This Day in Labor History: February 17, 1992. Graduate students at Yale University went on strike. Time to put aside my animus for elite institutions to discuss graduate school unionization, since this is the strike everyone wants to talk about. So let's! Image
Still, before we get into this, I do have the make the principled point that the focus on the Yale graduate students instead of the many other graduate students who unionize is the same process by which the New York Times only talks about Yale and Harvard. Elites beget elites.
Graduate student unionization has long been controversial on college campuses. Are graduate students primarily students or apprentices?
The answer should be obvious that all graduate students getting paid for work are workers, but you would be surprised how many liberal faculty members simply cannot accept this idea.
Graduate students are not only workers, but particularly vulnerable workers, in spite of their high levels of education. Especially in the sciences, where a lot of funding depends on the relationship with a single professor, students are quite vulnerable.
That is especially true of women and the sexual harassment of female students has long influenced support for unionization among graduate student in the sciences.
The first move toward graduate student unionization took place in tumult of the 1960s, as a lot of politically active undergraduates went on to graduate school.
Rutgers and CUNY were the first graduate school units to be covered by a collective bargaining contract, as they were covered by faculty contracts.
The University of Wisconsin was the first graduate student union to negotiate their own independent contract in 1970. The University of Michigan and University of Oregon soon followed.
Of course, we barely talk about this history of unionization in the public sphere. After all, who goes to Rutgers or Oregon anyway?....... As a New Mexico PhD, let me shine that chip on my shoulder.
At Yale, the struggle would be and still is a much longer struggle. T.A. Solidarity was the original organizing group, founded in 1987. That turned into the Graduate Employees and Student Organization (GESO) in 1990.
Students began organizing to demand union recognition. Yale administrators rejected this from the beginning, refusing to recognize the union as a bargaining unit for the graduate students.
By the time it went on strike in February 1992, the GESO represented 1300 of Yale’s 2200 graduate students. Its demands were union recognition, a pay raise, a grievance procedure, and the expansion of time granted to complete the Ph.D.
The strike was announced for three days . It received significant support from other unions, frustrating Yale administrators who hoped to isolate the strikers.
49 percent of union members at Yale refused to work in solidarity with the striking graduate employees, with much greater support among the maintenance and cafeteria workers (75 percent did not show up for work) than the technical and clerical workers (about 30 percent).
Many faculty were of course opposed.

“They really are among the blessed of the earth,” Prof. Peter Brooks, chairman of the department of comparative literature, said. “So I sometimes feel annoyed at them seeing themselves as exploited.”

Uh huh
Despite these labor actions, Yale still refused to negotiate with the students.
The 1992 strike ended without recognition although the administration did raise the pay of the TAs and provide teacher training, showing how strikes can create real victories for workers even when the union remain unrecognized as a bargaining unit.
Strikes continued from time to time, including a 1996 strike that only ended when the administration threatened to fire all the strikers because they did not submit student grades as a bargaining tool, despite an overwhelming vote in favor of unionization among the students.
In 2003, another strike took place but in that year, the GESO suffered a big setback as student/workers voted against unionization by a narrow margin, giving the administration much more ammunition in its continued determination to never recognize a graduate student union.
But a 2005 strike again resulted in the administration providing a lot what the students wanted, including a pay raise for graduate student teachers and new initiatives on faculty diversity and child care.
Over the years, graduate student unionization has increased significantly at public universities in non-right-to-leech states, including at the University of Rhode Island, where I am Director of Graduate Studies for History. I encourage the TAs to be active union members.
After all, as the employer here, why would I not exploit you if you don't have a union?
At private universities though, this battle has been much more difficult.
NYU was the big exception for a long, long time and that was a very difficult struggle. Democratic administrations have generally supported grad student rights and Republican administrations have not.
NYU graduate students struggled mightily with both their administration and the Bush-era NLRB to maintain recognition. In the end, university administrations are some of the best union-busters in the nation.
Given the number of self-identified liberals with backgrounds in fields where they study race, class, and gender, it’s sickening to see them turn on treating graduate workers with respect and use the tools of oppression they decry in their own writing against exploitable workers
At present, the Yale graduate students are continuing the fight to organize. Now affiliated with UNITE-HERE, major issues include mental health care, fairness in funding, and greater diversity at Yale.
When we think about the labor movement over the last few decades, we often tend to forget about the importance of the academy.
Graduate students and, to a lesser extent, faculty, have proven some of the bright spots in American labor.
With the collapse of the industrial unions due to capital mobility and the decline of the building trades, public sector workers of all types have risen in importance in the world of organized labor.
In the case of schools like Yale, that are not public, major barriers remain to unionization but these campaigns have also developed many important labor scholars and activists, providing key intellectual support for organized labor at large
That in itself is a tremendous benefit of this organizing, even if Yale graduate students remain without recognition today.
Much to my shock, the Trump NLRB did not overturn the Obama NLRB decision to grant graduate students at private school bargaining rights. Brown and Harvard students saw wins in the last few years. So this see-saw may be coming to an end. We will see.
Back Friday to talk about the 1910 Philadelphia trolley strike.

