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NEW YORK—Local politicians, national union leaders, and Harvard labor
activists gathered here in the Greenwich Village neighborhood of
Manhattan last Thursday to rally behind graduate students at New York
University who have been on strike for nearly three months.
But even as thousands of well-wishers from around the world
register their support for the strikers through an online petition, NYU
is threatening to stop paying the strikers’ stipends for two semesters
and to prevent them from working as teaching assistants in the future.
The struggles of striking graduate students at NYU might deter
their counterparts at other private universities, including Harvard,
from demanding collective-bargaining rights.
NYU insists that graduate students are not employees, and that they therefore do not have a right to unionize.
“What the university keeps saying is ‘You are not a worker,’
but that’s not what I’m seeing,” said a striking teaching assistant,
Amy LeClair, in a speech to more than 300 activists at last Thursday’s
rally. “I am essentially being fired from my job, not only for the
current semester but for the future semester, as well,” said LeClair,
who is also a graduate student in sociology.
LeClair said she is one of an estimated six “graduate
assistants”—a term used to describe graduate students holding teaching
and research positions—who received letters last week informing them
that they were suspected of being on strike and listing potential
penalties.
NYU spokesman John Beckman said the punishments should come
as no surprise. “Each and every graduate assistant received a letter on
Nov. 28, telling them what the consequences would be, of not teaching,”
Beckman said.
“Therefore, any such decision must have been an act of
conviction,” Beckman said. “So I find it puzzling that someone would
act out of conviction, and then begin to complain about what the
consequences were, particularly when they were well known in advance.”
From 2002 until this past summer, NYU was the only private
university in the country to hold a contract with a union of its
graduate students. But NYU allowed the contract to lapse on Aug. 31.
Administrators offered a revised contract, but NYU’s graduate student
union rejected it.
The union, known as the Graduate Student Organizing Committee
(GSOC), has been on strike since Nov. 9 to protest the end of the
contract. The students’ union is affiliated with the umbrella labor
group UAW, which is best known for representing auto workers.
Beckman, the NYU spokesman, said that all graduate students,
even those who are penalized for striking, “will continue to get free
tuition, and they will continue to have 100 percent of their health
care premiums paid for.”
Beckman added that the university plans to make loans
available to graduate assistants suffering from stipend cuts, and that
these loans would not require the students to go back to work.
Beckman said, “Does that sound like typical behavior by an ‘employer’ in a strike? I would say no.”
“Why is this different? Because they are not our employees,”
Beckman said. “They are our students, so we are continuing to support
them in a way that will allow them to continue to be successful,
academically.”
But GSOC spokeswoman Susan Valentine asked, “If we’re not workers, why are you taking away our money if we’re not working?”
Valentine, who is also a graduate student in medieval history,
called NYU’s free-tuition pledge a “red herring,” because many Ph.D
students at elite universities across the country do not have to pay
tuition anyway.
Valentine estimated that “hundreds” of the university’s
estimated 1,000 graduate assistants remain on strike, although she
admits the number has dwindled from the initial count of roughly 500.
But Beckman, the NYU spokesman, said an “overwhelming
majority” of the graduate assistants have gone back to work. He also
said he thought the rally “seemed to be about half the size of the
rallies that took place in the first semester.”
WIN WITH QUINN?
The newly elected speaker of the New York City Council,
Christine Quinn, told activists at last Thursday’s rally that “the
entire resources of this City Council are committed to winning this
strike.”
However, when asked afterwards to elaborate on what measures
the council might take, Quinn did not offer any details. “We’re going
to do all the research we can do to figure out how we can be most
helpful to the workers here,” she said. “Hopefully, NYU will come to
their senses and stop this stupidity.”
A leader of Unite Here, a union that mainly represents workers
in the food service, hotel, and textile industries, sought to link
NYU’s stance to President Bush’s policies.
The federal National Labor Relations Board ruled in 2000 that
graduate students at NYU were employees of the university and therefore
had the right to unionize. The majority of the board’s members at the
time were appointed by President Clinton.
But in July 2004, in a case involving Brown University, the
board reversed its earlier precedent and ruled that graduate students
at private universities did not have the right to unionize. By that
point, most of the board’s members had been named by Bush.
“The Bush labor board said...that you don’t count, you’re not
workers,” the president of Unite Here’s hospitality division, John W.
Wilhelm, told the demonstrators. “Well, we know where to tell President
Bush to take that, along with all the rest of his bullshit,” Wilhelm
said.
The leader of Harvard’s Student Labor Action Movement (SLAM),
Michael W. Gould-Wartofsky ’07, showed up at the rally here to support
the NYU strikers, and he said that SLAM would support a unionization
drive at Harvard. But, he added, graduate students “at a place like
Harvard are often afraid to speak up.”
Gould-Wartofsky is also a Crimson editorial editor and a regular columnist.
WORKERS OF THE WORLD, UNITE?
Strikers have received support from faculty members at
NYU and around the globe since NYU issued its theats in the Nov. 28
letter. In early December, 10 professors from the United States, the
United Kingdom and France signed a letter to NYU President John Sexton
opposing the punishments. They posted the letter online, and it has
garnered over 6,000 signatures.
The renowned University of California, Berkeley feminist
theorist Judith Butler wrote the letter, which is now available at
www.facultydemocracy.org.
According to the website, 39 Harvard affiliates have signed
the petition, including Professor of Law Janet Halley. She wrote in an
e-mail yesterday that NYU “should not change such substantial parts of
the academic culture to cram down the union.”
Some NYU graduate assistants who wanted to keep working but
who would not cross the strikers’ picket lines moved their classes off
campus, creating a potential hassle for undergraduates.
“I think that undergraduates are sick of the strike, and a lot
of them don’t know how to channel that energy,” said Sarah Dell’Orto,
who is a member of the pro-striker group Graduate-Undergraduate
Solidarity. “A lot of times, [undergraduates] take that anger or
frustration out on GSOC, instead of trying to be supportive,” Dell’Orto
said.
A handful of anti-strike groups have formed on facebook.com,
as well, with titles such as “Gsoc Can Shove it. If I Had Free Tuition
I’d Be Dancing In the Streets,” and “Strike Against the Strike.”
Undergraduate Elizabeth R. Webber was in a Spanish class
taught by a graduate assistant, but the instructor went on strike and
ceased teaching altogether.
“Initially, I did support the strike because I felt the grad
students were entitled to certain rights,” Webber wrote in an email.
But now, she added, “I don’t think the GSOC strike has really
accomplished anything, and I’m not sure that it will.”
“At some point the grad students are just going to have to
compromise,” Webber wrote. “It’s not fair that the undergrads are the
ones who are suffering.”
—Staff Writer Abe J. Riesman can be reached at riesman@fas.harvard.edu.
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