CUPE3903 Fails at Grasping the Big Picture

CUPE3903, “representing” graduate students, part-time faculty, and teaching assistants at York University and their three-month long strike charade is about to come to an end. After a government appointed negotiator finally told us what we all knew already – that the two sides are irreconcilable – Premier McGuinty finally decided to start the motions of back-to-work legislation.

Normally, I don’t have too big a problem with strikes – certainly unions have had their place in bringing much needed job security and improved working conditions – but in this instance, it was nigh impossible to feel any sort of sympathy for this union strike.

As a TA in the University of Toronto, I made $28.50/hour – a fairly hefty amount for little work and admittedly low standards of qualification. Granted, I am still an undergraduate, meaning my wages are lower than those of my graduate counterparts – who earn $36/hour plus health benefits (amounting to about $400 in medical coverage per year). York TAs, who work comparable hours in comparable situations, are paid a whopping $63.29 per hour. That’s right. Even as a graduated student, working in a full-time engineering firm, I would make no more than $40 an hour to start with – and that’s if I’m lucky.

CUPE3903’s demands have been wholly unreasonable, from the massive wage increases (they want in excess of 10% in the next 3 years – during the worst recession in decades, no less) to what they call “job security”. Let me elaborate on this point. The union wants part-time professors on one-year contracts to be given lengthier contracts based only on seniority, not qualifications. Many of these part-time professors lecturers are Ph.D. candidates or recent postdocs. The union claims it unfair that they don’t get the same security as tenure-track professors who have their Ph.D.s and established research fields.

On the face of it, increased job security seems something worth fighting for – something that even the students suffering from the strike could support. However, this demand of longer contracts comes with a condition of a shorter collective agreement. CUPE3903 refuses to sign a collective agreement longer than 2 years, while demanding that their faculty receive lengthy contracts of up to 5 years. Though unpublicized, most people know that the reason CUPE refuses to sign a longer collective agreement is so that their next round of bargaining in 2010 will coincide with all the other university CUPE unions province-wide. They’re just itching to go back to the picket lines in less than two years, along with a cohort of colleagues from around Ontario. With contradictory demands like this, it’s hard to take them seriously.

Moreover, CUPE3903’s hardline position has managed to drive a stake into Ontario politics. While McGuinty’s Liberals are in a no-win situation – alienating either the students or the unions, he can at least claim public opinion support in bringing back-to-work legislation to Parliament. The New Democratic Party, on the other hand, has been smoked out by CUPE to do something brazenly unpopular amongst us students. NDP Leader Howard Hampton has declared his support of the unions, and is solely responsible for holding up back-to-work legislation at Queen’s Park. In doing so, he has alienated one of his largest group of supporters – the students – in order to appease his core power base – the unions. It is yet to be seen how big of a political impact this will have on the NDPs, but needless to say, it won’t make the students any more likely to vote for them in the next election.

If the NDPs take a political hit in the next election, their already fragile existence may become life-threatening for the party – and CUPE3903 will have had no small part in making the NDPs look irrelevant to the public in the midst of a massive recession. NDPs losing power means less sway for CUPE, and some would wonder how they’ve gotten themselves in such a mess. It all seems to me like the unions have bitten off more than they can chew, asking for the moon when we can’t even see the sky.

I wonder, too, whether CUPE3903 really represents the graduate students and the TAs and the contract faculty. In my experience, having attending a couple of union meetings for the sister union at the University of Toronto, the meetings are dominated by the union leaders, whose jobs are paid for by the union, and whose only tasks are to fight for more demands and get more publicity. There is no room or any voice for dissent, and generally, the leaders are preaching to the converted. The people who attend union meetings are usually the most hardcore, or even militant. These are the ones who really believe in striking until all their demands are met. Most of the moderate or conservative types stay away from union meetings because of these attitudes. With such a biased attendance, it was no surprise to me when I read news reports of CUPE3903 members voting to reject York’s latest offer. What I wonder is whether those who voted even bothered to read the contract, or just decided to do what their all-too-aggressive leaders told them to do.

What’s even more puzzling is the lack of student input in the whole issue. When a striking union of less than 5000 members holds over 50000 students hostage in a 3-month long strike, one would think there would be more of an outcry in the media – but reports have been mostly docile from the students, not outraged. If I were at York right now, I would be demanding a full refund from the university, and in addition demanding that the union compensate me for lost time – the opportunity cost of a few lost months of education plus lost time in the summer for employment. Not to mention all those people who still have to pay their loans, or the exchange students who have become disgusted at the whole system in the ordeal.

Have the unions become irrelevant? What are the students doing? Will there be another strike in 2010?

Comments (4)

  1. Yuri Sagalov wrote::

    and yet, you don’t have time to make me a ski trip website :(
    </3

    good post though

    Tuesday, January 27, 2009 at 3:09 am #
  2. Lorence wrote::

    Nice take on the grand scheme of things – more posts!

    Tuesday, January 27, 2009 at 6:50 am #
  3. Pike Bishop wrote::

    Thank you for your idiocy.

    Tuesday, January 27, 2009 at 4:27 pm #
  4. Steph wrote::

    To be fair, there is a petition going around organized by our student union, which is demanding a 12% refund of tuition. the percentage is proportionate the amount of in-class time that was missed. and there was some kind of student rally or protest which i did not attend. other than that, yeah, we’ve been pretty docile.

    Wednesday, January 28, 2009 at 4:41 am #