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UC Service Workers Overwhelmingly Vote Yes On Historic Contract Agreement

by via AFSCME
97% of Service Workers Vote Yes To New Contract That Will Start To Lift Thousands of Families Out of Poverty
Oakland, CA - UC Service Workers voted yes to accept the historic contract agreement with the University of California that will start to lift thousands of families out of poverty. After a year and a half of bargaining, custodians, gardeners, food service workers and drivers voted to accept this historic agreement that will include significant wage increases, a pay system that rewards seniority and a first time ever statewide minimum wage for their job classifications.

"After a year and half of negotiations, this is truly a historic day. We have gone on strike, held informational pickets, lobbied, ran television commercials and many other things that were key to get UC executives to do the right thing and readjust their priorities from executives to the lowest paid workers at UC." expressed Lakesha Harrison, President, AFSCME Local 3299.

This new agreement includes wages increases over five years of 4%, 3%, 3%, 3%, and 3%. For the first time, UC service workers will have a state wide minimum wage that reaches $14.00/hour by the end of the contract. In addition the contract includes the adoption of a fair pay system that gives employees credit for their service and dedication to the University. The agreement also includes stronger benefits protections.

"This has been a truly historic fight for all of us. For years, we have been struggling to make ends meet each month on UC's low wages. Finally UC executives have recognized their moral responsibility to provide a wage increase that will start to lift us and our families out of poverty, and provide better jobs in our communities" stated Kathryn Lybarger, Gardner, UC Berkeley.

After a year and a half of bargaining, the negotiations over this contract were able to move forward when Art Pulaski, Executive Secretary-Treasurer of the California Labor Federation, stepped in to serve as a mediator. "In addition to the fight that service workers waged to win this historic contract, the skillful negotiation abilities of Art Pulaski were crucial in putting the final pieces of this deal together. We appreciate his time and effort to help secure this historic contract" stated Ms. Harrison.

Throughout this contract fight, service workers have received strong and wide support. This support includes former President Bill Clinton, Robert F. Kennedy Jr., Retired General Wesley Clark, Lt. Governor John Garamendi, Speaker Karen Bass, State Senate President Pro Tempore Darrell Steinberg, State Senators Leland Yee, Gil Cedillo, and Gloria Romero, Assemblymembers Anthony Portantino and Julia Brownley and Congress members Barbara Lee, Henry Waxman and Hilda Solis. Their support has included multiple letters, meeting with UC leadership, speaking and appearance boycotts at UC campuses and other forms of public support.

"This is a good settlement. It will give some of the lowest paid workers at the greatest university system in the world enough of a salary to meet the minimum needs of their families," Lieutenant John Garamendi, a UC regent said. "It should also be noted that only a small portion of the worker's contract comes from the state budget."

"We appreciate the strong support of many of California's leading elected officials and community organizations. Lt. Governor Garamendi, State Senator Leland Yee, Speaker Karen Bass, Senate President Pro Tempore Darrell Steinberg, State Senator Gloria Romero, State Senator Gil Cedillo, Assemblyman Anthony Portantino, CLUE and other religious leaders, and many others helped convey the importance to the leadership of the University to get a fair and just contract for service workers. We appreciate their support for starting to end poverty wages at UC" state Ms. Harrison.
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by Hank Chapot (hchapot(at)igc.org)
Reader Commentaries: berkeleydailyplanet.com

UC Service Workers Examine Settlement Offer
By Hank Chapot

Wednesday February 11, 2009

As you read this, low-wage employees at all 10 University of California campuses represented by the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees (AFSCME) are voting on a new contract, one close to that given union-represented patient-care workers a few months ago.

When the previous contract expired a year and a half ago and negotiations stalled, members intensified their fight; they picketed, organized a boycott by celebrities, politicians and commencement speakers, intensified lobbying, sponsored legislation, struck for five days in July 2008, began planning a longer strike for spring 2009, dogged the Regents and even sat in at head Regent Richard Blum’s office, where 20 workers and student supporters were arrested in January.

