Page Six THE MICHIGAN DAILY Thursday, March 16, 102 Page Six THE MICHIGAN DAILY Thursday, Mdrch 16, 1 ~72 'G TS and il : .x' 0 S B LITIES E PAID SUPPLLI ORT continued Continued from Page 5 University contract colleges for larly is this the other one. staff compe (k) According to other figures So much prepared by MAHE, at the CUNY ule. From Senior Colleges a professor mak- admistrati ing ,$20,000 on Oct. 1, 1968 made mittee men $27,525 on Oct. 1, 1971, for a 37.6 following i percent increase over four years. ways in wh An associate professor making (a) First, $16,000 in 1968 made $22,500 in ized proced 1971 for a 40.6 percent increase, v i e w i n g An assistant professor making though a ro $12,250 in 1968 made $17,830 in tern can be 1971 for a 45.6 percent increase. cess by whic Without promotion an instructor For exampl making $11,200 in 1968 would eral years n have made $15,350 in 1971 for a sity has eve 37.1 percent increase. At the top appropriate levels in each rank, professors' of increase compensation rose from $26,000 to between uni $31,275 in that three-year period of minor ex (20.3 percent), associate profes- ed recaptur sors' from $21,000 to $25,500 (21. red, apart f 4 percent), assistant professors' the Legisla from $17,000 to $20,830 (22 per- cation decis cent), and instructors' from $13,- exclusivelyc 900 to $17,150 (23.4 percent). The tional doll lowest levels in the salary scale mental doll increased from $18,000 to $22,500 shifts in t (25 percent) for professors, from structure. $14,000 to $17,830 for associate (b) The d professors (27.4 percent), from administrati $11,000 to $14,830 for assistant Vice of the professors (34.8 percent), and Academic A from $10,050 to $12,700 for in- four acadenm structors (26.4 percent), order of sta For faculty on the CUNY staff ity: () sal in both years, 1969-70 and 1970- teaching st 71, average compensation for pro- non-teachin fessors in the CUNY Graduate Di-. non-salary. vision went up 8.6 percent to one year; wh $33,700, for associate professors portive staf 11.3 percent to $25,300, for assist- Ond place a ant professors 14.1 percent to $19,- the deans, t 700. At CUNY City College, on der of priori the same comparison, average past several compensation for professors went overall aver up 11.4 percent to $32.100, for as- schools and sociate professors 14.0 percent to true, the qu $25,200, assistant professors 19.7 has the fac percent to $19,200, and instruc- declined? tors 17.6 percent to $15,000. (c) Funds Averages and increases for fac- sponse to a ulty on staff in both years at the several level other seven CUNY senior colleges compensatio: reporting were of a similar char- Allocation i acter. Of these the lowest figures four levels: were, for professors, a 6.3 percent (i) The G increase at Hunter ($32,200) and islature. Vi an average $30,400 at Richmond; edgeable obs for associate professors a 7 per- current legi cent increase at Hunter $24,800) system has and an average $23,400 at John list of man Jay; for assistant professors a 9 increasing la percent increase at Hunter ($19,- own budget. 700) and an average $17,600 at of legislated John Jay; for instructors a 4.3 for discretio percent increase 'at Queens ($15,- central adm 100) and an average $15,000 at extremely o City College. (John Jay College is years. a recent addition to the CUWY (i) Exter system.) Overall average increases police, and for the nine colleges reporting primary am indicates a tendency to decrease placed upon differentials between ranks: a 9.3 Rates have percent increase foil professors, nually over 11.5 percent for associate profes- seriously eat sors, 13.6 percent for assistant cremental d professors, and 10.5 percent for (iii) The ,instructorsThe adminis instrutors.both the de~ 2. The Allocation Process: Prob- in the vari lems and Possibilities leges will pl Why has the faculty salary situ- cation of ation declined? First and obvious- One-year re ly, the rate of growth in appro- the various priations has slowed. But the pro- (Plans are in cess of allocating the funds that three to fi are available to the University ag- soon.) Thes gravates the problem in two ways: rent account (i) The method of allocating portive staf funds is such that external de- Each unit is mands and internal negotiated tration that agreements with non - academic go to salarie staff eat up funds thought of as sitions or1 available for increases, thus effec- The units ar tively leaving faculty salaries in a increase req residual position. (ii) The struc- President Sm ture of faculty involvement in cause it is kn budgetary affairs appears to have range betwe' left faculty members at a disad- percent, per vantage where pressures are be- is the rang ing exerted, particularly those claims it has whose status is already