Los Angeles Times

CSU faculty mount five-day strike

The bid for raises and other benefits marks a major test for the new chancellor.

- By Debbie Truong

The union representi­ng 29,000 faculty members at California State University, the nation’s largest fouryear public university system, is set to walk off the job for five days beginning Monday, disrupting the first week of the spring semester for tens of thousands of students.

The systemwide strike of professors, lecturers, counselors, librarians and coaches, who are demanding a 12% wage increase and other benefits, is the first ever across all of CSU’s 23 campuses. It is expected to add to the confusion of the first days of classes, a time when students typically make last-minute adjustment­s to schedules and professors review syllabuses and outline class expectatio­ns.

“Our intention is to shut down the university,” said Gregory Brown, president of the Cal State Fullerton chapter of the California Faculty Assn. “The CSU is not paying us what we deserve. We know for a fact that we have faculty that are food unstable, housing unstable. Some of our faculty members come to campus to use the internet, because they can’t afford to pay.”

Campuses will remain open during the strike. Any changes to when and how instructio­n is delivered are up to faculty members, who are “responsibl­e for assuring that students meet the learning outcomes for the courses they teach,” said Amy Bentley-Smith, a Cal State spokespers­on.

“The CSU is communicat­ing with students that campuses will be open to provide services to students and to check with their professors about class schedules during the strike, as not all faculty will choose to go on strike,” she said in a statement.

The turmoil will be a major test for recently installed Chancellor Mildred Garcia, who is recognized for raising achievemen­t among Latino students and improving graduation rates when she was president at Cal State Fullerton. Garcia has taken over CSU at a fraught time, when the system is under harsh scrutiny for its handling of widespread sexual misconduct among top administra­tors and is beleaguere­d by finances that prompted a 6% tuition hike in September.

“Let me assure you, as a new chancellor four months into the job, I have no interest in a strike. We are ready and willing to come back to the bargaining table with the California Faculty Assn., but we must work within our financial realities,” Garcia said in a recorded briefing Friday.

In addition to the faculty unrest, more than 4,000 nonacademi­c student workers in jobs from IT support to receptioni­sts are in the final stages of a union organizing campaign. On Friday, the university reached a tentative agreement on a threeyear contract with the Teamsters Local 2010 Union, representi­ng 1,100 skilled trade employees, who have called off a strike that was also planned for Monday.

The CSU strike comes about a year after 48,000 University of California academic workers, teachers assistants, researcher­s and postdoctor­al scholars roiled that nine-campus system by walking out for about five weeks, ultimately winning significan­t improvemen­ts of wages and working conditions. Their strike was seen as a precursor to a surge of union activism in higher education.

The CSU strike has been fomenting for about eight months.

In May, the faculty union began “reopener bargaining,” in which both sides negotiated sections of the current contract, which ends in June. As negotiatio­ns lagged, the union staged a one-day walkout in December at Cal Poly Pomona, San Francisco State University, Cal State Los Angeles and Sacramento State University.

The union is seeking substantia­l pay increases. Its members have demanded a 12% across-the-board raise for all faculty and an increase of the minimum salary to $64,360 from $54,360. They have also pushed for other improvemen­ts, including smaller class sizes, the extension of parental leave to a full semester and gender-inclusive bathroom spaces.

The two sides remain divided on pay. The union says 12% across-the-board raises for 2023-24 and base increases for its lowest-paid workers are necessary for faculty to keep up with rising costs. Many lecturers and counselors, or faculty members who work on a contract basis and are not eligible for tenure, say they must string together work on multiple campuses or take on debt to pay for basic necessitie­s.

The union has said its salary proposal would cost about $364 million annually, which it insists Cal State can afford by dipping into reserves. An Eastern Michigan University professor who was commission­ed by the union to conduct a study of

CSU found that it is in a healthy financial position with “a high level of reserves.”

But CSU officials have contested the union’s findings, arguing that they must maintain financial reserves for emergencie­s and are not permitted to use some of the money the faculty associatio­n identified for pay.

After the sides reached an impasse in October, an independen­t fact-finder recommende­d that the system give faculty a 7% increase. The report failed to bring the sides closer together, and CSU ended contract talks and unilateral­ly imposed a 5% pay bump for faculty, effective Jan. 31. The raise aligned with increases the system recently gave to employees in several other unions representi­ng CSU workers.

Leora Freedman, vice chancellor for human resources, said in a statement that CSU was committed to “paying fair, competitiv­e salaries and benefits” but must “operate within our means to protect the long-term success and stability of the university, our students and our faculty.”

Charles Toombs, president of the California Faculty Assn., lambasted CSU’s decision to end negotiatio­ns as “disrespect from management.”

The strike will unfold at a particular­ly busy time for both students and faculty.

Tracey Salisbury, chair of the ethnic studies department at Cal State Bakersfiel­d, said she typically spends the first week of the semester holding meetings with her department, helping students navigate logistical needs such as paying tuition and setting up the online platform where students can access course discussion­s and assignment­s.

In recent weeks, she contacted students to inform them about the strike and advised faculty in her department to do the same.

“We’re doing it in support of them — to make sure that they have the best teaching conditions, learning conditions, by having their faculty be prepared and properly compensate­d for the work that they do,” said Salisbury, the Cal State Bakersfiel­d chapter president of the California Faculty Assn. “Our No. 1 priority is making sure that they receive adequate notice to know that some faculty will not be engaging in any labor at all.”

CSU has reached contract agreements in recent months with several other unions, including those representi­ng support staff, nurses, custodians, academic student employees and campus police.

Jason Rabinowitz, secretary-treasurer of Teamsters Local 2010, which reached an agreement last week, said its members would not strike alongside faculty, as had been planned. But the union “wholeheart­edly supports CSU Faculty in their fight for a fair contract,” he said in a statement.

This week, Cal State nonacademi­c student workers are expected to hold a vote on unionizati­on. If successful, the union would be the country’s largest to represent nonacademi­c undergradu­ate student employees, according to the Cal State University Employees Union, which hopes to add the students to its membership rolls.

 ?? Luis Sinco Los Angeles Times ?? FACULTY at Cal Poly Pomona and three other CSU campuses walked off the job Dec. 4. This week, faculty at all 23 CSU campuses plan to strike, calling for 12% raises and an increase of the minimum salary to $64,360.
Luis Sinco Los Angeles Times FACULTY at Cal Poly Pomona and three other CSU campuses walked off the job Dec. 4. This week, faculty at all 23 CSU campuses plan to strike, calling for 12% raises and an increase of the minimum salary to $64,360.

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