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THE UNIVERSITY OF CINCINNATI
CHAPTER,
AMERICAN ASSOCIATION OF
UNIVERSITY PROFESSORS
By
Ina Maria Remus and
David L. Sterling
1999
American Association of
University Professors
University of Cincinnati
Chapter
Board of Directors
1999
PRESIDENT James Cebula
VICE PRESIDENT John Brackett
SECRETARY Lynn Ritchey
TREASURER Daniel Langmeyer
AT LARGE Andrea Kornbluh
Jane Thompson
Larry Gilligan
PAST PRESIDENT Maita Levine
CONTENTS
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
I. THE COLLECTIVE BARGAINING
CAMPAIGN
II. THE FIRST NEGOTIATIONS
III. THE STRIKE OF 1979
IV. YEARS OF ACHIEVEMENT
V. THE STRIKE OF 1993
VI. THE CULMINATION
APPENDIX I
APPENDIX II
APPENDIX III
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
The authors and the University of Cincinnati Chapter of the
American Association of University Professors would like to thank
the University of Cincinnati Archives and especially the
Assistant Head Archivist, Kevin Grace, for all their help. Their
assistance in many hours of research is very much appreciated.
Furthermore, we would like to extend our appreciation and thanks
to Professor Marion Brown for her permission to quote from and
reprint her poem "Strike" in the Appendix.
I. THE COLLECTIVE BARGAINING CAMPAIGN
For the first time in its history, the Council of the American
Association of University Professors in October, 1972, adopted a
resolution supporting collective bargaining "as a major
additional way of realizing its goals in higher education"
and "promising assistance...to interested local
chapters." "To the extent," the resolution stated,
"that the Association is influential in the shaping of
collective bargaining, the principles of academic freedom and
tenure and the primary responsibility of a faculty for
determining academic policy will be secured."
The AAUP Chapter at the University of Cincinnati had been in
existence since the Second World War; by the 1970's it had grown
to close to 400 members making it the tenth largest in the
country. It ordinarily dealt with traditional faculty concerns:
academic freedom and tenure, university governance, educational
innovation. But by the seventies, double digit-inflation had
eroded real income for faculty by approximately one-third.
Moreover, according to the 1975 AAUP Bulletin, the median salary
of University of Cincinnati faculty was the lowest among the ten
category I institutions in Ohio. Faculty members paid for the
Blue-Cross, Blue Shield medical insurance; there was no drug
rider and no dental benefits; and the prospects for improvement
in salary and fringe benefits were dim. In the academic years
1971-1972 and 1972-1973, the average salary increases had been
3.2 percent.
By the time the national AAUP acted to espouse collective
bargaining as an appropriate means to secure its objectives in
higher education, the Cincinnati Chapter, under the leadership of
President Daniel Hershey of the Department of Chemical
Engineering had already formed Committee N to study collective
bargaining and to report its findings. On March 27, 1972, the
Committee, chaired by Professor George Engberg of the History
Department, well-respected by his colleagues in the College of
Arts and Sciences, adopted a statement proposing that AAUP
members and the faculty at large "give serious consideration
to the nature, structure and problems involved in the use of
collective bargaining at this University." To this end the
Committee in November, 1972, invited Professor Allen Ruben of
Cleveland State University and General Counsel of the Ohio
Conference, AAUP, to discuss collective bargaining in general and
at Ashland College in particular where he had recently negotiated
a contract between its AAUP chapter and the Ashland
administration. "At the regular AAUP chapter meeting,"
Engberg wrote to Ruben on November 20, 1972, "the day after
your appearance, there was an extended discussion of collective
bargaining and a straw vote of those present. The vote was about
33 in favor of going ahead with collective bargaining, with no
negative votes, and about 6 abstentions. We realize that this is
not a representative measure of either the chapter or the faculty
but it is certainly one indication of local feeling."
Encouraged by the reception of Professor Ruben's presentation
and by a January, 1973 survey by a graduate student in labor
economics which yielded 110 favorable replies, 95 opposed and 57
either undecided or "insufficiently informed,"
Committee N recommended that the Chapter seek to establish a
collective bargaining unit at the University of Cincinnati. In
May, 1973, a Committee to Organize for Collective Bargaining was
formed with seventeen members representing 9 of the 16 colleges
and chaired by Professor Lowell Leake of the Arts and Sciences
Mathematics Department. The Committee's minutes of May 9, 1973,
indicate that cards designating the AAUP Chapter as the exclusive
bargaining agent for the University faculty were about to be
circulated, and a letter promulgated by the committee refers to a
special AAUP meeting on May 23, at which past Chapter presidents
and current officers signed cards to initiate the designation
campaign.