relatively for. low, The principal reasons sug- (iv The C gest themselves through an ex- Ultimately th amination of the process by which the Office o funds are allocated. . for Academi The chronological order of the the administ. budget making process is general- Legislature w ly as follows: erage increas (I) In mid-August, adminis- tion for allt trators of the various units of the year it wen University submit proposed bud- 6.5 percentf gets for their operations in the more could fiscal year beginning the follow- the Governo ing July 1. These requests are Emphasis on filed with the Office of Academic fits has come 'Affairs, ance from (ii) In September or October the Faculty the Committee on Budget Admin- mendations istration (a Regental committee which .reque presided over by the Vice Presi-: ward total dent for Academic Affairs; two benefits and SACUA members meet with the of disability Committee) constructs a "pro- dency was at posed budget request," which it that such ite submits to the Regents for appro- ing granted val and forwarding to the Bureau ployees throu of the Budget, in the Executive ments during office in Lansing. This document Some of t takes into account the August re- eliminated a quests from the individual units. level because (iii) Later in the fall there are priority on t Bureau hearings, at which repre- the centrala sentatives of the University ap- What is the pear in support of the Univer- Legislature. is sity's budget request, or a political (iv) The Governor's bill is de- the Universit livered to the Legislature in mid- says the Vice January. It constitutes the first of what the public notice of his proposed bud- gards to be re get. his v iew, it1 (v) In hearings before the Sen- do any signif ate Finance and House Appropri- long-range p. ations Committees the University's four years gi representatives argue for the Uni- dependence o versity's position. has appeared true as to faculty and ensation. for the general sched- our discussions with Ave officers, and com- ibers we gained the npressions about the ich the process works: there is no standard- ure for setting and re- budgetary priorities, ughly consistent pat- discerned in the pro- ch funds are allocated. e, over the past sev- o unit of the Univer- r gone down in funds sure regular feedback to SACUA or Senate Assembly or to involve faculty generally in setting prior- ities for use of University funds. The recently appointed Resource Allocation Commission is charged with considering such matters. (d) The only direct faculty in- put in developing the academic budget is through the Vice Presi- dent's advisory committee, which by all reports has had a minor role, though other faculty input is assumed to come through the deans. This year the administra- tion considered that a 10 percent compensation increase for facul-3 d, though the degree ty could not be managed. There- is markedly different fore it presented Lansing with the ts. With only a couple 6.5 percent figure. According to ceptions, no centraliz- administration sources., the Eco- e of funds has occur- nomic Status of the Faculty Com- rom cuts imposed by mittee has been viewed only as an ture. Ordinarily allo- information gathering group. If ions are made almost faculty believe that it should do on the basis of addi- more, these sources indicate, then ars available (incre- Senate Assembly should instruct tars") rather than by it accordingly and the University's ;he overall budgetary budgeting and allocation struc- ture should be revised to accom- deans and the central modate its input. The same would on - chiefly the of- be true of the Resources Alloca- Vice President for tion Commission or of any other ffairs - work with organ of faculty governance, ,ic budgetary areas, in (e) Within the University bud- ndard operating prior- get faculty could expect to exert ary, (ii) additions to its greatest influence in decisions aff, (iii) additions to about the General Fund. At this g supportive staff, (iv) point, knowledge of a few figures With the exception of is required. On the Ann Arbor ien "additions to sup- campus the General Fund (GF) f" was put into sec- made up $115,367,519 of the total with full approval of revenues and working capital of his has been the or- $261,312,373 in 1970-71. Of the GF ties followed over the only $69,294,030 came from State years, with respect to appropriations; $63,938,298 was age allocations for the budgeted for Departmental In- colleges. If this is struction and Research. All other estion remains: Why funds' i.e. the Designated Fund, culty salary situation the Expendable Restricted Fund, the Auxiliary Activities Fund, are distributed in re- and the rest of the GF) derived variety of pressures at from student fees ($32,871,489), s Funds for faculty research grants, and other sourc- }! . I n l t I i .! ( . 