OP/ED 5A - The Michigan Daily - Thursday, February 14, 2002 PART 2: AT THE BARGAINING TABLE fter months of heated bargaining, the conflict between the Unive seven issues. The main concerns of the University are budgetary an unclear funding commitment from the state legislature, the Ur in a decade. Meanwhile, GEO is hoping to receive written confirmation and improve the quality of living for its members. So far, GEO seems corn versity seems unmoved on many points. With the contract between the University and GEO set to expire tomor i distilled to inties. With ftest budget ase benefits rbal pror ted to its rands a n " DOWN 4 . . 4II -n DPART s - GEO the University: and SALE spya out on the bargaining process. The Daily examines some of the biggest and most contentious issues currently on the table. The University Vs . GEO Local 3550 We are heading into a 12th week of negotiations with the Graduate Employees Organization over a new labor contract, and many graduate students, undergraduates, faculty and staff are interested in the outcome of these negotiations. As faculty members on the bargaining team, we want our community to understand some of the core val- ues that govern our decision-making as we work to come to a fair agreement. Graduate student instructors are funda- mentally important to us in two ways. First, and foremost, they are students. The opportu- nity for GSIs to work closely with both undergraduates and faculty in a teaching envi- ronment is a key ingredient in their education- al experience. The financial support provided to GSIs - salary, tuition and benefits - helps them to pay for their graduate education and also is part of the University's commit- ment to their academic success. Second, GSIs are crucial to the quality of our teaching enterprise. The employment of GSIs makes it possible for us to offer smaller classes, allowing more individual attention and active learning experiences for undergraduates. GSIs approach their disciplines with a fresh perspective and creativity, transmitting their excitement to the undergraduates they teach. They are an important link between undergrad- uates and faculty in the intergenerational learn- ing model that makes up a great university such as the University of Michigan. Because of the importance we place on our graduate students, we want to arrive at a con- tract that provides fair compensation for their work and continues to improve the quality of their work environment. GEO has played a valuable role in this process and in bringing sig- nificant issues to the attention of the University over the years. Yet, working with a union made up of stu- dents presents its own unique challenges. GEO has regular turnover in its leadership and mem- bers, with new negotiators at the table for each new three-year contract. GEO leaders prefer to bargain publicly with an inclusive, democratic approach that invites large numbers of observers at each of our bargaining sessions. This approach, while understandable, is not the most efficient method of arriving at a swift con- clusion to the bargaining process. Many of the issues we are working through involve a significant budget impact for the Uni- versity. We're proud of the fact that our GSIs are among the most highly compensated in the country. They are rightfully well paid because we expect them to be among the best in their fields. Six years ago we began to link GSI salary increases to faculty increases in LSA, both to ensure reasonable pay increases and to reflect the linkage that exists between faculty and GSI instructional efforts. Since then, GSI increases have kept pace with the faculty and we have never had to rely upon the minimum salary increases specified in the contract. However, we are heading into an extraordi- narily difficult budget year. Faculty and staff salary increases are likely to feel the impact, as are a wide variety of University programs. Undergraduate students and their parents are understandably concerned that tuition levels not increase at an unreasonable pace. We ask that GEO be responsible about the costs of the con- tract provisions they are hoping to negotiate, given the realities of our budget environment. One of the greatest areas of misunderstand- ing is the cost ofGSIs' tuition that is paid for by the University. GEO has expressed to us the notion that tuition expenses are not "real" costs to the University. On the contrary, tuition reflects the very real cost of providing instruc- tion and other academic support and student services to graduate students. A study in the Chronicle of Higher Education this week docu- ments that most universities spend more to edu- cate students than the cost of tuition reflects. Some proposals fall outside the scope of bargaining because they tread on the funda- mental need of departments to have control over t h e quali- ty of~ their> acad- emic envi- ron- ment. This is why, for example, we insist on English lan- guage proficiency for international students who want to be GSIs, and why we require instructional training for GSIs from foreign countries and for all GSIs at the discretion of their departments. In the end, we will not be able to respond to every proposal .submitted by GEO. It is the responsibility of both parties at the bargaining table to prioritize their core issues and concerns, and work hard to come to a resolution on those issues that are the most important. We are con- fident that the set of proposals the University has put forward will increase materially the compensation and quality of working con- ditions for GSIs. ERIc A. BERMANN Associate Professor of Psychology CHARLES C. BROWN Professor of Economics LOUIS B. NAGEL Associate Professor of Music ROMESH SAIGAL Professor ofIndustrial and Operations Engineering Many GSIs today are than they were a quar ry ago, thanks to tl many who have stuck togeti union