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More from @ErikLoomis

19 Feb
This Day in Labor History: February 19, 1910. The Philadelphia Rapid Transit Company fired 173 union members to bust a strike of its drivers, leading to a general strike and general uproar, culminating in an all-too-rare victory for workers in the early twentieth century!!! Image
Streetcar workers often had it pretty tough in the Gilded Age, making the field one with strong union support from workers.
In 1909, the Amalgamated Association of Street and Electric Railway Employees Local 477, the American Federation of Labor-affiliated union for streetcar drivers, wanted to win a contract for the Philadelphia drivers. This was not some radical union.
Read 38 tweets
17 Feb
I was unaware liberals hated teacher unions. Who are these liberals again? Joe Biden? No. Nancy Pelosi? No.

Did Menaker check with Randi Weingarten about this? Or does she hate teachers unions too?

Or is this just complete bullshit as per usual?
Yes, there are a few putative liberals like Chait or Rahm who feel this way. But it's not only ridiculous but utterly Fox News-esque to take from this that *liberals* hate teachers unions.
Moreover, who is it that is making fun of Chait and Rahm all the time for being anti-teacher union and charter school hacks? Most of the time, it's liberals!
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14 Feb
This Day in Labor History: February 14, 1940. A group of Navajos write a letter of protest against the livestock reduction program the government forced upon them. Let's talk about how the New Deal transformed Navajo work culture in a shockingly negative way.
The four Navajos were named Scott Preston, Julius Begay, Frank Goldtooth, and Judge Many Children. They wrote, in part, "The Navajo Indians are not opposed to grazing permits as such, in fact we believe they heartily approve them if the manner of issuance is fair...
....and the limits are sufficiently high to permit the family to exist.

For instance, in our own district (No.3) the sheep unit is set at 282. If a person has 5 horses, that would be the equivalent to 25 sheep; 1 head of cattle is the equivalent of 4 sheep....
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13 Feb
This Day in Labor History: February 13, 1837. The Equal Rights Party, better known as the Loco Focos although a pejorative from the city’s Whigs, held a rally in City Hall Park in New York City to protest the high cost of living. Let's talk about this early labor action!
This led to the Flour Riot, where workers raided flour mills to gain what they thought what rightfully belonged to them at a much lower price than they paid.
This brief moment of labor agitation is a good window into both the problems early 19th century urban workers faced, as well as their nascent labor organizations.
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12 Feb
WHY IS RHODE ISLAND NOT TRYING TO VACCINE AS MANY PEOPLE AS QUICKLY AS POSSIBLE !?!?!?!?!?

This is ridiculous.
"As of Wednesday, Rhode Island had administered nearly 60% of the doses it had received from the federal government, the lowest rate across all states."

Great job Rhode Island! Way to be the worst state in only the worst pandemic in 100 years!
I very much have no problem focusing on equity in vaccinations. The Central Falls plan is a good one. But the most important thing is putting vaccines in people's arms. And we are doing a horrible job of this basic task we face.
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7 Feb
This Day in Labor History: February 7, 1894. Gold miners in Cripple Creek, Colorado walk off the job, leading to one of the biggest wins for workers in the Gilded Age. Why? Because they had elected a pro-labor governor. Let's talk about this!
By the 1890s, the area around Cripple Creek was the center of the Colorado gold fields. Cripple Creek itself was the second largest city in the state.
The Panic of 1893 theoretically could have helped these workers; it was silver prices that collapsed and the government needed all the gold it could get.
Read 34 tweets

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