1 ;I i i t, { a collective bargaining agent. ty can exert strong pressures to fying assertions must be made.. Many states, however, do not yet derive funds for raises from the First, although there are several! have explicit provisions covering non-academic budget or from re- examples of faculty unions and higher education. States where the vision of budgetary priorlties, it other less formalized collective; law has been most comprehensive would therefore appear that much bargaining arrangements, pri- and definite have seen the greatest of these funds would come from marily in metropolitan areas of amount of unionization over thb trade-off arrangements within the Northeast, none has operated past two years. Of 130 colleges the academic budget. long enough to provide definitive and universities where faculties 2. Models for Dispute Settle- evidence for or against adoption are known to have selected agents, ment of the model. Furthermore, none as of July 1971, 39 were in New Three approaches to decision- of the institutions now actively York, 29 in Michigan, 14 in both making have been used in dispute involved in collective bargaining New Jersey and Wisconsin, 11 in settlement (a) p e r s u a s i o n, is truly comparable to the Uni- Illmoi, and 10 in Massachusetts. through informal arrangements, versity of Michigan. (All campuses of the City Univer- (b) institutionally established pro- As of August, 1971, the national sity of New York are counted as cedures using neutral third par- situation was as follows: one, as is true of the State Uni- ties, and (c) coercion, including (a) City University of New versity of New York, the Chicago sanctions and strikes. York was the first institution of City Colleges, and the Nebraska (a) The persuasion approach is higher education beyond the com-! and New Jersey state college sys- now available and could be im- munity college level to negotiate tems.) proved, as will be shown. a contract with faculty. This two- (c) Within two years after a (b) For individual faculty mem- year contract became effective 1965 Michigan law (Amended 1bers the University has recently September, 1969. A second wasI Michigan Employment Relations established a grievance procedure f negotiated in 1971. Bargaining for Act (1947) Mich. Laws Ann. §423. with the formation of the Senate CUNY faculty was a National Ed- 208 (1965).] authorized public em- I Advisory Review Committee. An ucation Association (NEA) affili-' ployees, including teachers, to or- ombudsman concept may be a ated organization, the Legislative ganize for collective bargaining, needed supplement. For issues af- Conference, which had been inde- ' over three-fourths of the state's fecting the faculty as a whole, pendent for some twenty years. , then 590 school districts had re- other third-party procedures could The bargaining team was able to I cognized unions. By February of be utilized for mediation, fact- negotiate substantial financial in- 1971, all but 15 had organized. A finding, or arbitration: creases without reduction of staff; 1968 study by Charles Rehmus (i> AAUP has offered ad hoc or program. Rank and seniority' and Evan Wilner indicated that mediation services on some cam- are the bases for an incrementj within the first two years pay in- puses. Under Michigan law me- schedule. While merit increases creases averaging 10-20 percent diation services are available, up- are possible outside the negotiateda higher than what teachers would on request of either party, to re- contract, they are rarely extended. otherwise have received apparent- solve disputes relating to a col- Other factors such as tenure and1 ly resulted. It is too early to de- ! lective bargaining* agreement. promotion procedures, work load! termine what other factors might i[Mich. Camp. Laws Ann. §§423. and working conditions, andI also have played a role in this 207, 423.25 (1967).] fringe benefits were also negotiat-I trend and whether the trend will (ii) In contract disputes fact- ed. (See see. I.A.1 for results in continue. I Charles M. Rehmus finders are also used under Michi- average compensation.) and Evan Wilner, The Economic gan law to make recommenda- (b) Rutgers, St. John's, and Results of Teacher - Bargaining: tions, with a provision that if one Southeastern Massachusetts all, Michigan's First Two Years (Ann party refuses to follow the recom- negotiated contracts' with faculty Arbor: University of Michigan. In- mendations the other party may bargaining representatives during stitute of Labor and Industrial make them public as a means of the fall, 1970. At Rutgers and St.1 Relations, 1968).J bringing about a voluntary agree- John's, faculties are represented; (d) As of August, 1971 26 of ment. (Mich. Comp. Laws