Faculty at California State University, the nation鈥檚 largest public university system, plan to聽walk off the job this week to聽raise pressure for their demand for a聽12聽per cent pay increase.
The will involve the 29,000 CSU professors, lecturers, librarians and coaches at all 23聽campuses, their union said. The 460,000-student system plans to聽keep its classes running during the action.
The workers鈥 union, the California Faculty Association, has asked for a three-year contract that begins with a 12聽per cent pay increase. It聽 for the strike earlier this month after CSU administrators of negotiations, saying that the 12聽per cent request was unaffordable and that they would instead give the workers starting this month.
The union said the 12聽per cent increase would put pay for its lowest-paid faculty members at $64,360 (拢50,630) per year. 鈥淐SU management wants to maintain the status quo, which is not working for the vast majority of our faculty, students and staff,鈥 the union said.
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CSU leadership complained that the union has not modified its 12聽per cent demand at all during the entire negotiating process, and said that the 5聽per cent rise 鈥渋s聽consistent with agreements the CSU has already reached with five of its labour unions鈥.
CSU is so big that it accounts for one of every 20聽Americans holding a college degree. The walkout comes just a year after a 32-day strike at its statewide companion, the University of California system, involving nearly 50,000 teaching assistants and other unionised academic workers that was the biggest-ever job action in US聽higher education.
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Higher education and many other sectors of the US economy have seen elevated levels of labour unrest since the pandemic, owing to factors widely seen as including workers wanting to keep greater flexibility in their job conditions while getting the financial security of Covid-related government聽aid.
Most contract disputes at US colleges and universities, however, have been settled short of strikes. Just last week, the 10-campus Pennsylvania State System of Higher Education reached the outline of an agreement with its faculty union on a new four-year labour contract.
California State University system leaders have described themselves as being caught in an especially tight financial bind. The system recently announced that it would raise tuition fees by 6聽per cent annually through the 2028-29 academic year to help reduce a聽$1.5聽billion (拢1.2聽billion) budget deficit.
CSU and the union worked through a neutral third-party process, established by the state鈥檚 Public Employment Relations Board, that a 12聽per cent salary increase would be unsustainable for the CSU system, and instead recommended a 7聽per cent rise. CSU leaders the report, while the union said that the 7聽per cent level would amount to a pay cut for faculty and suggested that CSU reduce its administrative costs.
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The union has argued that CSU鈥檚 budget expanded by 68聽per cent from 2014 to 2022, with the number of administrators climbing by 34聽per cent, both well above the system鈥檚 13聽per cent growth in enrolment and the nation鈥檚 24聽per cent rise in inflation.
鈥淭he contract we are fighting for is not something we merely want. It is something we fundamentally need,鈥 said Kevin Wehr, a professor of sociology at CSU-Sacramento who has chaired the union鈥檚 bargaining team.
Last month, the CSU faculty union organised a series of one-day protest strikes across several CSU campuses.
In addition to its salary demands, the union has asked CSU for manageable workloads, more mental health counsellors for students, expanded paid parental leave, breastfeeding facilities and gender-inclusive toilets.
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