By January, 1974, of the 1092 non-Medical Center full-time
faculty, 585 had signed authorization cards, and there were 117
Medical Center faculty who favored collective bargaining. These
figures represented 56% of the University faculty exclusive of
the College of Medicine and almost 47% of the total faculty.
Despite the advice of the national AAUP that it should have at
least 65 percent of the faculty signed up before requesting that
an election be held, the Chapter called a special meeting on
January 17, 1974, and voted to ask the University Board of
Directors to authorize a collective bargaining election. In 1974
there was no public employees bargaining statute in Ohio, and the
Board of Trustees could have refused to accede to the request of
the AAUP Chapter. Nevertheless, on March 5, 1974, the Board of
Trustees agreed to hold an election to determine faculty
sentiment in regard to AAUP representation in collective
bargaining.
The next step was to decide which faculty members would
participate in the election; if the AAUP prevailed, they would
then become members of the bargaining unit. Because there was no
law and no state board to make this crucial decision, it was left
to the University Board of Trustees and the AAUP Chapter to come
to some agreement as to who would be qualified to vote. The AAUP
wanted a bargaining unit that would include all full-time faculty
members and the University librarians and exclude those faculty
who belonged to the Colleges of Law and of Medicine. The
University Administration recommended that all full-time faculty
members including those in the Colleges of Medicine and Law be
permitted to participate in the election. Librarians would be
excluded on the ground that they were not faculty.
It was obvious that the AAUP, although it argued that there
was no community of interest between College of Medicine faculty
and its colleagues in other colleges, was concerned that if the
medical faculty voted, collective bargaining would go down in
defeat. Although the University Administration contended that all
faculty should be treated alike, it was similarly obvious that it
believed that if the medical faculty participated in the
election, the AAUP would lose. In May, 1974, the AAUP offered to
"submit the issue to an outside and impartial board of
mediators," and asked rhetorically "will the University
Administration and the University Board of Directors make the
same commitment?"
The response was in the negative. The University
Administration said in effect it was all or none, and the AAUP
had no choice but to capitulate. The final determination of those
eligible to vote included all faculty members in all Colleges and
those in the Graduate Department of Community Planning, the
Observatory and the Division of Professional Development. Those
faculty who held adjunct or part-time titles, and who devoted
more than half time to instruction, and department heads were
also included. Administrators at the level of Assistant Dean and
above were excluded. And finally only those full time members in
the College of Medicine who received their salary through the
University were going to be permitted to participate in the
election. There was a further delay because the Faculty Senate,
which supported the Administration's decision relative to the
proposed bargaining unit, initially resolved to be on the ballot
as one of the choices to bargaining collectively for the faculty.
(Later the Senate reconsidered and withdrew its name.) The
election was, therefore, postponed until the fall of 1974.
The election campaign that followed pitted the AAUP against
the "Concerned Faculty." The AAUP produced a brochure
that conceded that "collective bargaining will not work any
miracles," but promised to establish a bargaining council to
insure that "all bargaining positions and policies will be
locally determined and controlled through democratic
processes." The AAUP, the brochure stated, "both
nationally and at the University of Cincinnati, has a proven
record of commitment to academic freedom and the role of faculty
in university governance.... Based on this experience, [it] is
best able to further the economic interests of the faculty while
continuing to safeguard the integrity of teaching and
research." On the other hand, the "Concerned
Faculty" opposed collective bargaining on the grounds that
it would lead to "rigid salary schedules" which in turn
would "lead eventually to a dilution of the quality of the
faculty." Collective bargaining may involve "increased
teaching loads, centrally specified office hours and advising
schedules, tighter constraints on consulting, strictly
quantitative evaluation measures for research...." Strikes
may occur which would "deprive students of our services and
confront...faculty member with a difficult decision to crossing
picket lines."
The statement issued by the steering committee of the
"Concerned Faculty" was signed by 22 faculty members;
on November 5, 1974, two days before the election, the AAUP
published an advertisement in the student newspaper, the News
Record, signed by 241 faculty members, urging colleagues to vote
"Yes." At the head of the list was the name of George
Engberg.
On November 7 and 8, 1974, 87 percent of the University
faculty eligible to vote went to the polls. AAUP election
observers were instructed to "enter upon this task with a
fair and open mind." Do not "argue regarding the
election." "Conduct yourself so that no one can find
fault with your actions." And "BE ON TIME."