Ann. by the American Association of Michigan's 29 two-year public col- §423.25 (1967).] University Professors (AAUP! leges had designated collective (iii) Binding arbitration entered jointly with a local faculty asso-I bargaining agents. (Delta, North into voluntarily is sometimes ad- ciation at St. John's), at South-I Central Michigan, and Northwest- vocated as a method of effect- eastern Massachusetts by thet ern Michigan had not.) Of these, ing agreements without strikes. American Federation of Teachersr th MFT (th Am rir F~d~r. Sin 1968 bindinp britntin of (AFT I TPrh .AAinitinlb hn (h) Fear of losses in faculty; pay agency fees is sufficient status and power through organ- ground for discharge of tenured izing for adversary bargaining is teacllers at the K-12 level. a major concern of many faculty (b) Despite the ordinary dif- members throughout the country. ference in meaning between "pro- The following statement by Dr. fessional association" (AAUP, Lyle H. Lanier, Executive Vice NEA) and "trade union (AFT), O President and Provost, University this difference practically vanish- of 'Illinois, expresses a feeling es when an agency is legally de- shared by many 'faculty members signated as the exclusive bargain- as well as administrators: ing agency. In this context net- The concept of 'participatory ther Michigan law nor the Michi- democracy' in the determination gan Employment Relations Com- of educational policies and in- mission recognizes any differ- creasingly in administrative de- ences. Each is treated, in spe- cision-making is incompatible cific terms, as a "labor organiza- with collective bargaining con- tion." [Brown 1970 art., pp. 287 ducted between two mutually- ff.; cf. Mich. Stat. Ann. §17.454(2) e x c 1 u s-i v e and independent (g) (1968); and National Labor groups. - Relations Act, 29 U.S.C. §152(5) (MSU Faculty Affairs Committee, (1964).] AAUP has officially de- "An Impartial Review of Collec- nied the appropriateness to higher tive Bargaining by University education of the exclusivity prin- Faculties," March 9, 1971.) ciple. Nevertheless, if AAUP were To offset this possible negative accepted as the bargaining agency outcome some contracts have had for the University of Michigan it "no strike" provisions and faculty would have to function as the exe- unions, with the exception of those clusive agent, as would any affili- in some community colleges and ates of NEA or AFT. the University of Wisconsin's (c) Who could be included in Teaching Assistants Association, the bargaining unit? The Michigan have expressed reluctance to con- Supreme Court has directed sider striking as a possible bar- MERC to use what amounts to an gaining tactic, Thus far adversary ad hoc approach, one required to relationships with university ad- consider the special circumstances ministrators have been low key prevailing in each institution. in most situations. SUNY negotia- Therefore it is as yet ' unclear tions, for instance, will be coon- whethel non-academic employees dinated primarily through'the Ex- or administrators could be includ- ' ecutive Office of the Governor. ed at the University of Michigan. The faculty organization there be- I It is unlikely that a college or lieves that this will help to pre- Iprofessional school would qualify serve the feeling of community by itself. Recently MERC denied among administrators, faculty, the petition of the University Col- and students with respect to aca- lege at Michigan State University demic affairs. for acceptance as a bargaining (Li Legal and administrative unit. University College is a two- provision still cast an uncertain year college in which all MSU light on the overall bargaining Freshmen and Sophomores a r e situation within higher education. required to enroll. To gain clarity, in mid-1971 AAUP petitioned the NLRB to is- (d) Any academic unit within sue general rules in four areas: (I) the bargaining unit is entitled to defining "supervisors," (ii) deter- petition MERC for exclusion. The mining which organizations are Wayne State University Medical appropriate bargaining units (eg School's claim to exclusion had %1. 