Category: eBulletins

Trump’s Immigration Policies Affect Us All: March for a Sanctuary City

On Friday, July 27, the Guardian reported that the Trump administration is planning to rescind work permits for spouses of individuals on H-1b visas. These are the visas issued to our international colleagues; if carried out, this action by the administration will damage them and their families. Immigration policy and policing affect many of our students as well as other workers who are employed at the University while on temporary visas.

When our colleagues and our students are hurt in this manner, it affects us all; and we must stand up alongside them in fighting unnecessary policies, rooted in racist nationalism.

Activism in support of migrants who are in the country, many of whom are seeking asylum as protected by U. S. and international law, has been growing and is proving to be effective. By supporting this activism, we are supporting reasonable immigration policies. Among other benefits, these policies will allow the University to attract and retain scholars and their families who will be able to live, study, and be productive in this country without threats to their work or residency status.

The repercussions of the “zero tolerance” border policies of the Trump administration, which resulted in the separation of children from their parents, may take years to sort out, and the damage done to those targeted by it may be irreparable. If it were not for the outrage expressed throughout the U.S. against it, what would it say about our country? What would it say about us?

Last week, after mounting pressure from local activist groups, Mayor Kenney declared that he will not renew the City’s Preliminary Arraignment Reporting System (PARS) contract with the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency (ICE) which allowed real-time sharing of arrest data between the Philadelphia Police and ICE.

This data was able to be used to arrest victims of crime who lacked legal status in the country, and advocacy groups report that it made migrants more vulnerable to manipulation and abuse as they were hesitant to report crimes that were aimed at them. PBS has reported last week that thousands have reported sexual abuse while in ICE custody as well, a crime that is notoriously under-reported.

The activist groups that were able to sway Mayor Kenney are now moving toward their second of three goals: closing the Berks County Residential Center. Berks is a low-security detention center where families are sent to for an indeterminate amount of time while they await asylum hearings. Families end up at Berks after being randomly selected. Some who cross the border are released after posting bond money or wearing ankle monitors. Others are sent to Berks for detention. Many, including Philadelphia’s City Council, are calling on Governor Wolf to close of the facility so that the detainees can be released until their petitions for asylum are heard. (For more information click here.)

The third goal of the activist groups is to abolish ICE. This is more complicated, as ICE performs many important functions. But immigration oversight existed far before ICE came to be. ICE is an entity that resulted from the restructuring of the Department of Homeland Security after 9/11 when “Congress granted ICE a unique combination of civil and criminal authorities to better protect national security and public safety”. Given the xenophobia in the U.S. at this moment, such authorities are too easily abused and must be reconsidered.

A member of the coalition of activists approached TAUP for support of their upcoming action, the March for a Sanctuary City on August 4th. The Executive Committee voted in support, and we hope you will join us in pushing Governor Wolf to shut down the Berks County Residential Center and for the abolition of ICE, whose functions can be restructured in a manner that does not invite the unnecessary over-policing and abuse of migrants seeking asylum in this country.

Please join us:

March for a Sanctuary City, August 4th, 11am-2pm, beginning at Philadelphia’s Liberty Bell, 6th and Market Streets

Responding to the Rankings Scandal

Like the rest of the Temple Community, we at TAUP are saddened, angered, and appalled by the rankings scandal at the Fox School of Business. As the Jones Day report puts it, the “leadership and other employees” at the Fox School of Business “knowingly and intentionally” provided false information to U. S. News and World Report (USN) not only about its online MBA but other programs as well in order to raise and maintain its rankings. All of the specific charges of fraud are troubling, but we are particularly concerned by the allegation that Fox reduced its reported class size by under-counting the number of faculty that each member of the staff assists; this raises larger questions about how faculty labor is being done, by whom, and how it is recognized.

Now, USN is demanding that Temple look into the reports it has made for other programs; both Fox’s accreditor and the accreditor of Temple as a whole have raised concerns; Temple has been hit with a lawsuit by students claiming they have been defrauded; and the Pennsylvania Attorney General has opened an investigation.

There is a great deal we do not know about this scandal, and multiple investigations are ongoing. But we do know enough now to say:

–We lament that this scandal may do damage to the reputation of excellent programs and departments at Fox and thus to the faculty and staff who serve them despite the fact that they had nothing to do with these fraudulent practices.

–This scandal has damaged the trust that students in and outside of Fox as well as the general public place in our university.

