Tag: merit

Progress: Discrimination, AP Merit, Retrenchment, Office Space 

On Tuesday, October 22nd and Thursday, October 24th, the union and the administration met and made progress on several issues:

  • Language was crafted that both sides could agree to on the contract language covering discrimination grievances, and a tentative agreement has been signed on the issue, preserving our members’ rights.
  • Both sides have also been able to work out issues in regard to the AP merit process, and a TA has been signed.
  • Retrenchment:  A tentative agreement has been signed to acknowledge the specific place of full-time non-tenure track faculty should the university declare a financial emergency and seek to layoff faculty.
  • The Adjunct Office Space Committee, which convened as a labor-management committee following the ratification of the first adjunct contract, will continue with a focus on office space issues for all CBU members.A tentative agreement has been signed.

 

Additional Progress: Adjunct Proposals

The Adjunct Appointment, Evaluation and Job Security proposal moved forward significantly on Thursday. After multiple shifts in language from the union, on Thursday, the administration modified a number of its positions, putting us very close to an agreement that will advance the professional standing of adjuncts. It will increase support for their teaching from within their departments, and offer a path to increase job stability through the ability to request an evaluation for the purposes of promotions, raises and/or multi-semester appointments. There are a few final details to work through before both sides can come to agreement, but many of the largest obstacles have been overcome.

 

Major Issues Remain:  Healthcare, Wages, Family-Friendly Policies, NTT Job Stability, Compensation.

The administration has made it clear that their key priority is increasing healthcare costs.  They have proposed significant increases to the percentage of premiums all full time members would pay, with families bearing a considerable burden, with increases in premiums of over $1000 a year.  While the administration has proposed a new tier for those with only one dependent that would cut premiums for some members, the new deductibles they have proposed would eat significantly into these savings–in network, $250 for individuals and $500 for plus-one and families, double that out of network.  They have also proposed doubling the co-pay for specialists to $40.

 

TAUP will be pushing back against these punishing proposals while pushing for more family-friendly policies: 

  • Support for childcare
  • Tuition benefits at other schools
  • Parental leave for librarians and Academic Professionals
  • Healthcare benefits that support families rather than punishing them

To help TAUP fight the administration’s anti-family proposal. Email Jenna at jsiegelaft@gmail.com.

 

Compensation

TAUP has made significant moves in our compensation proposals, the administration’s proposals on wages remain below projected inflation, and they have not yet moved on other key proposals, among them  NTT job security, NTT pension parity, course releases for exceptional service, and others.  

 

NTT Job Stability

The administration is still not willing to take the most important step in helping to insure that NTTs who have taught for 3 years will have a degree of job stability.  Our proposal, which would trigger 3 year or longer renewals or explanations for non-renewal, will cost the university nothing. It follows what is already the general practice at many schools and colleges at Temple.  The university should take the final step in giving NTTs some contractual guarantees for their commitment and hard work.

 

Next Steps

Join us in  fighting for these proposals and the values they represent at the table.  

Have you attended open bargaining? Come  on Nov. 6th or Nov. 12th to show your support for these issues. RSVP 

 

Have you signed the petition urging the Board to agree to a Fair Contract?

If you want to know who is circulating the petition in your school/department, or if you’d like to circulate a petition to you colleagues, contact Jenna at jsiegelaft@gmail.com    

 

We know the administration can afford our proposals.  It’s time for them to say “yes.” 

 

End-of-Year Digest: Commencement, the Start of Summer, and the Work of the Union  

e-Bulletin 5/7-5/9/2019

On this Commencement Day, TAUP celebrates our students and the faculty, librarians, and academic professionals who teach and guide them. We hope our members have a restful and productive summer.

Be sure to take time this summer to attend a negotiation session, witnessing what happens as TAUP and the administration engage in collective bargaining. Having members of the TAUP bargaining unit in the room shows the administration that the issues being negotiated are important, and it’s a reminder of the respect that is due to the people who work at the university and are affected by the decisions being made. Witnesses have been very helpful to the table team, contributing to the discussion during breaks and offering very useful perspectives from different schools and departments. Upcoming sessions are scheduled for May 16th, 21st, and 23rd. Please RSVP.

 

Invitation to a Town Hall with Presidential Candidate Senator Elizabeth Warren

The AFT, our national affiliate, will be conducting a Town Hall for dues-paying members of TAUP (which makes you a member of AFT) with Senator and Presidential Candidate Elizabeth Warren.  It will be held on on Monday, May 13, 4:30-6:30 p.m., at the Plumbers Local 690 Union Hall, 2791 Southampton Rd., Philadelphia, 19154. Parking is available. Seating is limited for this event, so be sure to RSVP here.

