Response to Provost Katznelson and How You Can Support the GWC Strike
We are calling on all supporters of the tuition strike to also support the Graduate Workers of Columbia in their upcoming strike. Provost Ira Katznelson sent out a misleading email on Monday trying to pit students against the workers. But we and thousands of other students understand that the working conditions of our teaching assistants directly impacts students’ learning conditions. If you support Columbia academic workers on strike, please add your name to this petition to show the workers and the Columbia administration that students and workers stand together.
Ira Katznelson writes that the GWC’s decision to call for a work stoppage is “regrettable” and “unnecessary,” but in fact it is a last resort that they have been pushed to by the administration’s unwillingness to meet their very reasonable and necessary demands for a living wage, protection from harassment, union protection, and full recognition of all academic student-workers.
Katznelson’s email argues that doctoral workers’ compensation is comparable to that at other institutions. This is false, as rates for hourly pay are significantly lower than at other NYC institutions like CUNY and NYU, and compensation for Ph.D. students on 9-month appointments is lower than at NYU. Katznelson and the Columbia administration obscures the reality that attending Columbia requires incurring a uniquely high cost of living. Even after housing subsidies, the vast majority of graduate workers spend over 40% of their total compensation on rent, which is neither sustainable nor paralleled at peer institutions. If it’s neither “reasonable” nor “responsible” to pay student workers living wages under the current budget, is it “reasonable” or “responsible” to continue paying seven-figure salaries to administrators and pursuing multi-billion-dollar expansion and renovation projects?
On the issue of harassment and discrimination, Katznelson writes that the union and the university are “not adversaries,” yet the university’s counterproposal on this issue would maintain Columbia’s unchecked decision-making power and would prevent any real recourse for cases of power-based harassment.
The issue of union recognition tells a similar story. The administration refuses the GWC a union shop model, which nearly all graduate unions in private universities (as well as all other unions at Columbia) have. Moreover, the university still refuses to recognize entire groups of student-workers as part of the union.
Katznelson’s email demonstrates how fearful the administration is of the power that GWC wields through a strike, which is so potent precisely because these students’ work is absolutely necessary to the university’s functioning.
If you want to support the strike, here are some ways you can help out with the effort:
- DO NOT report your striking instructors or TAs to their department, to faculty, or to administration. Deans Valentini and Rosen-Metsch have recently sent out an email encouraging students to ‘contact the relevant academic department for further information or instructions’ if their instructor is on strike. This is the administration’s disingenuous way of saying that they are relying on students to report their striking instructors in order to potentially retaliate against them by reducing their stipends and financial aid.
- Sign this solidarity petition in support of the strike and share with all other Columbia students you know!
- Send an email to Provost Katznelson using this script!
- Send a letter in support of student-workers’ demands!
- Join the picket lines (and bring some friends)! (in-person picket sign up; virtual picket sign up)
- If you are an academic student-worker (including undergraduate and Master’s TAs and RAs), commit to striking!
- Donate to the hardship fund here! (During bargaining yesterday, admin threatened to create a website for self-reporting non-participation in the strike and to dock pay for strikers. We’re starting up a fund to help support strikers who might incur financial hardship from retaliatory measures.)
This strike will only be successful if striking academic workers have the full support of all members of the Columbia community, especially fellow-students. Any support you can show will go a long way in helping Columbia student-workers win their urgently necessary demands.
Important Vote on Whether to Continue the Tuition Strike
We are nearing the 2-month point on our tuition strike. Through our collective action, we have bolstered democratic student power, won increased financial support through acceptance of the CARES Act aid, and won our demand for Columbia to divest from fossil fuels. Yet, we know that this is far from enough, and we have not forgotten that we have a long struggle ahead of us. Our strike builds upon years of student activism at Columbia, and we hope to continue to organize through the strike and beyond to win our other demands.
As part of our democratic decision-making process, we ask that strikers please fill out this voting form to voice your opinion on whether the strike should continue beyond March 18th, the beginning of the next billing cycle. Using this information, we will inform participants of the decision by Sunday, March 14th.
It’s very important that everyone who is striking fills out this voting form, because if we don’t get enough responses for the vote to be representative, we might have to call off the strike due to not having adequate confirmation of our current numbers. That’s why we’re also asking everyone to vote on what threshold of respondents we should consider to be sufficiently representative for a binding vote.