–This scandal is in part the result of an unhealthy fixation on rankings that warps the priorities of our university as a whole. We understand that rankings matter in recruiting students, but their effect on fiscal and pedagogical decisions at Temple is entirely too strong. Rankings like those of USN reflect little about the real quality of an institution. To take just one example, in the most influential of USN’s rankings, the percent of full-time faculty and the faculty/student ratio count for only 1% each in how universities are ranked. By comparison, high school guidance counselors’ view of a university counts nearly 3.5 times more than both of these factors combined.

–This scandal has exposed the bad effects of the concentration of administrative power at the expense of faculty, librarians, academic professionals, and other stakeholders.This goes beyond the Dean’s disbanding of the committee for reviewing responses to ranking surveys, which the Jones Day report cites as a cause contributing to the scandal. That action is of a piece with the undermining of shared governance at Fox.

The erosion of shared governance at Temple is hardly unique to Fox. While the administration may be largely to blame for this, the faculty must take some responsibility, too, especially the tenure-track faculty which has more opportunity and more agency to engage in governance. Yes, it can be hard to participate when we doubt whether our participation will have any effect. But let’s insist then that our efforts are honored. When we do not participate in departmental, collegial, and university governance through the Faculty Senate we send a signal to the administration that we do not care about shared governance. This makes it hard to have the difficult discussions we need to have among ourselves and with the administration, discussions which might create an opening for more productive partnerships.

We applaud the administration’s making public the Jones Day Report, the steps it has announced to increase rigor and transparency in reporting data across Temple, and its demand that Dean Porat resign. Whatever good Dean Porat did during his long tenure at Temple, and many of our colleagues would say it was considerable, he bears responsibility for the practices of the school he oversaw. We are also glad to hear that faculty input has been solicited in the search for an Interim Dean.

But we are troubled that none of the steps involving the larger issues bound up in this scandal explicitly include faculty, librarians, academic professionals–not to mention students. These university-wide initiatives will be directed by administrators and staff. We do not doubt their commitment or expertise. But we believe that a proper accounting of what went wrong here and what is going wrong elsewhere in Temple’s priorities and operations requires the voices and the ideas of stakeholders who are not in the administration, including faculty, staff, students and members of the Temple community.

To help ensure that the concerns, the deep and broad knowledge, and the ideas of our members are put to good use, TAUP is working with others to organize opportunities in the Fall for them to speak out. By sharing our experiences and discussing our views, we hope to strengthen our understanding of what is going wrong and right at Temple regarding shared governance and academic freedom, including the complications that arise when 75% of the faculty are contingent. We hope this will lead to a report and a set of recommendations and demands. If you would like to be part of doing so, please contact Steve Newman at stevenewman1970@gmail.com. Of course, if you have any reactions to this E-Bulletin, including views of what happened at Fox or other places at Temple, please let us know at taupaft@gmail.com. We know these are complex and highly-charged issues and want to hear from those we represent.

Faculty Safety:  Please Share Your Experiences and Concerns

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TAUP has received a disturbing number of reports of members being subject to assault, threats, and other forms of abuse from students, both graduate and undergraduate.  Some members have expressed frustration at the administration’s response when they have reported these episodes.

Article 24 of the TAUP contract states, “Temple agrees to continue to make reasonable provisions for the safety and health of bargaining unit members in pursuit of their University recognized professional responsibilities.”  

To make sure that this article is being upheld, and to ensure that our members feel safe at work,  we need to be informed of incidents where a student or students have subjected members of our bargaining unit to  physical assault, threats of assault, harassment or bullying in person, online, or through other media.*  

If you are aware of an incident that happened to someone who is no longer working at Temple,  please consider sharing that as well. If an incident had been reported to a departmental supervisor, Dean or another administrator, how did they respond?

In order to gauge the scope and severity of the problem, it is critical that we hear from you.  We have raised this matter with Human Resources and they are concerned as well and care about the safety of Temple’s employees. Your experiences and suggestions will form the basis for further discussions both within the Union and with the administration.  Your stories may bring up other important elements of faculty safety that will need to be further investigated.

Please send your story to tauparticle24@gmail.com or if you prefer, you can reach out directly to  either Steve Newman, President of TAUP stevenewman1970@gmail.com,  215 983-8905, or Jennie Shanker, Vice President jshanker1@gmail.com, 215 917-4373.

*We recognize that colleagues who have been subject to harassment, bullying or assault may find it traumatic to rehearse these events. If we hope to reduce these types of incidents, it is critical that we are made aware of how prevalent these problems are. All details will be kept confidential unless you give explicit permission to share them.