{"id":3231,"date":"2019-05-20T15:49:30","date_gmt":"2019-05-20T15:49:30","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/columbiagradunion.org\/?p=3231"},"modified":"2019-11-27T00:25:07","modified_gmt":"2019-11-27T00:25:07","slug":"session-9-non-discrimination-and-harassment-and-other-proposals","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/columbiagradunion.org\/2019\/05\/20\/session-9-non-discrimination-and-harassment-and-other-proposals\/","title":{"rendered":"Session #9 – Non-Discrimination and Harassment and Other Proposals"},"content":{"rendered":"
Last Monday, May 13, we met with Columbia\u2019s bargaining team in Lerner Hall to present a significant contract article \u2014 Non-Discrimination and Harassment \u2014 and several counter-proposals \u2014 Severability, Union-Management Committee, Employment Files, Job Posting, Appointment Notification and Job Description, and Appointment Security. More than 1,700 GWC-UAW members sent a clear message to Columbia in an <\/span>open letter<\/span><\/a> — read aloud by Aya Labanieh (English) — demanding a neutral process that ensures real recourse to sexual harassment and all the other ways that the administration tries to make graduate workers (and students) feel powerless. The goal of our Non-Discrimination and Harassment article is to prohibit discrimination and harassment of undergrad and grad workers, ensure real recourse through, among other things, a neutral arbitrator, and prevent future harassment and discrimination by changing the culture at Columbia. <\/span><\/p>\n See below for a detailed summary of the proposals and testimonials from last Monday<\/span>. <\/span>Our next bargaining session will be on May 29 in Studebaker 207, at 1:15pm<\/b>. GWC has a working group for Sexual Harassment. If you\u2019re interested in helping the union build our campaign around Nondiscrimination and Harassment which Columbia is sure to fight, get in touch with Rebecca Glade (<\/span>rmglade@gmail.com<\/span><\/a>) or Niyati Shenoy (<\/span>niyatishenoy93@gmail.com<\/span><\/a>), our fearless organizers heading this group, to get involved! <\/span><\/p>\n As a result of the summer bargaining <\/span>referendum<\/span><\/a>, we\u2019ll be announcing more bargaining dates soon. In the meantime, if you have personal experiences you\u2019re willing to share about your working conditions, e.g. wages, health benefits, late pay, please reach out to us at <\/span>gwc.bargaining@gmail.com<\/span><\/a>. Our union\u2019s main task now is to send a clear message to Columbia that we are serious about a contract that supports, protects, and empowers student workers at Columbia, and Columbia had better get serious too.<\/span><\/p>\n Summary of proposals and testimony:<\/b><\/p>\n Last Monday, Columbia\u2019s team as usual was not there to bargain with us as equals, but to condescend to undergraduate and graduate workers in the room.<\/span><\/p>\n Bargaining was scheduled to start at 1pm. Once again, Columbia\u2019s team was inexplicably late. First, we were told they\u2019d arrive by 1:15pm. Next, we were told their team would be another 5 minutes late. In the end, bargaining began at 1:50pm. While, sadly, this disrespect for our time was unsurprising to us, it was particularly frustrating given how many fellow union members had squeezed valuable hours out of their busy work schedules during finals period to testify about their working conditions, observe bargaining, and support us. <\/span><\/p>\n As workers talked about being shut out of the country for 6 months without assistance from Columbia, being shortchanged in wages, organizing around sexual harassment in their departments, and being discriminated against by not only colleagues but also Columbia\u2019s Office of Equal Opportunity and Affirmative Action (EOAA), several members of Columbia\u2019s team shamelessly scrolled through their phones while Columbia\u2019s lawyer and chief negotiator appeared to nap at the table.<\/span><\/p>\n Meanwhile, Columbia\u2019s counter to GWC\u2019s Paid Leaves contract proposal noticeably made no attempt to take into account the May 6th testimony of a union member about the many ways Columbia\u2019s student leave policy had failed them. It also ignored our proposal to ensure international SAs have access to 7-day immigration leave to renew their visas. <\/span><\/p>\n Bargaining with Columbia\u2019s team can be infuriating, to say the least, especially when it seems their team hasn\u2019t even bothered to read our proposals.<\/span><\/p>\n Thanks, then, to all the workers who joined us at the table on Monday to help us make our case for a contract that protects us from retaliation, injustice, misconduct, and abuse, and empowers student workers. Undoubtedly, highlights of Monday\u2019s bargaining session were the detailed, informative, and often upsetting testimonials we heard from 7 of our fellow academic workers.<\/span><\/p>\n A graduate worker from Computer Science described being stranded for 6 months in Canada while their visa was processed with delays, without support from Columbia\u2019s International Students and Scholars Office. Their experience spoke to the importance of pro bono legal support for international student workers and of securing housing for international workers\u2014two \u00a0important provisions of our International Student Workers\u2019 Rights and Protections article proposed on May 1.<\/span><\/p>\n A graduate worker from English presented and read GWC\u2019s open letter, signed by some 1,700 undergraduate and graduate workers, demanding stronger protections against and enforceable procedures to address discrimination and harassment. This showed Columbia that a strong Non-Discrimination and Harassment contract article is a priority for our union, something we, your bargaining team, and fellow workers are going to fight for.<\/span><\/p>\n
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