This Town Hall is part of AFT Votes 2020–for more information on our national union’s approach to the upcoming Presidential election, visit the website.

Access to events like this is one of the many benefits of joining TAUP .

 

Merit Pay

TAUP has received information on merit awards this year, and we are analyzing the data from this and previous years.  Next week, look for a report on our findings and the implications for the current contract negotiations. We have put a  proposal on the table is for 1.75% merit per year of the contract. This is at the high end of the range negotiated in the last three years of the current contract.

 

TAUP Endorsements for the May 21st Primary:  Mayor and City Council

Through its Committee on Political Education (COPE), TAUP endorses candidates and  offers modest funds through donations members offer to COPE (which are separate from dues) to candidates who share our values and who seek election to offices that bear on the work of the Union.  

After interviewing many candidates, we have endorsed  the following pro-education, pro-labor candidates in the upcoming primaries.  We urge you not only to vote for them but also to visit their campaign websites to see how you can help their campaigns.  

Mayor: Jim Kenney

City Council-at-large (D):  

Erika Almiron

Justin DiBerardinis

Helen Gym

Adrian Rivera-Reyes

Isaiah Thomas

 

TAUP Election Results

Here are the results of our recent election. Congrats especially to our newly elected leaders!

Officers elected to a two-year term:

President: Steve Newman (tenured/tenure-track, CLA)

Vice President:  Jennie Shanker (adjunct, Tyler)

Treasurer:  Norma Corrales-Martin (full-time nontenure-track, CLA)

Members of the Nontenure-Track Constituency elected to three-year terms

Max Avener (CST)

Alex DeVaron (Boyer)

Donald Wargo (CLA

Members of the Tenure Track Constituency Council elected to three-year terms

            Will Jordan (Education)

Jeff Solow (Boyer)

Damien Stankiewiecz (CLA)

Members of the Adjunct Constituency Council

 elected to three-year terms:

                        Alex Schecter (Tyler)

            Milca Dubon (CLA)

             elected to two-year terms:

                        Carla Anderson (CLA)

Jay Bagley (CST)

Delegates elected to a one-year term

            Sam Allingham (CLA)

            Paul Dannenfelser (CPH)

            Joyce Lindorff (Boyer)

Bernie Newman (CPH)

Thanks to all those who voted in the recent TAUP Elections and to the candidates who agreed to run!

From the Table: April 18th, 2019 Negotiation Session

On Thursday, TAUP sat down with the University’s administration for the first day of open negotiations for a new contract. In addition to the table team, over 20 people from TAUP’s Collective Bargaining Unit showed up to observe the discussion, a great success for our first time using Open Bargaining, in which all members of the CBU are invited to attend.  Our next confirmed sessions are  May 3rd, 9:00 a.m.-noon and May 6, 1-5 p.m. at Temple University Center City. Let TAUP know if you’d like to attend.

Early Settlement

We are pleased by the cooperative spirit that the administration has shown in our complex discussions setting forth the process for these negotiations.  As we described in previous bulletins, we have agreed to pursue an early settlement on wages, benefits, and job stability/security, with parallel processes on other important issues, including rules defining who in the library is in the Union; grievances; resources for adjuncts to meet 1:1 with students and for other needs; workload concerns; and diversity.

We put a wide range of proposals on the table yesterday, all informed by our union’s central value–that our members should be treated as the professionals as they are and fully and equitably rewarded for their accomplishments. These are the proposals we put out this week; more are forthcoming.

Proposal: Compensation

  • Significant Across-the-Board raises

  • Increases in merit

  • New salary minima, that should increase every year of the contract

  • Increases in overload pay

  • Increases in summer pay

  • A research fund for FT faculty who conduct independent studies

  • Pay for adjuncts conducting independent studies

  • Pay for required adjunct service

Temple Can Afford these Increases  

Since signing the full-time contract in 2014 and an adjunct agreement in 2017, the University has been doing very well financially, with large increases in unrestricted net assets, a very large net positive in revenues over expenses, and a decrease in debt load.  Even with challenges on the horizon, we believe that Temple will continue to do well, thanks in significant part to the excellent work done by our faculty, librarians, and academic professionals. However, the percentage of Temple’s budget devoted to instruction has remained flat.  Many of our members struggle to pay their bills, to afford health care, and to balance their work lives with their lives outside of work. This must change.

