“The debate
over Janus v. AFSCME, on which the U.S. Supreme Court ruled [last]
week, appeared to be between the conservative view that unions can do nothing
right and the liberal view that unions can do nothing wrong. Consequently, the
court’s five conservatives voted in favor of striking down ‘agency shop fees,’
while the four liberal justices voted to retain ‘fair share’ fees for
nonmembers of public-sector unions.
“Missing from the debate have been important critiques of the
union movement from the labor perspective. To regain their relevance, faculty
unions at public colleges and universities will need to shed their historic
approach of privileging tenure-track members over contingent faculty members,
and instead embrace a new kind of organizing unit that finally deals with the
needs of adjuncts and part-timers, who shoulder most of the teaching load in
higher education.
“For contingent faculty members, the question about union
representation has long been: Should they be coerced into paying their ‘fair
share’ when they do not receive their fair share at the bargaining table, where
their numbers are not equitably represented and their voices not heeded?
Under Janus, they will no longer be required to do so.
“The National Labor Relations Board has made it clear that
tenure-track faculty members at private colleges cannot be in the same
bargaining unit as their non-tenure-track colleagues. But conflicts of interest
abound in the two-tier system at public institutions, where the majority of
adjuncts are represented in "mixed units" with their tenured
colleagues.
“Not surprisingly, conflicts
are usually resolved in favor of the tenured faculty. Pay, benefits, and job
security are obvious examples of those conflicts, but one of the more egregious
ones occurs when the union places limits on adjunct teaching below full-time
work while allowing full-timers to teach overtime, as has been the
practice in Washington State and California.
“In [Hoeller’s] journal article Against Tenurism, colleges and the unions
together have created a two-tier ‘system of privileged ‘haves’ and unprivileged
‘have-nots,’ whereby tenure-track faculty members form a minority, now less than
25 percent of all college professors, who rule over the majority of faculty who
have little job security, low wages, few benefits, and virtually no way out of
this academic ghetto. … It is not fair to force adjuncts, who have no job
security, into the same bargaining unit with tenured faculty, especially when
these tenured faculty function as supervisors, hiring, evaluating, and rehiring
and/or firing the adjuncts.’
“With the Janus decision,
unions at public colleges will inevitably lose members and money and clout.
Having ignored contingents for so long, they will undoubtedly make the pitch
that unions can improve their lot. But unions’ historical approach — bargaining
small improvements in union contracts, campus by campus, every three years,
while tenured faculty members continue to make larger gains — is unlikely to
make a dent in the two-tier system. In mixed units, it is more likely that
tenured faculty members will continue to use contingents’ dues to feather their
tenured nests.
“What should faculty unions do now? At a minimum, they should
admit that tenured faculty members often serve as supervisors of contingent
faculty members and, where this situation exists, insist that adjuncts have
separate bargaining units. They should also insist that where adjuncts
outnumber tenured faculty members, the adjuncts should have proportional
representation in union-leadership positions and on negotiating teams.
“Unions should insist that contingents elect their own officers,
representatives, and contract negotiators, and that they bargain for their own
contracts. If the unions truly want to represent contingent faculty members,
their eventual aim should be to abolish the two-tier system and ensure full
equality for all professors. Their model should be not American unionism, but
the one-track model established
in British Columbia by the Vancouver Community College Faculty Association.
“And what should contingent faculty members do? While some unions
have made some gains for them, the situation still remains dire for the more
than one million college professors who teach off the tenure track. But unions
are not the only options. The Washington State Part-Time Faculty Association…
and the California Part-Time Faculty Association have achieved results
independently of the unions. They have worked successfully for sick-leave
bills, increased pay, class-action lawsuits to obtain health-care and
retirement benefits, and higher limits on adjuncts’ workloads.
“What we still need, though, is an independent national
organization to provide vigorous representation for all contingent
faculty members, no matter where they teach.”
Keith Hoeller retired in 2016 after 25 years as an adjunct
professor of philosophy at Green River College, in Auburn, Wash. He is the
editor of Equality for
Contingent Faculty: Overcoming the Two-Tier System (Vanderbilt
University Press, 2014).
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.