1 A1A U CU Uy )n are no exception. s chiefly decided at overnor and the Leg- rtually every knowl- erver admits that the slative appropriation problems in it. On the y is the University's ack of control over its The relative amount increments available nary purposes to the ministration has been w over the past four nal Demands. Utility, fire costs have beenI ong external demands the available funds. gone up almost an-I the past four years,t ing into the few in- ollars appropriated. Schools and Colleges. stration assumes that pans and the faculties ous schools and col- ay a role in the allo- incremental dollars. quests are made by 'units each August. the works to include ive year projections e requests cover cur- t, teaching staff, sup- f, and maintenance. told by the adminis- certain amounts will s and not to new po- tion-academic items. e not asked for salary uests anymore, Vice With has explained, be- lown that these would en 9 percent and 14 haps higher, and this e the administration! es. Since 1964-65 the GF has risen from $60.1 to $115.1 million while State appropriations have risen from $44.1 to only $69.3 million - a decline from 73.3 percent of the total to 60.6 percent. The rest of the GF c me from student fees, indirect 6ost recovery ($10,831,- 000, mostly from the federal gov- ernment), other revenue ($2,370,- 000: unrestricted gifts, etc.), and working capital addition ($229,- 562). This year a 73.8 percent ap- propriation from the State would have brought $84,564,411, over $15 million more than received. It may be doubted that faculty can help bring further pressures to bear or the Legislature, but the Legisla- ture will have to be reached some- how if the erosion is to be stopped This factor can scarcely be over- estimated. Meanwhile, at what points could UM faculty actually affect bud- geting and allocation of funds? (i) First, the faculty could influ- ence the overall budget by par- ticipating in a review of all pro- posed new expansions, grants, andI programs. The task would be to; join the administration in deter-s mining not only their desirability but also whether there are un- necessary or unacceptable costs tied to their approval, notably inI overhead and maintenance, and whether current operations will have to suffer. iii) Second, within the General Fund, faculty and administration working togetherI could take the bold step of evalu- ating which programs should con- tinue and which should be phasedj I 4 t f i I 1 I I I 1 l i , ; out or curtailed. (iii) Thir faculty could accept alterati productivity arrangements faculty teaching relatively d, the ons in (fewer more ie r' ii e Hme ican e era-l lice lyoo Uoinagn ar ruaion of 1 L/ . Iin eacn case,ini ai ar-s....." . u..--- --.- tion of Teacher's Michigan affil- grievances, if agreed upon by both gaining obtained salary increases. all-university committees, senates, not yet been decided as of Sep- iate, connected with AFL-CIO) parties, has already been provided At St. John's this amounted to a or other faculty bodies), (iii) de- iembei, 1971. Hoever a ladmark had agreements with 4, the MEA in collective bargaining agree- total 21 per cent across-the-board termining the status of teaching lations Board (NLRB) handed (the National Education Associa- ments with three unions repre- increase during the first two-year fellows and research associates' down on September 14 171 not tion's affiliate) with 16, and non- senting non-academic employees contract period. The Rutgers con- and (iv) determining the status on Stember 14, 17no affiliated locals with 6. Historical- at the University of Michigan. Al- tract, while based primarily on of part-time teachers. No rul- only authorized colletive bar- ly these institutions have had most all collective agreements rank and seniority made definite ings have yet been made. close ties with the secondary contain this feature. However, proviaion for merit increases ' Thus far, there does not appear allowed exclusion of the law fac- schools, both in administrative these contracts do not provide for ($500,000 additional money being 'to be any clear eviaence that fac- u f he brainin it. practice and in recruitment of binding arbitration as the last set aside for this). Southeastern ulty participation in university though this decision initially at- teaching staff. It is altogether step in bargaining. For resolution Massachusetts sought rather to ; governance has lost ground. d likely that the situation of many of impasses at the bargaining ta- achieve better distribution of Among several institutional rep- i9 un o infuence ns re- of the two-year colleges, particu- ble, the last recourse for these funds than to obtain more money S resentatives polled recently by an garding public institutions as well. larly through faculty demands for unions is to strike. By mutual from the state. No faculty strikes I MSU committee, all felt that col- Some experts believe the ruling professional academic status and agreement, binding arbitration have taken place in any of the ' lective bargaining had had a sig- sl for rights of participation in aca- could be resorted' to where formal above institutions. i nificantly positive effect on fac- ladtis fagentatf demic governance, will more near- collective bargaining is not pre- (c) In addition to these uni- ulty participation in university af- faculties. The fact remains that at ly approach that of the four-year sent. Under