Tag: negotiations

TAUP Digest 4/8-4/12/2019

Negotiations UpdateClose to Setting Dates

 

TAUP and the administration have made significant progress in agreeing to a process for negotiations; there is only one outstanding issue, and we are hopeful it can be resolved as we await a reply from the administration.  We are therefore close to setting dates and will let you know the time and place as soon they are confirmed.  Our hope is that we will sit down together within two weeks.

 

Once bargaining does begin, we will need you, our members, to pay close attention to our communications from the table, to calls to attend events.  We will need you to communicate with us, and to come to witness negotiations when you can.  When the administration sees members supporting their colleagues in union work,  we will be in a good position to win the contract we deserve.  Let TAUP know if you want to get more involved in our Contract Campaign, Organizing, or Data Teams. 

 

Save the Date:  Rally for a Fair Contract May 1, Bell Tower, noon-1:00 p.m.!

 

We’ll be gathering on Wednesday, May 1st at the Bell Tower from noon-1:00 p.m. to rally for a fair contract.  Speakers will include members of TAUP and other unions as well as legislators.  Come support our vision for Temple!   (Rain site: 217D in the Howard Gittis Student Center)

 

 

Tentative Agreements Reached at CCP and Arcadia

 

We are happy to report that the Faculty and Staff Federation of the Community College of Philadelphia (AFT 2026) and the adjunct union at Arcadia, affiliated with United Academics of Philadelphia (AFT 9608) have both recently signed Tentative Agreements.  Both are the result of YEARS of determined bargaining and solidarity, and we salute our sister unions and hope for a speedy and smooth ratification! 

 

Faculty Voices

This week’s faculty voice comes from another local institution. Daniel Pieczkolon teaches at Arcadia University and has been a leader in their successful effort to unionize. Daniel spoke at TAUP’s Campaign Kick-Off event in March about the power of solidarity across local higher ed institutions.

 

Thank you to Abbey Bricker, Organizer Extraordinaire!

Last week, we bid farewell to our wonderful staff organizer, Abbey Bricker, who has taken a job with SEIU in Ohio.  For two years, Abbey did a fantastic job helping to move our union to a more activist organizing model.  She trained a large cohort of activists who will be able to continue this work in her absence and helped install our current system of Departmental Organizers. She was a joy to work with, and we wish her the best in her new job, continuing the fight for fair working conditions and the dignity of labor.  TAUP is now searching for a new staff organizer and will keep you posted.

 

Have you become a TAUP Member?

When  people represented by a union stand together and show that they support the work being done by their colleagues, they increase the strength of their own voice at the table. When the administration sees that membership is growing, they know that the work of the union is reinforced.

 

Dues paying members increase their union’s ability to leverage the gains that members need and want to see.  Over the next two weeks, member activists will be reaching out to colleagues to ask them to join TAUP. If you haven’t signed your membership card yet, now is your chance! Join here. If you have questions about becoming a dues paying member, reach out to our office taupaft@gmail.com.

TAUP Digest 3/25/19

e-Bulletin 2019.03.25

Negotiations Update 

The discussions we have been having with the administration to set the stage for working together at the table are ongoing. At this point, we are where we were last week: waiting for a response to the most recent proposal we’ve submitted, but we’ve been told to expect one shortly, which is good news.  The negotiation of terms marks the beginning of the negotiating process, and once those terms are agreed upon, dates for working at the table can be set.  As soon as we have details, we will share them, including the dates, place, and topics for negotiation sessions, as well as ways that members can support the Table Team during open negotiation sessions.

Have you become a TAUP Member?

When  people represented by a union stand together and show that they support the work being done by their colleagues, they increase the strength of their own voice at the table. When the administration sees that membership is growing, they know that the work of the union is reinforced.

Dues paying members increase their union’s ability to leverage the gains that members need and want to see.  Over the next two weeks, member activists will be reaching out to colleagues to ask them to join TAUP. If you haven’t signed your membership card yet, now is your chance! Join here. If you have questions about becoming a dues paying member, reach out to our office taupaft@gmail.com.

Members’ Corner: Getting a Contract that Recognizes our Humanity and Dignity

“…we deserve for our employer to recognize that our work is not separate from our humanity nor our students’ humanity—that we are not simply cogs in the Temple machine or the CCP machine, or the Arcadia machine—that thanks to our hard work we should know that will still have a job next semester, next year, the next decade– so that we can allow ourselves to breathe, do our jobs well, AND be human.”  

