Ongoing contract negotiations between Pennsylvania's 14
state-owned universities and its faculty union are hitting a wall, according to
officials from both sides of the table.
Meanwhile, professors in the Association of Pennsylvania
State College and University Faculties cast their votes Wednesday through
Friday on whether to stage a walkout.
Although the union has voted on whether to strike several
times before, a walkout has never actually happened. But union president
Kenneth Mash said the two camps have never been more at odds than they are now.
He said sticking points include the education system's
bid to have more grad students teach classes and to increase adjuncts' workload
without upping pay.
"What they've done all along the way is not been
serious about negotiations, and put things on the table that are just meant to
be insulting and infuriating," he said of the school system. "The
truth of the matter is that none of us should be in this position. They should
be negotiating fairly."
Kenn Marshall, spokesman for the state System of Higher
Education, took issue with that characterization.
He said while system officials have continued to meet with
union leaders, the union has failed to produce concrete contract proposals.
He also said that Mash's complaint about adjunct pay
isn't valid, saying the proposal — instead of increasing the adjuncts' total
duties — would shift them away from research and toward teaching.
According to Marshall, such changes are necessary. The
state higher education system, he said, is in its worst financial situation
ever.
"That's not an overstatement," he added.
"We are receiving the same level of funding from the state that we did
back in 1999. And that doesn't even take into account inflation ... that's
obviously affecting these negotiations."
Mash said he doesn't see that as a legitimate excuse.
"It is the responsibility of the university
president to make sure that the resources are there in order to be able to
properly run our system," he said. "If the chancellor's going to come
out and say that he's going to be, up front, ineffective at convincing the
Legislature that we need additional funds, then I think that's a serious
issue."
Union members have been without a contract for more than
a year.
Source: NewsWorks
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