The Temple
Association of University Professionals, the university’s teacher’s union, has
begun discussing changes for its new contract before the current contract
expires Oct. 15.
The union,
which represents faculty, librarians and academic professionals, has discussed
making negotiations to improve issues concerning non-tenured track faculty,
tenure and promotion, discipline and dismissal, library, workload and childcare
with administration, said Art Hochner, president of TAUP.
The goal of
the negotiations is “to achieve a fair economic package and make some
improvements in the working lives of the faculty librarians and academic
professionals,” Hochner said.
The union,
which represents approximately 1,450 professionals, surveyed some of its
members to come to a consensus as to which issues were most important to
discuss and renegotiate. TAUP views the contract as an “exclusive bargaining
agent for all members of the collective bargaining union,” according to the
union’s bulletin.
“The hope is
to get it done,” said Steve Newman, vice president of TAUP. “Nobody likes
working under an expired contract. It’s never the ideal outcome.”
Hochner said
proposals haven’t been made yet, but the union and administration, specifically
Sharon Boyle, associate vice president of Human Resources, have had discussions
on each of the issues that he calls “fruitful.” Proposals are expected to be
formed within the coming weeks.
The
discussions on the non-economic issues arose this past June, with economic
issues expected to be taken care of within the next few weeks to meet its
approaching deadline.
Boyle said
she hopes to approach the economic issues in the same way and come to an
agreement “cooperatively.”
The union is
looking to make improvements to pension, healthcare, vision, dental and tuition
support in the near future.
Hochner
attributes their headway to their approach of open discussion to avoid “rancour
and contentiousness.” He also said it could be related to a developing
relationship between the union, President Theobald and Provost Hai-Lung Dai.
“The
relationship’s had its ups and downs, but right now, it’s in a good spot in terms
of communication,” Hochner said.
Hochner and
Newman both said the changes are to provide not only fairness, but better
working conditions for the educators protected under the union.
“Generally
our position on this is our working conditions are the student’s learning
conditions,” Newman said.
“There’s
concerns we have about the direction the university is going in,” Hochner said.
“Mostly, in terms of whether there’s enough emphasis on the core missions of
teaching and research – whether enough of the resources of the university are
devoted to these missions. And one way the resources are devoted is in terms of
our salaries and benefits and how they treat the people that teach the students
and do the work of the university.”
Source: Temple
News
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