In turn the University Administration issued a series of
"Information Bulletins," the last of which stated
dramatically that "no question of greater importance has
come before the faculty in many years...the results of the
election - whichever way its goes - will bind all persons in the
unit and not only those who vote."
The counting of the ballots took place on the afternoon of
November 12, 1974. According to a later survey by two members of
the Economics Department, "to the surprise of
many...including some of the AAUP leaders," the faculty
voted 676 to 583 to give the Chapter the right to represent it in
collective bargaining. A month later, the University Board of
Directors adopted a resolution recognizing "the University
of Cincinnati Chapter, American Association of University
Professors...as the exclusive bargaining agent for all members of
the faculty who were or would have been eligible to vote on
November 7 and 8, 1974."
The Department of Economics survey of 211 faculty revealed
that 51.5 percent of the Medical faculty voted in favor of
bargaining, that the strongest support came from the two-year
colleges and the College of Education and the least supportive
colleges were Engineering, Business and the Conservatory of
Music. Faculty members indicated that they voted in favor of the
AAUP because they harbored anti-administration sentiments,
because of low salaries and disparities between administrative
and teaching salary levels, because of dissatisfaction with
programs of community involvement and because of administrative
emphases on intercollegiate athletics. In contrast, those who
voted against AAUP representation did so because they were either
opposed to collective bargaining per se or to collective
bargaining in higher education, because they believed that
unionization was incompatible with "professionalism"
and because they felt bargaining would lead to a
"deterioration of faculty-administrative relations."
II: THE FIRST NEGOTIATIONS
Three months after the bargaining election, the first AAUP
Bargaining Council met on February 6, 1975. According to one
contemporary observer, the Chapter had chosen an
"ingenious" scheme: the Council would be selected from
the colleges on the basis of their AAUP membership. In all there
would be 26 elected members and the eight chapter officers. As a
result AAUP membership soared almost immediately from 399 to 537.
The Bargaining Council, divided into committees, devoted
countless hours during February and March, 1975, meeting weekdays
and on Saturday mornings, drafting contract proposals, and
coordinating its efforts with the Chapter Board of Directors and
the Negotiating Team. The first Chairperson of the Bargaining
Council was George Engberg; the first Bargaining Team was
composed of Professors William Joiner as Chief Negotiator,
Herbert Shapiro, Jane Leake, Saul Bloomfield, Martin Tucker and
David Hartleb; in all, they came from five of the University's
colleges. Labor lawyer Jerry Venn, later replaced by James
Paradise, was retained by the Chapter to participate in the
negotiations, and in the AAUP office as staff were Nancy Keely
and a part-time work study assistant. Faculty members were asked
to contribute $25 to defray bargaining expenses, and expenditures
were running between $1500 to $2000 a month.
The first negotiating session began on March 27, 1975; the
AAUP team faced a University committee led by attorney Benjamin
Gettler. Progress was painfully slow. In October, 1974, before
the bargaining election, the University President, Warren Bennis,
announced that he would seek state aid for a salary increase
equal to the cost of living which in Cincinnati was approximately
12 percent. The AAUP's first salary proposal was for an average
twenty per cent increase plus two percent for merit and minimum
salaries of $10,000, $12,000, $15,000 and $19,000 for the four
professorial ranks. In addition the University would pay for an
expanded medical insurance plan and establish a fund of at least
$300,000 to be "used for removing sex and race inequities in
faculty salaries and ranks."
In May, 1975, Mr. Gettler announced that "breaks" in
the negotiations "were a distinct possibility because key
administration personnel would be absent during portions of the
summer." The next month, with bargaining in recess, Gettler,
in a letter addressed to Professor Joiner and copied to the
University faculty, objected to the AAUP "attack" on
the members of the University Bargaining Team. "It is,"
he wrote, "the usual pattern for such first agreements to
take from one to two years to conclude."
On July 2, 1975, Professor Joiner responded to the Gettler
letter. "You begin," he stated, "by informing me
of the membership of the Administration Bargaining Committee. I
can assure you that although it has been some time since you have
been able to meet with us, we have not forgotten the identity of
the members of your team." Joiner accused the Cincinnati
attorney of distorting the AAUP position relative to Chapter
membership; "our proposal would clearly not require faculty
members to join the AAUP." "Although," he
concluded, "we would agree that improving the University's
financial base is of primary importance to the University, we
could hardly accept your implication that faculty salaries and
other matters we wish to deal with are of secondary importance.
