As students across the country return to their classrooms for the 2022-2023 academic year, teachers and other employees have been raising the alarm over widespread staffing shortages, low pay, safety concerns and unfair contracts.
On Monday, over 500 staff members at American University in Washington, D.C. kicked off aĀ five-day strikeĀ demanding higher wages and equitable pay structures after weeks of failed contract negotiations between the university and SEIU Local 500, which represents the workers.
Many of the striking workers serve as advisers for first-year students, including Roshan Abraham. The employees first unionized in 2020, but he says they have struggled to secure good faith negotiations from the university and have failed to reach a fair contract since then.Ā
āThe first semester is largely about personal development, and what it means to be in a community, and the second semester is about anti-racism and anti-oppression,ā Abraham said. āWhat I teach my students is what Iām living right now ā part of the reason Iām on strike is because I actually believe the stuff I teach my students.ā
The university staff members, including administrators who may make as little as $32,000 per year, voted 91 percent in favor of the strike, and are demanding a wage increase of 9 percent over two years to correspond with the rate of inflation. Theyāve also filed unfair labor practice charges against the university for explicitly excluding employees in the unionās bargaining units from merit-based raises.
According to Abraham, the higher wages will ultimately benefit students, who often cycle through multiple advisors in their first year due to the departmentās high turnover rate. Even as theyāve faced resistance from the university administration, Abraham says the striking workers have experienced an outpouring of support from students and non-unionized colleagues.Ā
āOur president is amongst the most well-paid presidents in the country ā they could settle this contract for less than that,ā said Abraham, referring to university president Sylvia Burwell, who earns overĀ $1 millionĀ per year.Ā āInstead, theyāve dug their heels, and have ignored us and stonewalled us. Their plan was clearly to wait us out.ā
Other labor actions among educators and school staff have been linked to widespreadĀ staffing shortages, often driven by low pay and a sense of burnout exacerbated by the pandemic. On the K-12 level, teachers have also expressed exasperation with the so-called culture warsāĀ increasingly restrictive attacksĀ on anti-racist education and LGBTQ rights in schools.Ā
On Wednesday, the first day of classes was delayed in one ofĀ Seattleās largest school districtsĀ after members of the Kent Education Association voted to strike over the districtās failure to negotiate a contract with adequate pay and more manageable class sizes. In Philadelphia, roughlyĀ 4,000 school district workers, including bus drivers and cleaners, represented by 32BJ SIEU voted to authorize a strike if the district is unable to negotiate a new contract offering higher salaries and better training.
And, in Ohioās largest school system, staff reached a āconceptual agreementā with the Columbus Board of Education after roughly 4,500 teachers, librarians, nurses, counselors and other employees went onĀ strike for the first timeĀ since 1975 on the first day of school.
For four days, strikers, parents and students picketed for hours at 20 different locations across the 47,000-student system. The strike came after five months of failed negotiations, and a Columbus Education Association vote in whichĀ 94 percent of membersĀ rejected the districtās most recent offer.
The teachers were calling for officials to address issues with the heating and air conditioning systems in the districtās buildings, as well as more planning time for teachers, curriculum changes and solutions to large class sizes. They carried signs that said āColumbus schools deserve working air,ā āa history lesson in progress,ā and āon strike for the schools our students deserve.ā
āIn multiple efforts to negotiate through the media after walking away from the bargaining table, the school board has tried desperately to make this strike about teacher salary, teacher professional development and teacher leaves,ā CEA spokesperson Regina Fuentes said in aĀ statement.Ā
āLet me be clear. This strike is about our students who deserve a commitment to modern schools with heating and air conditioning, smaller class sizes, and a well-rounded curriculum that includes art, music and P.E.ā
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