was founded. Most of us paycheck to paycheck, but atl There are some, however, who ipate fully in the life of either t or the city of Ann Arbor. Par $800 a month in rent to family over $800 a month for child them with less than nothing toI uate student librarians earn an, percent of what GSIs earn, an of these are allowed to be in the arbitrarily are not. Female and minority grad have fewer opportunities to teat do. Some 150 graduate student "low fraction" GSIs - earn $7 or less without benefits. Withot against bottom-line budgeting n candidate, and out-of-state grad could be shut out of the LSA G and lose their only way to pa Graduate students who are ha job have little or no recourse, ex lawyer with money they do not1 subjected to an insulting langt does nothing to assist or to te mand of the English language. This contract year is for all t students who continue to strugg We ask the question, "what munity do we want to be?" Do the kind of community that: families for trying to make a 1 themselves by attending gradua does not believe in equal pay fo C) cuts backroom deals for jobs sion of women and people ofc bids our lowest paid citizens into health care benefits even if ing to pay for them; E) discrim those in our number whose ed more than others; F) allows harassment to continue with it G) insults our immigrant citizen My guess is that the adminis answer no to each of these qu yet in rejecting our proposals doing better ter of a centu- he countless her since the still live from least we live. cannot partic- he University ents pay over y housing and care, leaving live on. Grad- average of 70 d while some union, others uate students ch than others s -- known as through their actions, indicated quite the opposite. Their position is all the more troubling, since most of these proposals cost next to nothing. Take, for instance, our proposal on harassment. We seek a definition of work- place harassment and a special grievance procedure. Some of our proposals merely ask to put current practice into writing. For example, the administration insists that they never implemented bottom-line budgeting (despite ample evidence to the contrary); that in fact, they are managing GSI hiring through the "slot system" in which the best GSIs are hired instead of the cheapest. GEO supports the slot system; all we ask is that they guar- antee the slot system for the life of our con- tract. '00 per month This brings me to the subect of under- ut a safeguard graduate students, yet another group within ion-LSA, pre- our community whose interests are undercut duate students when financial costs take precedence over SI hiring pool human costs. y for school. The administration has rejected many of rassed on the our proposals in the name of undergraduate xcept to hire a education. However, their refusal to sign a have. Finally, safeguard against bottom-line budgeting sug- interna- gests that they will attempt to implement it t i o n a 1 once this contract year is over. In the last con- graduate tract round, the administration sought to students increase the GSI workload by almost 50 per- - many, cent in exchange for a raise that would have o f brought us closer to a living wage. This would w h o m have made GSIs teach 4 sections or about 100 ... are flu- undergraduates each, making it almost impos- ent in sible to give our students the individual atten- English tion they already lack in lectures. - are If the administration stonewalls this year, uage test that graduate students will not be the only ones st their com- who don't go to class. Undergraduates won't either. Bottom-line budgeting is bad for hose graduate undergrads. So is the current state of teacher le unfairly. training which we are attempting to reform. kind of com- Undergraduates that I have spoken to are we want to be also appalled by the pace of negotiations on A) punishes harassment. Though the myth is to the con- better life for trary, GEO is one of the last lines of defense te school; B) (apart from undergraduates themselves) of r equal work; undergraduate education and it has been the to the exclu- administration that has more often than not color; D) for- compromised it. At a highly corporatized from buying research institution like the University, they are will- undergraduate and graduate students are all inates against in this together, like it or not. ucation costs Unless we are prepared to jeopardize s workplace both our community and our education, we mpunity; and should stick by one another in the coming s? month until the administration decides to tration would put us before their bottom line. The students speak on GEO F ew undergraduates on campus are aware of the current Graduate Employees Organiza- tion contract negotiations. While this issue may seem to have little to do with undergraduates, we must realize that it has the potential to greatly impact the quality of our education in the future. GEO, the union to which University graduate stu- dent instructors and staff members belong, has extended its contract, which expired Feb. 1, until tomorrow, Feb. 15, in order to continue negotia- tions. The union is negotiating for a contract, which includes improved childcare systems, pro- vides a clause concerning harassment in the workplace, does not utilize bottom-line budget- ing in compensating employees and abolishes unfair language testing practices. The University provides its graduate student employees with the least childcare options out of any school in the Big Ten. GSIs with children are unable to afford private childcare on their modest salaries and given veritably meager options by the Universi- ty, it is difficult for them to complete their own studiesand also give full energy and attention to their teaching. Also, nothing substantial in the current GEO contract exists to deal with workplace harassment, a clear deficit in