
sympathetic members.
Interestingly, in Canada, the issue of students as employees was settled in two
cases in the mid-1970s. In the 1975 York University case (Graduate Students Association v. York University, 1975), the Ontario Labour Relations Board (OLRB) ruled that
teaching assistants were employees under Canadian law because they were remunerated for their services and that their work was not part of their graduate programs of
study. While the OLRB found that graduate research assistants were not employees,
because their income did not depend on their services, this was quickly overruled by
the British Columbia Labour Relations Board the following year, when it held that
interns and research assistants were also employees and had the right to organize and
bargain collectively (Rogrow and Birch, 1984). This essentially settled the matter for
all Canadian universities.
III. The Origins, Prevalence, and Functions of Graduate Student
Unions in the United States
While many researchers trace the origins of graduate student unions in the United
States to the recognition of the bargaining unit at the University of Wisconsin in 1969,
the roots of the student union movement can be traced to the Free Speech Movement
at the University of California at Berkeley and the related student protests in 1965
(Rhoades and Rhodes, 2003). The protests were partly in response to the university's
rules that limited and censored student organizations on campus; graduate students
were consequently ruled out of the student government (the Associated Students of the
University of California). The protests were also held against a backdrop of anti-war
campaign on campuses across the United States.
The University's policy towards organizing on campus had a long history. In
1962, the California Labor Federation had accused the University of limiting the right
of its students to protest. The Free Speech Movement demanded the right to negotiate
with the university administration as a bargaining agent for teaching assistants, following which the students went on strike. Graduate students subsequently formed a
400-member teaching assistant union, a local of the American Federation of Teachers
(Lipset and Wolin, 1965; Draper, 1965). Faculty members were divided in their opinion about student organizing and the Free Speech Movement. Those who supported it
61
formed the Committee of Two Hundred. Others who did not favor student organizing
united in another group, called the Faculty Forum (Lipset and Wolin, 1965).
One of the most important consequences from the Free Speech Movement strike
was that it changed the way students thought about labor and more particularly about
working on campus (Draper, 1965). It also opened a discussion about on-campus relations and organizing and the importance of college students to the society.
In 1969, the Teaching Assistants' Association (TAA) at the University of Wisconsin-Madison was voluntarily recognized by the university administration and
gained rights to bargain collectively (Cavell, 2000). Ed Young, the chancellor at that
time and an institutional labor economist, favored collective bargaining and granted the
TAA their demand for recognition despite a lack of legal protection by state laws
(Saltzman, 2000). The TAA went on strike in March the following year, demanding
better wages, benefits, reasonable workloads, and the right to participate in curriculum planning. The local court determined that the strike was "illegal" and ordered the
teaching assistants back to work. In April 1970, the strikers reached an agreement with
the University whereby teaching assistants were promised guaranteed appointments for
four years and reasonable workloads. However, they were not included in the course
planning process (Rowe, 1970). A lack of legal protection continued to affect the work
of the TAA and, after a five-week strike in 1980, the university withdrew recognition.
However, following political pressure, a state law in 1986 finally gave the graduate students the right to organize and bargain collectively, but it also subjected the TAA to the
strike ban that applied to other state employees (Saltzman, 2000).
Graduate student unions at other universities have not been voluntarily recognized
and have needed legal protection to win collective bargaining rights. Initially, many
graduate students became organized by joining faculty unions. The City University of
New York teaching assistants and part-time faculty members were organized under the
United Federation of College Teachers. The union had its first contract with the Board
of Higher Education in 1969. The goal was to raise the salaries for untenured college
teachers. At that time, the average salary for new teachers was $5,500 per year, and
$5,950 for experienced teachers (Handler, 1969).
The economic crisis in the 1970s led to budgetary cuts in graduate programs and
stipends. Enrollment in these programs went down and students complained about
lower stipends. At the same time, the cost of living rose. Students became more active
on campuses, leading to several graduate student unions being formed at some universities and protest action taken elsewhere. Table 1 contains a chronological listing of
graduate student unions in the United States, as well as the central labor organizations with which they are affiliated.
After the initial thrust, the growth of graduate student unions became sluggish
over the next two decades; however, a resurgence has recently occurred. According
to Ehrenberg et al. (2002), by 1999, graduate students at 19 universities had formed
unions; however, another 13 major universities were added to the list between 1999
and 2002. The University of California (UC) system may have contorted this figure,
University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee
University of Minnesota
University of Massachusetts-Lowell
University of Michigan
GEO
Rutgers University
UE
University of Wisconsin-Madison
Affiliated Union(s)
Graduate Union
University
1993
1982
1988
1990
1993
1975
1975
1975
1972
1971
1971
1969
1971
1969
Formation
Date
Table I
1995
1992
1991
1991
2002
1978
1989
1975
1992
Recognized in
1981
Recognized 1992
1969
1982
1970
Recognized/
First Contract*
Graduate Students
Graduate Students
Graduate Employees
TA/RA/Grad Asst./
Pre professional
Grad Asst.