collective bargaining versities, by the end of 1970 the fairs. Polled were: St. John's, ulty is currently permitted to elect institutions as these colleges are this method is not available unless State University of New York S o u t h e a s t e r n Massa- withdrawn from control of local I provided for in the bargaining (SUNY), the Nebraska State Col- chusetts, Rutgers, CUNY (a rela- exclusion. school boards and are integrated agreement. ' lege system, and five New Jersey tively guarded statement), and (e) The size and make-up of into a district or statewide sys- (c) Coercion would include cen- state colleges had organized with Central Michigan. In none of these the bargaining unit can be a cru- tem. The degree to which the con- sure by the faculty or by an ex- NEA and local affiliates as bar- E places, however, does participa- cial factor -as to whether a fac- tinued practice of collective bar- ternal association such as the gaining agents: contracts were tion appear to have been as exten- ulty will accept collective bar- gaining will serve or hamper this AAUP, publicizing disputes, boy- negotiated in 1971. Adelphi Col- . sive as at the University of Mich- gaining and as to whether any development has yet to be tested. cotting, refusing to perform extra- loge (N.Y.), Belleville Area Col- , igan. particular unit will gain adminis- However, one recent study of 11 curricular duties, or otherwise lege (Ill.>, Brooklyn Center of Belief in the polarizing effect of trative or public recognition. representative community colleges withholding services. Lacking ac- Long Island, Polytechnic Institute I bargaining and a corresponding Would an appropriate bargaining in Michigan indicates that col- tion by such means, a strike tech- of Brooklyn, and New York Insti- ( diminution of the academic com- unit comprise all members of the lective bargaining at the commun- nique might be used. However, tute of Technology have filed pe- munity persists, especially in view Faculty Senate? At the Univer- ity college level has tended to limits to the effectiveness of using titions to be represented by AAUP of analogies drawn from the in- sity of Michigan the Faculty Sen- widen rather than narrow the faculty strikes or sanctions may while Boston State College, Bry- dustrial relations sector. This be- ate is a body of 2,796 people salary differentials among fac- be expected: ant College (R.I.), and Massa- lief has led to consensus following which now includes 171 non- ulty ranks. (Christine Gram, "Im- (i) In the first place, there is a chusetts College of Art will be discussion and study at such in- teaching faculty (July 22, 1971). pact of Collective Bargaining on very real possibility that the leg- represented by AFT. Hawaii, stitutions as the University of Sixty-nine Dearborn faculty, 60 Faculty Salary Structures in islature could not be reached by Fordham, Lawrence Tech., and Minnesota that unionization is un- Flint faculty, and 47 "U.S. mail- Michigan Community Colleges," such methods. Even where short- Manhattan College are institu- desirable. ing" faculty (including Professors Emerti members on leave, and Unpublished Doctoral Disserta- term gains would be attained, over tions of higher education outside 4. Public Collective Bargaining tion, Department of Higher Edu- the long run these could easily be of Michigan at which organiza- in Michigan staff at Veterans or Wayne Coun- cation, 1971). wiped out by public and legisla- tions are known to be circulating (a) Under Michigan law, exclu- t ty hospitals) are figured within (e) So few four-year colleges tive reaction, producing counter- cards among faculty to obtain- sive representation is granted a the o a otal Neither teach- and universities have had even a sanctions that faculty would con- their permission to be represented. bargaining agent once a majoritymmg fellows nor instructors are brief experience with collective sider detrimental to the good At the University of Rhode Is- of persons voting (not the ma- nembers. The supposition that bargaining that they provide little health and professional excellence land a faculty study committee jority of bargaining unit mm- the Faculty Senate membership data relevant to the University of of the University. For example, has recommended organizing for bers) have approved that agent. would comprise the bargaining Michigan. Nevertheless enough is the legislature could specify work collective bargaining. 