-Mary Stricker, NTT Sociology

Read Mary Stricker’s remarks from TAUP’s Contract Kickoff Event at Pub Webb two weeks ago.

 

The Presidential Executive Order on “Free and Open Debate” and Federal Funding

As many of you know, President Trump signed an Executive Order last week purporting to protect “free and open debate on college and university campuses,” and threatening institutions that do not follow his directive with the loss of federal funds.  TAUP strongly supports “free and open debate” at Temple and elsewhere, and, as per our contract, will defend the academic freedom of all of our members whatever their political beliefs.  But, along with statements from  our national union, the AFT, and the American Association of University Professionals (AAUP), we oppose the President’s diktat.

 As the AAUP says, it is “a solution in search of a problem–as the order notes, colleges and universities already have policies protecting free expression on campus, and, in the case of public institutions, are bound by the First Amendment.”  It authorizes cabinet agencies and the Office of Management and Budget to determine whether an offense against free inquiry has been committed, but almost all of these entities lack expertise in higher education as well as debates around free speech.  Finally, despite its supposed support for a diversity of views on campus, it is designed, as stated in the AAUP’s post, to be dangerously slanted toward institutions more likely to support the President’s politics.   Please consider signing the AAUP’s petition against this ill-conceived Executive Order.

 

TAUP Solidarity with Community College of Philadelphia: Informational Picket, March 20th

Our sister union at CCP, the Faculty and Staff Federation of Community College of Philadelphia (FSFCCP) has been working without a contract for three years. They recently authorized a strike vote, though they hope that a strike will not be necessary.  They are fighting administrative proposals that would increase their workload, which is already high in relation to other community colleges nationally, gut faculty governance, raise health-care costs, and refuse to pay their classified staff a living wage.

TAUP stands in solidarity with FSFCCP in this fight, and we invite you to join us in supporting them.  At an informational picket and march last Wednesday, TAUP’s Vice President, Jennie Shanker spoke in support of their efforts as did the Chair of our Adjunct Constituency Council, Zoe Cohen , representing United Academics of Philadelphia.  You can see photos of the event here, as well as a video from Jason Esters, who recently received his doctorate from Temple’s English Department here. The FSFCCP has always stood by TAUP, knowing that our struggles are theirs as well. We stand by the FSFCCP knowing the same. We will keep you posted on any further opportunities to show solidarity with CCP faculty, staff and students. .

TAUP Elections

If you are interested in being nominated or nominating yourself to run for President, Vice President, or Treasurer of TAUP or to serve on one of our faculty Constituency Councils, please read here.  Note that Self-Nomination Petitions must be received by the Nominating Committee, TAUP Office, 1301 Cecil B. Moore Avenue, Ritter Annex 721 (004-15), Philadelphia, PA 19122-6091, by Friday March 29, 2019.

Campaign Kickoff Event!

TAUP’s Campaign Kickoff event at Pub Webb on Cecil B. Moore Ave last week was a rousing success! Here are a few images from the event

Kolson Schlosser, chair of TAUP’s NTT Constituency Council and Srimati Mukherjee
Jason Norris, Jeffrey Solow – Tenured/Tenure Track Constituency Council Member at Large, Paul Dannenfelser and Norma Corrales-Martin – TAUP Treasurer.
Ben Curttright and Andrew Dudenbostel
Daniel Pieczkolon and Marsha Weinraub, emcee extraordinaire, wrapping things up!
A great crowd turned out for the event
Mary Stricker explaining why it’s crucial that Temple is a place where its faculty, librarians, and academic professionals are treated like whole human beings
Rep. Malcolm Kenyatta expressing his solidarity!
Destinee Grove, Pres. of TUGSA, expressing her solidarity!
Junior Brainard and Nweena Gates of the Faculty and Staff Federation of CCP (FSFCCP) showing solidarity!
Daniel Pieczkolon telling us about the gains they’re making at Arcadia and how our struggles reinforce each other!
TAUP’s new Operations Manager Patricia Blakey, President Steve Newman, Clifton Fordham and Omar T. Woodard
Paul Dannenfelser, Fred Rowland – chair of the Librarian’s Constituency Council, Daniel Pieczkolon – Arcadia University, Mary Stricker and Barbara Ferman
Zoe Cohen, chair of TAUP’s Adjunct Constituency Council, and Destinee Grove, President of TUGSA
Leanne Finnigan from the Paley Library explaining why our maternity and sick leave provisions sorely need improving.