TA/RA/Full-time
Grad Students
Graduate Employees
Graduate Student
Instructors
TA/GA
TA/GA
Grad Students, TA
GA/RA
Graduate Employees
(TA/RA)
Graduate Assistants
TA/RA/TA Associates
Membership Type
Uri-AAUP
2002
2000
2000
1999
1999
2000
2000
2000
1998
1998
1997
NEA/AFT
AFT, AFL-CIO
1996
1996
1995
*Note: In some instances, the bargaining units have been recognized but no first contract exists.
University of Massachusetts-Boston
University of Washington, Seattle
University of Iowa
University of Kansas
2003
2001
Pending
2001
2003
Pending
2001
2002
1999
2002
1998
Recognized 1995
Graduate Employees
Academic-Student
Employees (ASE)
GA
Graduate Students
Graduate Students
TA/RA
Graduate Assistants
Graduate students
Graduate Assistants
TA/RA
TA/RA
RAFFA
Graduates, TA's
(Excludes RA's)
Graduate students
JOURNALOFLABORRESEARCH
however, as eight of its campuses were given collective bargaining rights in 1999. This
occurred 16 years after the TAA union sought recognition at Berkeley and 11 years
after the union sought collective bargaining rights at other UC campuses (Saltzman,
2000). Nevertheless, as Lafer (2003: 26) reported, with 27 graduate unions existing in
2001, approximately 20 percent of all graduate employees in the United States were
covered by union contracts, "a level comparable to the most highly organized states
in the country and fifty percent above the national norm." Our own research suggests
that, counting the campuses at the UC and SUNY systems individually, there are now
at least 40 universities with recognized graduate student unions (Table 1).
Furthermore, there are organizing drives and recognition battles at more than 20
other universities, including Yale, Penn State, Ohio State, University of Maryland,
University of Pennsylvania, University of Virginia, University of North Carolina, and
the University of Illinois-Chicago. With the unionization of the first private university at NYU, a symbolic victory was achieved, albeit short-lived. The Brown decision
will certainly affect the future of current organizing drives. While graduate student
unions at public universities will most likely continue to grow in the next few years, the
situation at private universities would depend on the success of the challenges being
planned by organized labor and students groups against the Brown ruling.
The Yale University Case. The origins of the graduate student organization at
Yale University can be traced to 1987, when 25 teaching assistants formed a group
called the Teaching Assistant Solidarity, or the TA Solidarity (Johnson and McCarthy,
2000). They argued that teaching assistants had poor working conditions and were
not paid regularly. After they threatened to take legal action against the University,
the administration established a paycheck schedule for the following fall. In February
1990, the University adopted the Kagan-Politt Plan, which slashed teaching assistant
positions by 30 percent, imposed restrictions on teaching positions for students in their
fifth year, and a six-year registration cutoff. TA Solidarity members decided to form
the Graduate Employees Student Organization (GESO) in order to initiate discussion
with the University officials on the Kagan-Politt plan (GESO, 2004).
Yale did not recognize the new organization, maintaining that it had an educational, not an employment relationship, with the teaching assistants. GESO subsequently led a one-day walkout in December, 1991, and a three-day strike in February,
65
1992. As a result, GESO achieved an increase in pay for the teaching assistants and
cancellation of the six-year registration rule.
On April 6, 1995, teaching assistants walked out of their class sections demanding the right to be represented by GESO. In a subsequent election, 600 students voted
for the union and 120 voted against it (1,080 graduate students from the humanities and
social sciences were qualified to vote in the election). Some graduate students, who
opposed unionization, did not agree with GESO's strategies to cancel TA classes and
to "use" undergraduate students to achieve their goals. For the first time GESO opposition united in a group, called the Graduates Against Unionization. These students did
not consider themselves employees and believed that their teaching assignment was a
practical experience rather than a job. Despite the vote, Yale refused to negotiate a contract with GESO.
In December 1995, GESO organized a grade strike and again demanded union
recognition from the administration (Bodah, 2000; Rowland, 2001). About 200 teaching assistants did not submit the final grades of the undergraduate students by the due
date but fulfilled other duties for the Fall 1995 semester. The strike ended on January
15, 1996. At least two deans and faculty members of one department may have threatened the strikers with the loss of their positions as teaching assistants and the prospect
of negative recommendations which would affect their future careers (Hayden, 2000).