We have been doing our best to understand the pros and cons of withholding past the next billing deadline, Thursday, March 18th, when additional late fees will potentially be charged. We have, as of now, been on strike for nearly two months, and continuing to strike even in the face of additional late fees or holds will show the administration that we will not be quelled, but there are some increased risks. To the best of our knowledge, these are the risks of continuing to strike past this date:
- All accounts with an outstanding balance will potentially be issued an additional $150 late fee on the next bill (issued Thursday, March 18).
- Please note: To the best of our knowledge, strikers will be able to get late fees waived by SFS once they pay tuition and some strikers have already received late fee waivers by contacting SFS (You can use this email script for talking with Columbia offices: https://bit.ly/financial-aid-script). It also seems that late fees were not applied at the last payment deadline of February 18, likely a direct result of the strength we’ve built up through the strike. Additionally, we have raised over $9,000 for our strike solidarity fund. If you are a striker that has been unable to receive a waiver, please request funds using this form: https://bit.ly/strike-fund-request
- If you are planning to register for Summer or Fall 2021 semesters: If the balance on your student account is $1,000 or greater, your account will be placed on a financial hold, and you will not be able to register until the balance is paid. This hold is not irreversible and will be lifted automatically when you pay tuition. Registration dates across Columbia schools are listed here. Summer registration began on March 8th, and the earliest date listed for Fall registration is April 5th.
- If you are graduating Spring 2021: Graduation holds are placed 30 days prior to the graduation date, and you will not be able to receive a diploma or transcript until the balance is paid. This means that you could still withhold tuition until March 25th (31 days before commencement on April 26th) without facing a diploma or transcript hold at the time of graduation.
We encourage all tuition strikers or supporters of the effort to come to our next tuition strike town hall this Thursday, 7 pm ET, where we will discuss our strategy for the upcoming month. RSVP here: https://bit.ly/cu-tuition-strike-town-hall
On Sexual Harassment Allegations Against Governor Andrew Cuomo
Sexual harassment is never ok, never funny, and never just a misunderstanding. A report by the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission in 2016 stated that about 60% of women have experienced some sort of sexual harassment in the workplace. The accounts by three women, so far, of sexual misconduct and harassment by Governor Cuomo are familiar to almost any woman who has interacted with men in a professional or social environment.
Governor Cuomo has been the headline of several scandals in the last months. His personal disregard for women also manifests in his austerity politics as a governor, where he has cut funding from programs that disproportionately impact working class women. After cutting Medicaid funds during the pandemic, underreporting COVID-19 deaths at nursing homes, and relentlessly advancing austerity politics, Governor Andrew Cuomo cannot be allowed to stay in office.
Governor Cuomo is known for a pattern of bullying. The people of New York deserve better.
As a socialist, feminist and anti-racist organization, we stand with survivors. In light of these multiple allegations of sexual harassment, the High Peaks Chapter of the Democratic Socialists of America joins NYC DSA in their call for the immediate resignation and, failing that, impeachment of Governor Andrew Cuomo. We are in solidarity with Charlotte Bennett, Lindsey Boylan, and Anna Ruch, who have spoken out about their horrific experiences.
Signed,
High Peaks Democratic Socialists of America
The post On Sexual Harassment Allegations Against Governor Andrew Cuomo appeared first on High Peaks DSA.
Impeach Cuomo
Yesterday, March 2, New York City DSA issued a statement calling for New York State governor Andrew Cuomo to resign or face impeachment. This comes in the wake of weeks of political turmoil regarding Cuomo’s cover-up of nursing home deaths due to COVID and new testimony about his gendered workplace abuse. The organized left in New York state has known for a long time that Andrew Cuomo is far from a “Resistance Hero”, as the liberal media has cast him. On tonight’s show, we’ll hear from RPM correspondent Michael Carter and Alexandra Walling of our Socialist Feminist Working Group on Cuomo’s persistent disregard for the lives of working-class New Yorkers and what this means for our socialist movement. We also check in with NYC-DSA’s newly-elected Assemblymember Marcela Mitaynes of Assembly District 51 on her first weeks in Albany and our fight to tax the rich and invest in our New York.
Tuition Strike Actions Survey + Voting Form
We are planning a series of escalating actions for the next month to pressure Columbia to give us a concrete plan for how they will meet our demands. If you are interested in coming to any in-person actions, please fill out this form to let us know which actions you think would be most effective and which you’d be most comfortable participating in.
You can read the notes from our action-planning town hall if you want more context behind the different options.
