TA union strike on 45-day hiatus until UC meeting
By Daily Bruin Staff
Dec. 9, 1998 9:00 p.m.
Thursday, December 10, 1998
TA union strike on 45-day hiatus until UC meeting
SAGE: Graduate students ready for another walkout if demands not
fulfilled
By Timothy Kudo
Daily Bruin Contributor
The strike at eight UC campuses by teaching assistants (TAs),
readers and tutors ended Monday after a proposal for a 45-day
"cooling off period" was accepted by the university and the
unions.
The deal, which was proposed by State Senate President Pro Tem
John Burton, D-San Francisco, and Assembly Speaker Antonio
Villaraigosa, D-Los Angeles, calls for talks to begin within the
next week.
"We have confidence that these talks will result in a resolution
to this issue," said Connie Razza an organizer for the Student
Association of Graduate Employees (SAGE), the union that represents
academic student employees at UCLA.
Union leaders negotiating the deal included United Auto Workers
Vice President Elizabeth Bunn and Ricardo Ochoa, an organizer for
the Berkeley union. The deal must now be approved by the entire
union membership.
Razza is confident the deal will be confirmed. "I think that
everyone realizes that this is a great opportunity," she said.
Though a date for the talks has not been set, they could be held
at the UC Office of the President in Oakland, according to UCLA
Executive Vice Chancellor Rory Hume.
Hume also said that UC President Richard Atkinson and his staff
will probably represent the university in the talks.
Although both parties have agreed to meet, neither have altered
their positions. The university still maintains that academic
student employees are principally students, and thus not eligible
for collective bargaining.
Union leaders say they will strike again next quarter if they
are not recognized during the cooling off period.
"If things aren’t resolved then yes, we will resume the strike,"
Razza said.
Though union members have gone back to work, the strike can be
resumed without delay, should SAGE deem it necessary. Because the
strike is not cancelled, merely put on hold, a vote from union
members is not needed, Razza said.
Union and university officials declined to give the specific
details of what will be discussed. However, the talks are set to
focus solely on the issue of collective bargaining, not employee
grievances.
"The talks are going to revolve around the issue that was
involved in the strikes," Razza said.
But the university has left open the possibility that the
discussion could center around other issues.
"There are many issues that we would like to address," UC
Spokesman Brad Hayward said.
According to university figures, only about 5 percent of TAs,
readers and tutors went on strike.
Union members said they dispute that claim because the
university has agreed to begin talks.
"I think it actually shows that the union is powerful enough and
that it should be taken seriously," said Bruce Rusk, a TA in the
history department and a member of SAGE.
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