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NEWS & LETTERS, November 2004

Chicago colleges union-busting fails

Chicago--After three weeks of walking strike picket lines at all campuses of City Colleges of Chicago, the multi-campus system of community colleges in Chicago, full-time teachers got a contract minus the poison pill provisions that forced them to walk out. While on strike, picketers at Malcolm X College sounded off on the issues: "They demanded that we increase our course load from 12 hours a week to 15--at no increase in pay. Of course we won’t work for free, but I really don’t want to talk about. They put that demand in just to guarantee that we would reject it, because they want to break the union. "It is the same thing with the salary increases they are offering. If we wanted to start kicking in more for health care than our total pay increase, we wouldn’t need a union to do it.

"The college heads have been counting on keeping classes open without us. They have been bragging repeatedly that 70% of the teachers are part-timers--the so-called "adjunct" faculty--who are not in the union. They are counting on all those part-timers to cross, and they have actually ordered students to come to class.

"We don’t have any statistics on how many classes are actually being held, we are just teachers. But from what we can see looking in through the windows from the picket line, not many classrooms are in use. Those classrooms that do have a teacher in them have just one or two students, or at most a handful."

Even the college administration had to recognize the support the strike was receiving from students and part-time faculty alike. Students not only stayed out of classrooms in droves, but demonstrated before the college board demanding a settlement with the teachers. The lame response was, why aren’t you protesting against the union too.

So many part-time teachers refused to cross the picket lines that the administration tried to play hardball once more by threatening to hire replacement workers for the adjunct faculty that had not been crossing the lines. They admitted the effectiveness of the strike by stating that, without a settlement, they would have to cancel the rest of the semester and refund students’ tuition.

The tentative settlement eliminates, among other provisions, the demand for increasing course load from 12 to 15 hours. It brings to an end this attempt in a union town by an institution controlled by Mayor Daley to crush a union.

--Bob McGuire

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