Proposal: Increased Tenure-Track Hiring; Adjunct and Full-Time Non-Tenure Track Job Stability

  • A mandated increase in tenure-track hiring.

  • Priority in hiring and long-term contracts for adjuncts with significant length of service and who receive satisfactory evaluations

We believe that the lack of job stability for all of our faculty must be addressed. There is a side-letter in the contract that already commits Temple to tenure-track hiring, and although Temple has continued to hire some tenure-track professors, the statistics for at least two decades are clear–in total numbers and as a percentage of the faculty as a whole, tenure-track faculty numbers have declined at an alarming rate.  The percentage of tenure-track faculty within the bargaining unit as a whole be increased by a total of 1% for every year of the contract.

Those who are not eligible for the protections of tenure–approximately 75% of our bargaining unit–deserve more job stability.  Building on the good work done by the labor-management committees emerging out of the adjunct contract, we have proposed an avenue for adjunct faculty to gain priority in hiring and longer-term appointments.  This increased stability is tied to an evaluation processes that goes beyond SFFs, and ensures that our members have been given the guidance they need to excel in their department.

At our next session on May 3rd, we will be putting forth a job security proposal for full-time non-tenure track faculty.

Proposal: Maternity and Parental Leave; Sick Leave

  • 12 weeks of paid maternity leave, replacing the inadequate benefit for librarians and increasing the 8 weeks full-time members get, eliminating the classification of pregnancy as a sickness.

  • A modification that clarifies the benefit that gives full-time faculty who are new parents a semester free from teaching, to be used within 12 months of the child’s arrival.

  • Librarians’ sick leave no longer subject to a University rule not appropriate to professionals.

Proposal: Parity in NTT Pensions

The idea of parity extends beyond minimum pay.  One of our biggest gains in the 2014 contract was that the pension match for NTTs was brought close to parity with tenure-track faculty.  It is time to close that gap for these colleagues, and we have made a proposal to do just that.

Proposal: Merit Pay:  More Transparency and Equity for Research NTTs

TAUP often gets complaints from members who believe that the merit system is opaque and unfair, and there are never enough merit units to adequately reward the amazing work our members do.  In addition to proposing a bump in merit, we have proposed that departments specify the range of units members can expect for specific accomplishments. Some departments already do this, many do not, which leads to an unsettling unpredictability for our members.

We have also been informed that NTTs whose salaries come entirely from grants are not guaranteed the merit they are due; at best, they can build this into the salary requested in their grant applications. We have proposed a solution to this.

Proposal: Childcare and Tuition Benefits at Other Schools

We reminded the administration that the joint Faculty Senate-TAUP Committees conveyed proposals on these two important issues last May and that the contract requires a formal administrative response that is long overdue.

How You Can Help: Rally on May and Upcoming Negotiation Sessions

Support TAUP in its fight to realize a vision of Temple where our members are properly rewarded and our teaching, research, and service are better-supported.

Join us for a rally at the Bell Tower on May 1st from 12-1

If you would like to support the Table Team by attending the May 3rd, 9-noon and/or May 6th, 1-5.p.m. bargaining sessions, RSVP to let TAUP know.

TAUP’s Table Team

Member

Constituency

School

TAUP role

Steve Newman

Tenured/Tenure Track

CLA

President

Jennie Shanker

Adjunct

Tyler

Vice President

Norma Corrales-Martin

Non-Tenure Track

CLA

Treasurer

Fred Rowland

Librarian

Exec. Committee

Chair Library Constituency Council

Don Wargo

Non-Tenure Track

CLA

Exec. Committee

Member-at-Large NTT Constituency Council

Paul LaFollette

Tenured/Tenure Track

CST

TAUP Member

Zoe Cohen

Adjunct

Tyler

Exec. Committee

Chair Adjunct Constituency Council

ALTERNATES

Jeff Solow

Tenured/Tenure Track

Boyer

Exec. Committee

Member-at-Large TT Constituency Council

Sam Allingham

Adjunct

CLA

Member-at-Large, Adjunct Constituency Council

Debbi Casey

Non-Tenure Track

Fox

TAUP Member

Nia Jackson

Academic Professional

CLA

TAUP Member

 

Keep up to date with TAUP by following our social media:

Twitter: @TAUP

Facebook: @TAUPAFT

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