2024 Boston University strikes

Last updated
2024 Boston University strikes
BUGWUSigns.jpg
Signs at Marsh Plaza referencing the 2023 Barbie movie
DateBUGWU
  • March 25, 2024 (2024-03-25) – present
    (6 months and 1 week)

BU ResLife Union

  • April 12 – 15, 2024
    (4 days)
  • August 31 – September 6, 2024
    (6 days)
Location
GoalsBUGWU
  • Increased wages
  • Healthcare and childcare benefits
  • Disability and public health protections
  • Parent and caregiver protections

BU ResLife

  • Increased wages
  • Enhanced CPR and Narcan training
  • Summer health and safety measures
  • Improved health and COVID protections
Methods
StatusBUGWU
  • In progress

BU ResLife

  • Contract ratified between BU ResLife Union and BU covering most demands
Parties

Boston University Graduate Workers Union

  • 3,500+ members, striking worker number unknown

Boston University Residence Life Union

  • 300 members, 50-75 on strike
Service Employees International Union Local 509

The 2024 Boston University strikes are labor strikes in Boston, Massachusetts by graduate student and residential life workers at Boston University. The first strike began on March 25, 2024, and was organized by the Boston University Graduate Workers Union (BUGWU) labor union, which is affiliated with the Service Employees International Union Local 509. It is the longest strike the university has experienced since a 1979 strike which lasted two weeks and four days. A concurrent strike by the Boston University Residence Life Union (BU ResLife Union) labor union, also affiliated with SEIU 509, ran for four days starting on April 12, 2024. [1] The ResLife Union would begin another strike on August 31, 2024, starting a second concurrent strike with BUGWU, and concluding on September 6. On August 20, 2024, the BUGWU strike would become the longest higher education student worker strike in the past decade, surpassing the previous 147-day record set by University of Michigan graduate students in 2023, and reported by BUGWU to be the longest graduate strike in American history. [2]

Contents

Background

In 1979, Boston University experienced a strike as a result of backlash over policies by the university's president John Silber. [3] The union behind this strike, the Boston University - American Association of University Professors, found itself decertified following a ruling NLRB v. Yeshiva University stating that university professors were not protected under the National Labor Relations Act of 1935. [4] The university did not see another major strike until 45 years later following a 2016 National Labor Relations Board decision that allowed students to unionize. [5]

Boston University Graduate Workers Union

History

The university's graduate workers began organizing efforts in late 2020 as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic, in an effort to implement a safer workplace. Graduate workers then voted to affiliate with Service Employees International Union (SEIU) Local 509 in mid-2021, which also represents adjunct professors, lecturers, and residential advisors. [6] In September 2022, graduate workers began a successful public campaign of union authorization forms, advocating for improvements in wages, workload protections, healthcare and coverage, support for international students, and housing. In December 2022, BU's graduate workers voted 1,414 to 28 in favor of unionization, officially forming the Boston University Graduate Workers Union (BUGWU). [7] [8]

Contract negotiations

BUGWU sought negotiations with Boston University's negotiation team starting in July 2023, holding at least one session a month. [9] The first meeting saw two articles proposed, with the total number since expanding to 40, of which three have been rejected and seven have been tentatively agreed upon as of April 2024. [10] As of September 2024, there were 15 tentative agreements, 4 rejected articles, and 18 pending articles, with BUGWU alleging that 15 articles are being refused to be countered by BU. [11]

BUGWU strike

Disagreements in pay, healthcare, and benefits prompted BUGWU to move towards voting to authorize a strike. The union moved towards a strike by citing the MIT living wage calculator's estimation of $62,000 a year to live in Boston as being significantly above their pay of $27,000-$40,000 a year. BUGWU also cited greater access to healthcare for workers and their dependents. [12] [13] They highlighted freedom from rent burden, 12-month stipends, disability and public health protections, and parent and caregiver protections. [14] BUGWU held a strike authorization vote from February 28 to March 11, 2024, with 90% voting in favor. [15] They also filed an Unfair Labor Practice with the NLRB against the university, totaling six as of April 2024. [16] [17]

Elizabeth Warren, official portrait, 114th Congress.jpg
Rep. Ayanna Pressley, 117th Congress.jpg
U.S. Senator Elizabeth Warren and Representative Ayanna Pressley attended picket lines in support of the strikers.

Strike Begins

On March 25 at noon, BUGWU began their strike with a rally at Marsh Plaza, the center of the school's campus. [18] This included speeches by graduate workers, Representative Ayanna Pressley, whose district includes the university, and Senator Elizabeth Warren, who represents Massachusetts. BUGWU stated that they would continue to picket on weekdays at both the Charles River and Medical campuses until their demands were met. [19]

Subsequent Protests

BUGWU has held subsequent protests following their initial rally. The union would picket at BU's commencement, [20] walkout on the first day of classes, [21] among other smaller events.