'The procedure for obtaining col- unit raises some interesting prob- known about collective bargaining loads or curtail non-salary allo- (d At New York University, lective bargaining in a Michigan lems. Could all present Senate generally to warrant several in- cations, a private institution, faculty have public institution is as follows: members be bargained for ade- ferences: (ii) Profit and loss brought voted to organize under the AAUP' (i) An employee organization quately by a single bargaining ()i Early gains are sometimes about by strikes in the university but have been denied permission presents to the employer petitions agent? Are there members of the relatively large, as at CUNY. The setting cannot be measured in or- ; to file with the State Labor Re- signed by at least 30 percent of University family who might pro- continuation of such a rate of in- dinary market terms. The em- lations Board, since NYU is not the employees in a given employee perly be included within a bar- crease, however, would seem im- ployer likely would not be harmed a sub-unit of the state govern- unit. gaining unit but who are now ex- probable. The tendency in indus- economically by a strike. On the ( ment. The National Labor Rela- (ii The bargaining unit must cluded from the Faculty Senate? try where collective bargaining other hand, students, faculty, and tions Board would have jurisdic- then be defined, either by consent In some institutions non-faculty has been newly introduced has society could be seriously harm- tion in this case, according to of the administration and em. categories have constituted a eon- been for average compensation to ed, as could the standing and pro- state officials. This view accords ployes representatives or, where iderable portion of the bargain- rise sharply at first and then to ductivity of the institution, with a decision of that board on such agreement is not reached or ing unit agreed upon. It is pos- level off within a few years' time. (iii) Legal and administrative June 12, 1970 asserting its statu- not sought, by determination of sible for a would-be agent to delay Thereafter raises, though admit- interpretations within the State tory jurisdiction to determine bar- the Michigan Employment Rela- determining the make-up of the tedly protected by the bargaining of Michigan and elsewhere have gaining representatives for the tions Commission (MERC). unit to be requested until the cards process, are similar to general vewed faculty collective bargain- employees of Cornell University,' (iii) A bargaining agent is then are in. Presence of non-faculty trends in the economy. Over the ing almost exclusively on the in- as a private university whose op- 1'chosen, either by voluntary re- employees could become a decid- past seventy years of collective dustrial relations model. Thus far, erations have a substantial effect cognition by the employer of the ing factor. bargaining in industry the slice of for example, there has been no on commerce. agent's claim to represent a ma- What pattern would best serve corporate income going for wages provision under Michigan law (e) In California, the faculty jority of the employees in the unit the basic interests of faculty and (65-70 percent) has not changed. whereby public employees in association for all state collegesI or by election. At least 30 percent of the University? This question What has happened, according to higher education and those in ACSCP, has gradually become of the employees must have sign- is difficult to answer. Certainly UM Law Dean Theodore St An- elementary or secondary educa- more aggressive and, in 1970, it ed authorization cards before the health and autonony of the toine, a labor-industrial relations tion are distinguished in any way merged with AFT to form United MERC can be petitioned for an e n t i r e University community expert, is that increases in rates or whereby these are distinguished Professors of California. AFT in- election. Only one other choice- greatly depend upon the exercise of pay have been offset by pro- from other laboring groups. fluence is strong in this organiz- "no union"-is required on the of autonomgos corporate respon- ductivity increase and reductions Moreover, the traditional prohi- ation, which has not yet negotiat- ballot, though other organizations sibility among its faculty.'he fac- in the number of employees. bition of strikes by public em- ed a contract. obtaining signed cards from at ulty sh'ould also be in a position (ii) Across-the-board percent- ployees was retained in Michigan's (f) Thus far, there is no collec- least 10 per cent of the employees to lead and to cooperate with oth- age increases have been the usual 1965 Public Employment Relations tive bargaining among regular in the bargaining unit may also be er members of that community to- pattern in the four-year institu- Act, though it appears to have faculties at any of the Big Ten included on the ballot. The elec- ward achievement of its proper tions so far. Such gains are some- been weakened by relaxation of universities, though teaching fel- tion is held only after MERC goals. Definite