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Chicago State University Faculty/Staff Union
to protest salary freeze and contract give-backs
CHICAGO — Chicago State University faculty
and academic support professionals will protest Wednesday at their
University’s Board of Trustees meeting.
University Professionals of Illinois, the union
that represents more than 450 full-time and part-time faculty
and professional employees, has been in negotiations with Chicago
State University since July over a new collective bargaining agreement.
Laurie Walter, president of the faculty union,
will address the Board of Trustees at its meeting Wednesday.
"Our message to the Trustees is simple:
We are unhappy with their team’s unwillingness to negotiate
a fair contract. We have been negotiating for more than four months,
and we just keep getting proposals from the administration that
make it more difficult for us to get an agreement," said
Walter, a professor in the Biological Sciences Department and
chief negotiator for the union.
The faculty union has recently urged
the administration to review its spending priorities in light
of the current budgetary situation.
"While spending has increased exponentially
in recent years on the Intercollegiate Athletics program and on
new administrative positions, the administration says they have
no money available for even a basic cost-of-living increase for
the people who carry out the central mission of the university
— educating the students," said UPI spokesperson Cheryl
Green, an associate professor in the Counseling Department at
Chicago State.
Chicago State’s administration has proposed
that faculty salaries be frozen for the 2002-03 academic year,
and wants the union to accept several contract givebacks. "Our
administrators want to increase our workload and lower the number
of classes which faculty members can teach in the summer,"
said Walter, adding that the administration has recently cut several
academic programs.
The Union has proposed a modest cost-of-living
increase along with some changes to contract language that would
represent little to no cost to the university, some even resulting
in savings. "While we recognize that resources are limited
due to this year’s state budget crisis, we believe that
the union and the administration ought to work together during
this time to hammer out a fair contract so that we can focus on
continuing to provide an excellent education to our students,"
said Walter.
"We are willing to do our part, but the
contract givebacks that the administration has on the table indicate
that they are unwilling to work with us."
The CSU/UPI Chapter will demonstrate outside
the Student Union building, where the Board of Trustees meeting
is set for 9:30 a.m. Wednesday.
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