Tactics included TV commercials during UC football games and noisy demonstrations with fellow unions. These actions, and the possibility of further escalation may have led to the final offer, more than halfway toward AFSCME’s demands and far beyond any previous proposal.

The five-year contract offer for nearly 8,500 food-service workers, custodians and landscape gardeners includes a 3 percent across-the-board pay hike each year—plus an additional 1 percent effective in July. AFSCME won on core demands, including wage steps based on longevity and an end to the arbitrary “merit pay” system, benefits protection, caps on health care increases, overtime pay after shift instead of after 40 hours and a minimum wage of $14 dollars an hour (in the fourth year).

While still earning poverty wages, UC workers won guarantees independent of state funding, which, research proved, were found to be a small part of the overall payroll budget and little more than a cynical ruse repeated ad nauseam by negotiators to stifle discussion. And though this offer, coupled with the security of being a UC employee, is touted as being generous, it barely makes up for 20 years of flat wages and ever increasing fees for health care, pensions and other workplace fees. Even with this new contract, UC workers’ pay remains below comparable public sector jobs.

Shelley Nielsen, UC’s latest chief negotiator, said in a prepared statement, “We are very pleased to have reached what we believe is a fair agreement…” The irony is not lost on our negotiators, one of whom reacted by asking, “if management thinks this is a fair agreement, then, what in hell were those completely unacceptable and insulting 1 percent offers these past 14 months?” And wouldn’t you know it, last week the Regents voted to restart pension withholding, thereby slashing into any income gains.

The 15-month delay drove many employees farther into poverty. Some were unable to pay rent or feed their children and lost housing; others were forced to take second and third job or apply for welfare. While negotiations dragged on, UC twice rejected neutral mediators’ good-faith recommendations.

Considering this latest offer, UC seems to finally understand it can no longer claim to be the greatest public university in the West while exploiting its majority nonwhite, immigrant and female low-wage workforce, 96 percent of whom are eligible for one or more kinds of public assistance. What should we make of the fact that UC included a note in our W-2 envelopes this January that, based on our annual earnings, we may be eligible for the Earned Income Tax Credit?

When it comes to executive pay, management claims it must attract the best and brightest to compete with other universities and the private sector. The Enronization of Higher Education. But the argument is fallacious: UC is not Stanford or Yale; it is a public university owned by the citizens of California, and these people are supposed to be public servants, not corporate CEOs. Besides, who are these sterling executives, said to be worth six figures, regular bonuses and constant pay raises approaching 10 percent per year? They are supposed to be the best, but I’m not seeing it. Remember Gerald Parsky?

Considering recent compensation scandals, the top-heavy University of California is populated by a bunch of suits who use circular logic—their high pay justifies their worth. And every problem seems to be solved by hiring another manager, outside consultant or acting vice-chancellor, doing a study or taking a survey, the results of which are often kept hidden when found embarrassing. On top of this, just before newbie President Mark Yudof announced with great fanfare a freeze on salaries for 285 top-level employees, he gave out nearly $15 million in raises and bonuses to these same cocktail-circuit bureaucrats.

As a line employee, I often complain that we have plenty of people to tell us what to do but not enough people to do it. The plan seems to be to cut staffing so low that the only answer will be outsourcing of core campus services. Solves your union problems maybe, but costs inevitably rise and services fall when privatized profits are in the air.

AFSCME’s widespread support included letter-writing campaigns, meetings with UC leadership and speaker boycotts. State Senator Leland Yee has been especially helpful. Fellow unions, religious leaders, Clergy and Laity for Economic Justice and many others pushed UC’s leadership for a fair contract for service workers, who, after all, tend the needs of students and staff directly.

So, thanks to our supporters. Sometimes hard work and hell-raising win out. It is time for UC’s service workers to get back to the job of serving our students, the campus and the wider community. But hold on, many UC labor contracts remain in negotiations, so keep your fingers crossed and picket signs ready.



Hank Chapot is a gardener at UC Berkeley.
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