GESO took the case to the NLRB by filing an unfair labor practice charge. The General Counsel for the NLRB supported GESO's claim and issued a complaint in 1997
(NLRB v. Yale, 1999). At the hearing, Yale denied the charges and maintained its
position that the students were not employees under the law. The Administrative Law
Judge ruled that the strike was not protected under the NLRA because it was a partial
one; that is, the students continued to perform some of their duties after the strike was
called and, thus, were working and striking at the same time.
The grade strike case was appealed to the full NRLB, and in March 2000, Yale
settled the case. The charges against the University that it illegally threatened the striking TAs were dismissed, but Yale had to post official rules for the right of free speech
of its employees. However, the NLRB did not issue a decision whether the graduate
students were employees. Instead, it referred the issue back to the administrative law
judge. The decision is still pending. While the grade strike was unsuccessful for GESO,
the NLRB General Counsel argued that graduate teaching assistants were "employees"
and contended that they had the right to be protected under the National Labor Relations Act. This was the first time that U.S. labor law opened a window of opportunity
for a discussion about the status of teaching assistants at a private university.
In March 2003, GESO went on a five-day strike along with the other Yale unions.
Yale workers wanted better wages and pensions, and graduate students demanded the
right to organize in a union (Greenhouse, 2003a). Of the approximately 1,000 GESO
members, 482 voted to strike, and 141 opposed it. On April 30, 2003, GESO held
another vote, monitored by the League of Women Voters, seeking recognition by
Yale students (Zandonella, 2003). The organization did not seek the standard proce-
66
dure for an election under the supervision of the NLRB because they feared that Yale' s
administration would appeal the vote in a long legal procedure. Furthermore, there was
no outcome yet in the cases involving Brown and Columbia Universities about graduate students having the right to unionize in private universities. The union was surprisingly rejected by a slim 694q551 vote (Greenhouse, 2003a).
There were several reasons behind the union's defeat. First, GESO's members
may not have been united in their decision to strike in March. Second, GESO may have
lost many supporters because of its aggressive tactics after the March strike. Many
graduate students did not approve of the group's practice to interrupt lab classes and
visit students at home in order to get them on GESO's side. GESO also claimed unfair
practices by the administration and some faculty. In fact, GESO filed unfair labor practice complaints with the NLRB against five professors, who allegedly did not let union
activists speak to the students, conducted surveillance of union-related conversations,
and threatened not to write recommendations on behalf of graduate students in the
event of a strike.
Today, GESO, a member of the Federation of the Hospitality and University
Employees, along with the other Yale unions, still tries to influence decision making
on campus. In addition to the traditional issues driving unionization (such as demands
for higher wages, lower tuition, good working conditions, reasonable workloads and
class sizes, and health care benefits), GESO is now involved in helping to bring to the
fore several contemporary issues, such as the discrimination of minority groups and
women, and the "corporatization" of universities. It is still not recognized by Yale as
the legal bargaining agent for students.
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prospect of paying these debts is potentially problematic because of poor job opportunities in some areas (Joseph and Curtiss, 1997). Students would expect to be able to
pay off their debt in a reasonable amount of time, but doing so requires them to have
well-paying jobs. Today, students, particularly those pursuing an academic career are
facing the reality that there are limited tenured-track jobs available on graduation
(DeCew, 2003). With fewer job prospects, students are staying in school longer, thus
compounding their debt load even further (Smallwood, 2001).
Real benefits apparently have been gained through graduate student unionization,
thus affording unions with "pragmatic legitimacy" (DeCew, 2003). For example, students at NYU have been guaranteed higher stipends and have full health insurance,
while at Michigan State, students have secured excellent child-care benefits. Student
unions and their sympathizers have argued that:
when unions help teaching assistants win better wages and working conditions, the
mission of the university is ultimately served: Students don't have to work extra
jobs that take them away from their teaching and scholarly work, and students from
a wider range of economic backgrounds can afford to pursue graduate education.
Unions also fight for better training, smaller classes, and other improvements in
undergraduate education. Indeed, we have found that faculty members who attended
unionized graduate schools themselves generally support unions for teaching assistants (Shapiro, 2001: B20).
University administrators, on the other hand, have some understandably tough
issues to deal with in the face of student unionization. Essentially, they find themselves
in the unenviable position of having to do more with less. With generally declining
government support, administrators are forced to seek alternative financing arrangements that ultimately can affect both faculty and students. What has evolved over the
years is a rise in what is termed "the corporate university." The traditional model of the
university, as we once knew it, is now replaced by one that runs itself as business, seeking to make profits. Additionally, with decreased funding for research, universities
have had to forge partnerships with corporations in order to find funds. Not only does
it find itself increasingly corporatized, but it also finds itself in the midst of union
unrest. In arguing against unionization, administrators state that universities are not the
same as big business and that unions don't fit in the academic culture. As one administrator puts it: "What I would emphasize here is the lack of fit between what a union
is and does and the character of an educational community we should aspire to
achieve" (Bollinger, 2000: 1).