Unnatural Disasters: Killer Cuomo & Texan Tundra
While the increasing rate of vaccinations is a rare bit of good news, the pandemic is still raging in New York and Cuomo is yet again throwing workers under the bus by dangerously opening indoor dining. But restaurant workers are organizing to build power that will last beyond just this crisis. Gary Inman from the Restaurant Organizing Project will update you on these crucial efforts. Restaurant workers aren’t the only ones who have suffered from Cuomo’s wrath as thousands died in nursing homes while his friends raked in profits. Alice Murphy (@rosaceabitch) joins us to discuss the protest outside Medgar Evans against the governor this past Monday. Later in the show Madeleine Pelzel from Houston DSA will share with us her on the ground perspective about man-made disaster in Texas and how local socialist have responded to the crisis.
Follow @HoustonDSA @MutualAidHou, @SayHerNameTX and @MadsPelzel who are doing work on the ground right now in Texas. https://powerfortexas.org/
Tuition Strike Update 2/24 – Registration Holds & Action-Planning Town Hall
Columbia has started imposing registration holds on strikers’ accounts. What this means is that you won’t be able to register when it’s your designated time, if the strike doesn’t end before then. You can find a full list of registration times here—the earliest registration date for the summer is March 8, and fall registration doesn’t begin until April 5. There will be another billing deadline on March 18, and we’ll reassess whether to continue to strike at that point. For the time being, we’re asking everyone to continue to withhold tuition for as long as possible.
It’s important to keep in mind that you can still register for classes as soon as you pay tuition (the administration claims it’s instantaneous that holds are removed after paying tuition), so you could still register even if you miss your first scheduled registration time. If you are flexible about what classes you register for, or if the classes you want are widely available, then there are minimal risks to continuing to strike.
For students who are graduating this year, commencement begins on April 27, meaning a diploma hold will come into effect on March 27. As with the registration holds, this is not permanent but rather will be lifted once you pay. As mentioned above, we will have held a vote on whether to continue the strike before the March 18 deadline, and will continue to be in touch about how we want to move forward.
If you are considering dropping out of the strike, please reach out to columbia.ydsa@gmail.com to talk more.
Lastly, we want to emphasize that Columbia will do everything in their power to keep us in school and get us to pay tuition again. The administration aims to intimidate us with this retaliation, but we still have power. Over the next month, we’re going to be doing everything we can to force the administration to concede. We’ll need all the help we can get. If you’re interested in getting involved, you can join one of our working groups! We’re also hosting a town hall meeting this Thursday, 2/25, at 8 pm EST where we’ll be discussing potential in-person actions and other next steps.
Solidarity,
Columbia YDSA
Labor Rights and the American Catholic Church
Charlotte Metro DSA for M4A
On January 3rd, 2021, Charlotte Metro DSA held its monthly meeting in the midst of the #ForcetheVote on Medicare for All debate that was raging online amongst the American Left. While the weeks since that meeting have diverted our attention, it is important for the chapter leadership to revisit what was discussed at the meeting and report on the debates and decisions that the chapter made as a democratic organization in regard to #ForcetheVote.
Members displayed their passion and commitment to socialism and building working class power in one the longest debates in chapter history. Many fantastic questions were raised about how we build power, the nature of organizing work, and how we can effectively reach our friends, family, coworkers, and neighbors in the working class. Ultimately it was decided to not endorse the #ForcetheVote effort, but instead to use this as an opportunity to reaffirm our commitment as a chapter to Medicare for All organizing.
Through the debate we were able to reach a consensus as a chapter that healthcare is at the top of everyone’s mind, especially in the midst of a pandemic and economic crisis. Since healthcare intersects with every aspect of our lives - labor, housing, education, race, and gender, to name a few - it is also one of the easiest ways for us to start talking to and organizing with the people in our lives. So, instead of simply voting “no” on endorsing the #ForcetheVote effort, we want to use this as an opportunity. An opportunity to recommit to supporting Medicare for All organizing within Charlotte Metro DSA and in the Carolinas, as a way to reach and recruit new members, as a vehicle to building an effective organizing body in the region, and as a way to positively impact the lives of workers in our community and state.
As we launch this renewed effort in Medicare for All organizing, please join us for our Medicare for All Campaign Kickoff on Saturday, February 20th at 1:00 PM.
RSVP here. Campaign news, updates, and actions will be posted on our M4A Campaign launch page.
Medicare for All now. Solidarity forever.
The Charlotte Metro DSA Steering Committee