Tag: graduate students

Show your Support for Grad Students!

 

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TUGSA, the grad students’ union, is in the midst of negotiating a new contract with Temple.  Negotiations are at a critical juncture, and it’s important that our graduate students see that faculty support them.  

Come to the TAUP Office from noon to 1 tomorrow, 3/23,  at Ritter Annex 721 to pick up stickers and a t-shirt so that you’re ready for future actions.  If you can’t make it to the Union office, please contact Jared Dobkin (jared.dobkin@tugsa.org) and  TUGSA will deliver a sticker or t-shirt to your mailbox.

Make your support visible!


 

The Hour is Late and the Stakes Are High:  We Must Oppose GOP Tax Reform!

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We must do what we can to stop the GOP’s proposed Tax “Reform,” which may include provisions particularly harmful to higher education:  taxing graduate tuition remission as income; prohibiting deductions for student loan interest; and taxing endowments at some schools.  Recent reports indicate that the first two will not be in the bill emerging out of conference, and opposition is mounting toward the third; our efforts and those of our allies are having an effect!  But we cannot rest until we are sure these provisions are not in the bill,  and even without them, the bill would be a disgrace. As TAUP member and economist Don Wargo shows here in his clear-eyed analysis , it is founded on lies or mistakes; it disproportionately benefits the wealthy while doing serious damage to millions among the less-well-off and swelling the deficit; and it sets up draconian cuts to programs that millions of children, adults and senior citizens rely upon.

 So how can we act as Republicans in Congress speed this monstrosity toward a vote?

 Here are three ways:

 1) Work with TAUP leaders who have been calling colleagues living in districts represented by Republicans who may be persuadable—Ryan Costello (6th district), Patrick Meehan (7th—though he looks like an unlikely ally), and Brian Fitzpatrick (8th district).  We are giving these members a way to contact their representatives and urge them to vote “no” and to specifically combat any provisions that threaten higher education.  To help us call members in these districts, contact us at taupaft@gmail.com.    

2) If you live in these districts, call 877-795-7862you’ll be asked to provide your zip code and will then be connected to your legislator’s office.  If you talk to an aide or leave a message, make sure you mention your address so that they can be sure they know you are a constituent.

3) Attend an action— protest outside a legislator’s office, a townhall, etc.   Go to the American Federation of Teachers’ page, http://allin.rtp.aft.org/.  It provides a wealth of information about what’s wrong with the proposed bills.   Scroll down to find various resources including actions put together by Indivisible, Americans For Tax Fairness, and Not One Penny.

It’s the end of the semester and all of us have tons of exams, essays,final projects or performances to grade.  Many of us are looking longingly toward the Break.  But it is critical that we spare any time we can to raise our collective voice against these wrongheaded, destructive and immoral proposals.  There is too much at stake, and signing online petitions is not enough. It is time to act.

 In Solidarity,

​Steve Newman ​
TAUP President

For the Future of Education, Defeat the GOP Tax Reform Bills!

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TAUP strongly opposes the tax bills proposed by Republicans in the House of Representatives and the Senate, and we stand ready to work with any group on campus, among them the Faculty Senate; Temple Student Government and Temple’s Administration, to defeat these proposals. Together, we must all work to stop this ill-conceived attack on economic fairness and education.


Our reasons for doing so stem in part from a  disgust at the way the bills largely benefit the wealthy at the expense of the public good.  We fear that the large deficits incurred will lead to spending cuts that hurt the most vulnerable people largely left out of these reductions in taxation.  The proposals hew to the exploded dogma of trickle-down economics–see Kansas for a recent example of its disastrous effects–whereby we are promised that tax cuts to the wealthy and corporations will yield GDP as high as 4 or 5%, numbers no credible economist, even those in favor of lower taxation, finds plausible.


But we also have very specific reasons that should concern every member of the Temple community no matter your political affiliation–these bills strike at the heart of funding education.  


Here are some provisions that directly affect higher ed:  


  • While the recently proposed Senate version would retain the deduction for interest on student loans, the House version would axe it, a change that would make it harder for our students to attend Temple and increase the burden on students already here—as well as many faculty, librarians, academic professionals and other Temple employees still paying off their loans.

  • Tuition remission for employees and their dependents would be taxed under the House bill.

  • The House bill taxes tuition remission for graduate school as if it were income. The devastating effects this proposal would have on graduate education if it became law have been well-described here.   

There are other attacks on education in these bills, including the removal in the House version of the deduction teachers can take for buying their own school supplies.  


Then there is the proposal in both bills to tax endowments at the wealthiest schools; legitimate questions might be posed about the huge endowments some universities have amassed.  Still, it is curious that the only entities or persons at the top targeted for tax increases are not for-profit corporations or wealthy individuals but universities!   


Finally, the proposal to get rid of State and Local Tax (SALT) deductions—present in the Senate bill but not in the House version—is projected to cut hundreds of billions of dollars in local and state support for education.


So what can we do?   Get active!  Time is short!  Call your Representative and Senator; calls are more effective than emails or even letters, and when you call make sure you let them know that you are from their district or state.  Our national union, AFT, has been fighting these proposals since the House bill was released; for instance, you can sign a petition against repealing the SALT deduction here.    It is also important to educate others on the terrible consequences of passing tax reform if it looks anything like the two bills that have been proposed; you can find a sample op-ed here, letters to the editor, and other resources if you scroll down a bit from this link.  


We’ll be in touch about other ways to push back against this proposed massive transfer of wealth to the wealthy
 at the expense of education and the public good.