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Grad Student Union Launched at U. of Chicagocrossposted from howtheuniversityworks.com Despite the setback, organizing is once more on the front burner at private universities in the U.S., including by committed, activist grad employees at the University of Chicago, outraged by an unfair stipend arrangement and by some of the lowest wages for teaching in the country (as low as $1,500 per quarter). As a result of graduate employee agitation, commonly through collective bargaining, 3/4 of university employers pay for graduate employee health insurance; the University of Chicago does not. Among the graduate employees that I met there last month was one whose earnings as a gardener offered far better pay than his teaching. On May 2, the members of Graduate Students United announced a membership drive for an independent union with a philosophy of “active solidarity with other workers in the university and the community of which the university is a part.” Asking for annual dues of just $5, and leaving for later consideration such questions as possible affiliation with a national organization, the card drive netted 70 members at their first event and has an innovative membership structure relying on open organization and mass electronic referenda for significant decisions. After a year of preliminary organizing, the group looks to the future with confidence. “Over the past year we organized two well-attended demonstrations, collected about 500 signatures on a petition with demands for the administration, and set up a basic organizational structure,” said organizer Joe Grim Feinberg. “We are optimistic about our chances.” When I resume the video series in the next couple of weeks, I’ll begin with my recent interview with some of the Graduate Students United core organizers. I taped them singing one of Joe Feinberg’s songs for the union, conducting an intentional culture-struggle from below. It’s good stuff. In the meanwhile, here are some of the lyrics from a new piece he penned for the May 2 event:
Give ‘em hell, Joe & co. Rumor has it, the Kennedy bill reversing the sleazeball work of the Brown decision — supported by both Obama and Clinton — was partly inspired by the U. Chicago organizers, as well as by the continuing determination of the GSOC-UAW membership. I can believe it. Next couple of posts: 1) thanks to the quality trolls, is it the end for minnesota review? 2) Update on McGill Joins the Bush League which has racked up 70 comments and counting. Posted at 12:04:52 PM on May 7, 2008 | All postings by Marc BousquetCommenting is closed for this article.
Previous: Administration's Culture War From Above
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