The views of university administrators and others who oppose graduate student
unionization come as no surprise, given the efforts that have been made to fight this
proliferation of organizing on campuses throughout the United States. Perhaps the
most contentious of all issues pertains to the handling of economic versus academic
matters at the bargaining table. Administrators believe that academic issues should
not be discussed at the bargaining table and should remain the right of the university.
During their first agreement, NYU won the right over the union to remove academic
considerations from the table. Even though the union potentially could have bargained
68
for certain academic rights, they agreed to drop those issues for the sake of gaining a
first contract. Without this agreement negotiations might not have proceeded. Although
a number of unions have focused mainly on economic factors through collective bargaining, others view these issues as inseparable and attempt to negotiate related
clauses. For example, the union representing graduate students at University of Massachusetts-Amherst has tried to negotiate the assignment of teaching assistants based on
seniority rather than qualifications, and others have included class size (Williams,
2002). The question of teaching load becomes an obvious contentious issue that
remains an impetus for unionization. Given the current labor market, where academic
positions are declining, this issue may continue to gain noticeable attention.
Opponents of graduate student unions also argue that because graduate student
teaching and research assignments vary by semester, students voting for unionization are
those who are currently working as teaching or research assistants, and therefore only a
limited number of the total graduate student population is represented at any given time
(DeCew, 2003). Once a union is accepted, all students are then covered by that union, and
have to begin paying monthly union dues. Except in the fight-to-work states in the United
States, students who do not wish to be represented cannot opt out of the union.
Increased wages and benefits also represent increased costs to the universities.
With increased costs, universities can find it difficult to grant increased stipends and
provide health insurance and childcare. Ultimately, tuition must be increased. Coupled
with the issue of costs are assertions that having a unionized institution results in a negative image that potentially poses difficulties when attempting to attract the best students. Union critics propose that, "unionization modeled on i n d u s t r y . . , is highly
inflexible, bureaucratic, formalized, and potentially divisive. It is the antithesis of the
collegial model needed at a university" (DeCew, 2003: 104). Along similar lines,
George Rupp, former president of Columbia, wrote in response to a scheduled vote
regarding the representation of graduate teaching and research assistants by the UAW,
that "a union would reduce the flexibility that faculty advisors and students currently
have to structure teaching, and research assignments to meet individual education
needs as well as other aspects of graduate training" (Rupp, 2002: 1).
From the foregoing, there are clearly legitimate issues raised by those favoring
and those opposed to graduate student unionization. The NLRB and courts are in a
difficult position as they ponder the cases before them, and as they deliberate on the
cases that may arise following the Brown decision. Given that the economic realities of
universities are changing and that students, in many cases, are indeed employees under
the law, it seems just a matter of time that more universities, at least those that are
public, become unionized. Whether or not this is good for students or bad for administrators is moot at this point. But, as evident in the recent move by the administration
at Columbia University to meet and discuss a contract with union leaders has shown,
the two parties can peacefully coexist. This is, after all, the model envisioned by those
who chartered the NLRA and its associated institutions. Furthermore, as the evidence
in Canada shows, the university has not been turned upside down as a result of graduate students' unionization.
69
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ate other institutions as well, including the courts. For instance, some observers think
that j u d g e s in the court system are waiting on the NLRB current decisions to guide
them at the state level (Lafer, 2003). Thus another area of research is the role of politics and the legal environment on unionization.
Finally, the ideological orientation and attitudes of workers and administration
m a y also influence the decision to unionize ( A d a m s , 1974; Kochan, 1979). M a n y
workers and students join unions because of their political and ideological beliefs and
philosophies (Wheeler and McClendon, 1991; Hemmasi and Graf, 1993), with those
believing in group solidarity perceiving unions as a major vehicle for collective action
(Haberfeld, 1995). As Brett (1980) found, dissatisfied employees are more likely to
form unions if they accept that collective action may lead to positive outcomes for
them. This seems to have been the case at Yale University where many students began
to focus on getting G E S O recognized as the collective bargaining agent for graduate
students because they saw this as necessary in addressing their work-related problems (Jacobson, 2001). Furthermore, the attitudes and ideologies of administrators
are also relevant, as these may influence the degree of union resistance. For instance,
the pro-collective bargaining philosophy of the Chancellor of the University of Wisconsin in 1969 resulted in the voluntary recognition of the first graduate student union
in the United States (Saltzman, 2000). Nevertheless, there is need for more systematic research on the role of attitudes and ideologies in graduate student unionization.
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