Title: Graduate Student Unionization: An Overview
 1Graduate Student UnionizationAn Overview
- The Pros and Cons of what a Graduate Student 
 Union entails at a Private University
- Anindita Sinha 
- Yale University
2What is a union?
- A union is an organization that represents a 
 group of employees at an institution.
- Federal law (under the National Relations Labor 
 Act) gives the union the sole and exclusive
 authority to negotiate for "conditions of
 employment" for all employees the union
 represents
3Current state of graduate students and teaching
- Increasing numbers of teaching assistants and 
 research assistants at universities
- Substantial part of undergraduate teaching being 
 conducted by graduate students
- IRS considers teaching assistants salaries 
 taxable, indicating employee status for tax
 purposes
4Are graduate students employees?
- Fledgling student unions say YES. 
- Graduate students have teaching responsibilities, 
 therefore they are employees.
- Anti-union groups and administrations say NO. 
- Teaching responsibilities of graduate students 
 are an integral part of the graduate educational
 experience.
5Why do graduate students need a union?
- Graduate students do a significant amount of the 
 undergraduate teaching at universities
- They have no say in what sections they are given 
 to teach and what compensation they will receive
- Student unions claim that problems within the 
 infrastructure of a university can be better
 solved with the advent of a student union
6Process of becoming a student union
- The National Labor Relations Board has to decide 
 whether students at private universities are
 employees
- This can be accomplished by an NLRB vote held at 
 the institution however, the effects of this
 vote are irreversible
- Private institutions are required to form unions 
 under national labor laws
7How have student unions fared so far?
- At UC Berkeley, graduate students have not 
 received an increase in stipend for seven years
 due to contract negotiations
- In a recent study (Hewitt, 1999) surveying 
 faculty members at five universities with student
 unions, 90 stated that faculty-student
 relationships have not suffered
- All agree, however, that the long term effects of 
 unionization at private schools are not known
8So what is the current state of things?
- March, 2002  Columbia and Brown Universities 
 requested review of the Jan 2002 NLRB decision
 that graduate students were employees. The NLRB
 agreed to review the decision, however, no action
 has been taken yet.
- Yale Universitys Graduate Employee Student 
 Organization went on strike in March, 2003
 however, they were unable to facilitate a meeting
 with the administration
- Graduate student unions continue the struggle to 
 be recognized, while those opposed continue their
 fight against unionization.
9The challenges of being a student leader at a 
school
that is divided between forming a union amongst 
students.
- Must always remain neutral in a group of 
 potential conflict
- Must think for the benefit of the group without 
 allowing personal bias to enter into a decision
- -Must be extremely careful to respect and 
 appreciate all views brought into a group,
 regardless of origin
10So is student unionization the answer?
- Only time will tell. 
- In the meantime, 
- Educate yourself on the subject and form your own 
 opinion. Only in this way will we ever know if
 this is the right decision or the wrong one.
11The Allies for Unionization
- UAW - the International Union, United Automobile, 
 Aerospace, and Agricultural Implement Workers of
 America
- Other professional workers unions 
- The 13 student unions already formed at public 
 universities  e.g. UMass, Amherst, UC Santa
 Barbara, U. of Wisconsin, Madison, etc.
12The New York University case
- Based on the NLRB decision and vote (619 vs. 551) 
 in 2000, NYU decided to commence bargaining with
 the UAW on March 1, 2001.
- NYU was the first private university to formalize 
 a contract between itself (employer) and the
 graduate student union on Jan. 28th, 2002.
13What were the terms in the NYU contract?
- The UAW is the sole bargaining unit between the 
 students and the university
- All students (now termed graduate assistants) 
 are required to become a part of the union and
 are required to pay fees (deducted from the
 biweekly stipend check)
- Any grievances between a student and an advisor 
 may include a Union representative
14Terms of contractcontinued
- No strikes are permitted by the student union 
- The contract is legal until August 31, 2005, and 
 covers about 1030 of NYUs 18,000 graduate
 students (mainly those students who teach the
 bulk of undergraduate courses)