evidence does not what misleading, since where sal- some related sanctions. The pro- lows have organized at Wisconsin. has certified that the proposed yet exist as to whether or not in- ary differentials are already great hibition has not proved effective (g) In most cases where local bargaining unit is appropriate. volvement with non-faculty in a percentage increases would lessen against public school employees. organizations were selected to rep- (iv) A run-off election may be bargaining unit would necessarily the relative status of those already The same is likely to be true at resent the faculty, these have held is no majority of those vot- hamper the faculty's exercise of receiving the lower salaries. the university level, despite Michi- been reinforced by one of the I ing is reached. If no majority of such responsibilities. (iii) Hard data on the effect of gan law's unusual precision in de- national organizations. However, I those voting in the second elec- 5. Co 11e t i v e Bargaining in public collective bargaining within fining when strikes may be said contracts already in effect appear tion is obtained a further elec- Michigan Colleges and Unversi- a tight financial situation, as at to occur. Both injunctions and to reflect institutional unique- tion may be held only after one ties present, are difficult to come by. sanctions will be difficult for the ness even though the bargaining year has elapsed. In Michigan only 2 of the 13 Available data seem to suggest state to apply in many types of agency is a national organization (v) The next step is the nego- four-year institutions have or- that gains in employee compen- cases. Since faculty collective bar- such as NEA, AFT, or, AAUP. This tiating of an agreement between ganized thus far, Central Mi i- sation tend not to rise above cost- gaining is still new, possible limi- fact does not, of course, imply the nployer and the bargaining gan University (MEA) and Oak- of-living increases and tend to be tations on effectiveness deriving that the choice of agent has no agent, Ratification of this or any land University (AAUP). Cen- traded off either for increased em- from reference to the industrial bearing on aims or procedures. ( subsequent agreement by the tral Michigan negotiated its sec- 1/ been trying to shoot courses and more students). Un- less General Fund revenues rise entral Administration. considerably, these would appear, he control rests within to be the only ways by which a f the Vice President substantial overhauling of facul- c Affairs. Last year ty salary policy could be achieved,3 ration's request to the short of collective bargaining. was for 10 percent av- Our recommendations includej se in total compensa- means of effecting such changes, University staff. This beginning with a stronger man- t to Lansing with a date to the Economic Status of the figure, assuming that Faculty Committee. But first it is not be secured once important to consider what the r's bill had appeared. collective bargaining option could tax-free staff bone- offer. , in part, under guid- B. Collective Bargaining Economic Status of 1. Collective Bargaining in Pub- Committee recom- lic Employment since the mid-1960's, (a) Collective bargaining inG ested movement . to- private employment has been re- payment of health peatedly endorsed by Congress, steady improvement and the state legislatures since the insurance. This ten- Railway Labor Act of 1926, the ugmented by the fact Norris-LaGuardia Act of 1932, and ems were already be- the National Labor Relations Act non-academic em- of 1935 (the Wagner Act). Only ugh negotiated agree- since 1965 have the state legisla- this period. tunes authorized collective bar- he unit requests are I gaining in public employment.1 t the Administrative Thereafter public school teachers they are of too low in many parts of the country over- the unit's list or on came their traditional reluctance administration's list. .to adopt an "unprofessional" em- en presented to the ployee relation. While in the per-: not a blue sky total iod 1950-1955 there were only 77{ judgment as to what public school teacher strikes na- ty can expect to get, f tionwide and from 1956 to 1965 President, but a sum only 30, there were 30 in 1966 administration re- alone. According to the Division of' easonable requests. In Industrial Relations of the Bureau has been difficult to of Labor Statistics, U.S. Depart- icant intermediate or ment of Labor, among both public lanning over the past and private school teachers there iven the University's were 81 strikes in 1967, 94 in 1968,; on the Legislature. It I and 185 in 1969. This is but one I r i i I" I ii i. ' l E, a, ! f 1 S 1 fi t { 1 1 if f t j i ' 't ( ii j ( i f 4 4. d to others that the I important sign of the rapid de- ',