Oakland University AAUP on Strike
Members of the Oakland University chapter of AAUP (in suburban Detroit, MI) went on strike this morning.
And all of this is unnecessary:
Things may get worse before they get better--
Among the issues on the bargaining table are details of how the medical school will be integrated into the contract, cuts in summer pay, no new increases in salary, elimination of some health insurance plans, hiring of non-tenure track faculty and elimination of research leaves, according to the union.This is a troubling situation--but, unfortunately, by no means unique. The Oakland administration has used the troubled economy as cover to enact brutal cuts to faculty. In the locution we at PSU have become used to:
"The university hopes to reach a feasible and equitable settlement shortly," the University said in a press release. "The difficult economic circumstances we face, however, necessitate the university be extremely prudent."Yet this isn't about prudence. Figuring the professors were in far too weak a position to fight back, the university decided to see how many concessions they could force. According to the AAUP chapter, in addition to money-saving concessions mentioned by the Detroit News, the University is also pushing to weaken governance provisions.
And all of this is unnecessary:
It would be nice to report that the Oregon University System isn't using these same tactics. But, based on the recent offers by the PSU administration, it looks like this is par for the course.An earlier meeting, sponsored by AAUP in Dodge Hall for faculty and students, included presentations which discussed the financial picture of the university based on audited financial reports. The point was to illustrate that the university can afford to provide pay raises to staff.
"My conclusion is that Oakland University is in excellent financial condition and is in better shape than just about any other institution in Michigan," said Professor Rudy Richtenbaum, university finance consultant for the national AAUP.
Things may get worse before they get better--
Labels: bargaining, Labor news


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