insuring fair and safe working conditions for these employees. The University is seeking to change the way in which GSIs are paid. Rather than simply issuing each GSI a salary, the administration wants to dis- tribute a lump sum to each University department out of which individual departments will pay their GSIs. If this provision is included in the contract, the various academic departments will be likely to hire far fewer international and out of state gradu- ate students, because these students pay higher tuition and thus require more compensation. This would mean that local GSI candidates would be chosen over all others, regardless of qualifications, thus lowering the overall quality of GSI teaching skills, as well as narrowing the diversity of the GSI body (something to consider at a university which claims diversity as a priority). Another shortfall of the existing contract is that no specific regulations exist for foreign lan- guage testing of graduate student employees. Currently, it is perfectly legal for GSIs to be test- ed arbitrarily - and they are. Often, Caucasian international GSIs are not required to take the test, while those from Asian, African or Latin countries are. Clearly, these issues have serious potential to vastly effect the state of undergradu- ate education at the University. GSIs do 54 per- cent of undergraduate instruction and also the vast majority of grading our work. Because of the paramount role played by GSIs in our acade- mic experiences, the issues they face are integral to our academic success. Imagine how we as undergraduates would fare without the depth of experience and diversi- ty of our GSIs. Imagine the eminent drop in the quality of teaching if where our GSIs came from took precedence over their ability to explain con- cepts and grade papers insightfully. Think of how much more efficient and helpful our GSIs could be if those with children had better resources and thus more time and energy to devote to our needs and our work. If our GSIs do not feel safe at work, if they are not free from the fear of harassment, from the indignity of dis- crimination, how can they invest themselves in their studies and in the work they do for us? Ulti- mately any issues surrounding the work of grad- uate employees affect their ability to do their jobs and thus affect us as undergraduates. If we care about our education, we must support the graduate students who are integral to it. We must stand with GEO to defend our rights as students. ALENA AcER LSA, RCsophomore The writer is a member of Students Organizing for Labor and Economic Equality (SOLE). TBargaining lineup FOR THE UNIVERSITY: DANIEL GAMBLE - CHIEF NEGOTIATOR Human Resources and Affirmative Action Director ERIC A. BERMANN Associate Professor of Psychology CHARLES C. BROWN Professor of Economics KAREN CLARK Manager, Human Resources and Administration RON DICK Human Resources Representative LOUIS B. NAGEL Associate Professor of Music ROMESH SAIGAL Professor ofndustrial and Operations Engineering SHARON SCHMIDT Administrative Assistant Human Resources FoR GEO: ALYSSA PICARD - CHIEF NEGOTIATOR History LELAND DAVIS Anthropology IRFAN NOORUDDIN Political Science DANIEL PUGH Anthropology SUSANNI NGARIAN Southeast Asian Studies Liz DUHN Representative, Michigan Federation of Teachers DAVID HECKER President, Michigan Federation of Teachers iestions. And s, they have, Anatomy of the struggle: Some of the biggest issues INTERNATIONAL GSI TRAINING REFORM: The Issue Currently the University has an ambiguous policy for the English language testing of foreign GSIs. The University does not test all international students but instead tends to test those from non-West- ern nations. The decision to test does not consider whether or not English is their native language or if they were educated in English speaking schools. GEO contends that this practice is offensive and ineffec- tive and should be reformed. According to (lEO, both US. citizens and non-citizens have difficulty with English and should be allowed to improve their skills through the Univeristy. Also, the test mainly focuses n the cultural differences between educa- tion in the United States and other coun- tries. For examtle.the test asks whether it GEO says: All GSIs should attend a mandatory paid 5-hour training session and'make a paid 3-week program available to all GSI's who desire to take part. FRACTION RECALCULATIONS: The Issue GSIs salaries; tuition waivers and bene- fits are determined on a sliding scale based on fractions. Fractions are the percentage of timea GSI spends actually teaching stu- dents. GIIs who teach more than 95 hours per week have a quarter (.25) appointment and are granted a full tuition waiver. CONTRACTUAL HARASSMENT LANGUAGE: The Issue GSIs, because of their unique position as both employees of the University and students are particularly susceptible to harassment, sexual and otherwise. CEDRIC DE LEON President, GEO DOWN TO THE WIRE is a series-analysis of the Grad- uate Employees Organization This, the second part, allowed the University, GEO and SOLE to voice their opinions on the current state of the negotiations process. PART 3 WILL FOLLOW when the 12th contract is signed - or GSIs, out of deadlock, are forced to take a more drastic action ... GEO says: GEO has attempted to include eight pages of language culled from state and federal statues preventing harassment. GEO also wants to reform the grievance system and create a panel equally com-. posed of GSIs and University officials that would adjudicate disputes. In the event of a tie, a third-party arbiter would hear the case. GEO wants the grievance process altered so GSIs do not pay for a lnx-.r +hae -h.r o ii nl n m n fnfon .- -- The University says: The University does not want to include any anti-harassment language, samninrIr that Or v an ie the victina V 1' I is I