On September 27, BUGWU would protest the inauguration of the university's new president, Melissa L. Gilliam, claiming that she has not divested investments nor met with BU unions. [22]

Support

Various people and groups have shared their support for BUGWU, including Senator Bernie Sanders of Vermont, [23] SAG-AFTRA, [24] Boston City Council, [25] State Representative Mike Connolly, [26] the university's student government, [27] and other graduate and teacher unions. The university's student government would also pass a resolution in support of the ResLife strike. [28]

University Reaction

BUGWU flier at Boston Pride BUGWUFlierPride.jpg
BUGWU flier at Boston Pride

Boston University's Office of the Provost updated their payroll policy as a result of the strike. Requiring all graduate workers to attest to working weekly in order to receive their stipends—effectively moving to a model where the default actions is to withhold pay. While there is no way for administrators, in most cases, to confidently know who is striking, pay has been withheld even from students who faithfully attest their hours. [29] At one point, an administrator sent an email out to students in the medical sciences program with the names and immigration status of workers who did not complete the attestation, publicly revealing a protected status. [29] In response, graduate workers union filed an Unfair Labor Practice with the NLRB against the university, alleging wage theft. [30] BUGWU urged their workers not to fill out without speaking to union representatives. [31]

Graduate workers claimed instances of intimidation, surveillance, and harassment. Students putting up union fliers claimed they have been questioned by administrative workers, while departments like the Center for Computing & Data Sciences have enforced flier restrictions in their building according to claims by BUGWU. [29] Graduate workers alleged that their private offices were raided for pro-union materials. Others reported that personal items have been taken as well, although the union states that the Dean of Arts and Sciences told department heads the raids would cease. [32]

Boston University would file an unfair labor practice against the union for picketing actions on May 10, 2024. [33]

Use of Artificial Intelligence

On March 28, 2024, the dean of the Boston University College of Arts and Sciences sent an email to staff and faculty suggesting the use of generative artificial intelligence to give students feedback on assignments in the absence of graduate workers. [34] Multiple news organizations reported on the dean's suggestion, sparking backlash from both students and professors. [35]

Boston University Residence Life Union

Resident assistants (RAs) began organizing in early 2023 after calls for the formation of a labor union in 2021. [36] After holding a rally in support of the BU ResLife Union in February 2023, it was announced that a majority of the 280 RAs had signed union authorization forms; a month later, 92% of the RAs voted to form a union and join SEIU Local 509. [37] [38] Their formation would be supported by a resolution adopted by the City Council of Boston. [39]

This union, composed of both undergraduate and graduate students, advocated for a $15 an hour wage, meal plans for non-dormitory workers instead of a $15 per week stipend, improved CPR and Narcan training, crisis intervention, mental health care, summer safety measures, and backpay. [1] [40] They have also criticized BU's RA grade point average policy, which maintains that RAs must keep a GPA of 2.7 and above, as being used by the university to unfairly fire union members and remove housing. Claiming that the university did not begin enforcing the policy until after members began unionizing, the BU ResLife Union would file an unfair labor practice. [41] They have filed several others with the NLRB. [42]

Contract negotiations

The BU ResLife Union began contact negotiations with Boston University in December 2023, proposing 28 articles, with five having been tentatively agreed upon as of April 2024. [40] [43] The BU ResLife Union threatened to strike if their demands were not met by the university, holding a strike authorization vote between April 2 and April 11, and striking from April 12 to 15. [44] After failing to reach a tentative agreement following the strike, the ResLife union would once again hold a successful strike authorization vote in August 2024 and begin striking on August 31. They would stop on September 6 at 4 PM. [45]

Strikes

BUGWU, BU ResLife Union, and others in solidarity march in front of Warren Towers BUGWU and Res Life Strike.jpg
BUGWU, BU ResLife Union, and others in solidarity march in front of Warren Towers

After the strike authorization vote passed and bargaining was unsuccessful, the union began a four-day strike, from April 12 to 15. [46] The union stated that they would not fulfill ResLife responsibilities during the strike, such as being on-call or holding conflict mediation. The strike coincided with the 2024 Boston Marathon, a school holiday that sees many parties held, and ran concurrently with the ongoing BUGWU strike. [40]

The ResLife union would vote in favor by 90% to authorize a second strike, again concurrent with the ongoing BUGWU strike, which began on August 31, 2024 with RAs staging a walkout. [47] Initial numbers reported approximately 50 of the 300 union members are striking, [48] [49] though BU has reported the number has grown to around 75. [50] The initial strike coincided with move-in dates for students and did not specify whether it would last for a specific period like the previous strike, though it was later confirmed to be an open-ended strike. [48]

University Reaction

During the first ResLife strike in April, the university stated that they would continue to allow workers to access their rooms and dining plans, not charging them a daily rate. The university also stated that professional ResLife staff would fill in during strike. [40]

As a result of the second strike, BU would send a letter after a September 5, 2024 bargaining session that they would begin to charge for room and dining plans for striking union workers. [50] This would result in the ending of the strike a day later.

Contract

The BU ResLife Union would reach a tentative agreement on September 17, 2024 that would cover most of the union's demands, including new policies on fair compensation, meal plans, just cause protection, and GPA policies being changed. The contract would be ratified with a 100% yes vote on September 27, 2024. [51]

See also

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References

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