We are undoubtedly engaged in collective bargaining today because
this has appeared to be a prevalent administrative attitude in
recent years."
Joiner wrote again on July 14 and July 24. "We
feel," he stated on the 14th, that "many of
the non-economic issues must be separable from the economic
issues. For example, I am sure that other members of your team
can understand that academic freedom and tenure issues must be
dealt with quite independently of salary increases." On the
24th, Joiner expressed his disappointment that the
Administration's Chief Negotiator had not responded to his
earlier letter. "Since," he wrote, "we will be
dealing with a number of detained and complicated non-economic
issues, we can serve the best interests of all parties by using
the immediate future to deal with those issues, and then address
ourselves to economic matters when the state funding issue is
settled."
The negotiations resumed on September 9, 1975. Although
President Bennis had committed the University to a cost of living
increase, the Administration's first offer at the table was for
an average 4.5 percent raise in salaries. On September 12, there
was an angry exchange between the two chief negotiators. Joiner
said that the AAUP Bargaining Council had found that the contract
offered by the Administration was "unsatisfactory,
"that it was "sloppy in language, not responsive to
AAUP proposals and unclear even to members of the
Administration's Team." Gettler retorted that "after
each session the AAUP Team tries to find something with which to
insult the Administrative Team members." He then
"looked at B. Joiner," the minutes reported, "and
said that those were the acts of a person's small mind who used
insults to try to make himself bigger. Then he apologized for the
characterization."
The AAUP was trying to find some means to hasten the pace of
the negotiations. In October, 1975, the Chapter President, James
Hall wrote to labor consultant Wallace Weber that "we need
guidance about how to speed...the negotiations. Our meetings with
the other side (two or three times a week) have been occupied
almost exclusively with questions about minute aspects of our
proposed contract language. No actual bargaining has taken place,
even though both proposed contracts have been on the table for
over a month, and our proposals have been known to the other side
for more than six months." In December, Hall wrote to Bill
Sheehan of the Cincinnati AFL-CIO Labor Council asking for his
assistance. "When the AAUP Board," he said, "and
Negotiating Team met with you and...[Jim] Wolfe, we discussed the
possibility of the Labor Council putting out a general statement
of support.... We think this would be valuable...if negotiations
bog down again."
It was not until April, 1976, that the two sides finally
reached agreement; the 98th and final bargaining
session was on April 14, 1976. The two year contract, forty-six
pages in all and signed by Jane Early for the University Board of
Directors and President Warren Bennis and by James Hall and
George Engberg for the AAUP, provided for a salary increase of
$1500 plus an additional 4.8 percent of the faculty member's
1974-75 academic year base salary retroactive to September 1,
1975. In 1976-1977 the increase would be 6 percent with another 1
percent for merit. The University also for the first time would
pay for medical insurance, and minimum salaries were set at
$10,000, $12,000, $15,000 and $19,000 for the four professorial
ranks. Reappointment, promotion, tenure and grievance procedures
were codified, and there was a detailed process for "faculty
retrenchment under conditions of financial exigency." But
nothing was said about a $300,000 fund to deal with salary and
rank inequities based on sex or race. On April 23 and 24, 1976,
the AAUP Bargaining Unit voted 1056 to 44 to ratify the 1975-1977
AAUP-University Contract.
III. THE STRIKE OF 1979
When faculty members went on strike on October 25, 1979, after
almost ten months of negotiations, they did not know what to
expect. All they knew was what the University Administration had
offered them was unacceptable. The negotiation of the third
contract, since collective bargaining had been established at the
University of Cincinnati, demonstrated the unity of the faculty
and its determination to do everything it had to do to fight for
its rights. In order to assess the reasons for the strike, it is
crucial to take a brief look at the course of negotiations for
the 1979-81 University of Cincinnati-AAUP Bargaining Agreement.
In January of 1979, the AAUP Negotiating Team made its initial
proposal for a contract to the Administration's Negotiating Team.
The economic proposal asked for an increase in salaries of
approximately 26.4 percent over the next two years. From today's
point of view this may seem like a rather high figure, but
inflation was around 13 percent annually at that time and
predictions put it at about 9-10% for the future. Therefore,
anything in the vicinity of 26 percent would not have meant an
actual pay raise, but rather keeping up with inflation. As a
matter of fact, faculty at UC had lost ground, with salary
increases of around 5.5 percent in 1977-78 and approximately 7
percent in 1978-79. At the same time, inflation had been well
into double digits, and faculty had, therefore, lost purchasing
power over the previous two years. The AAUP held that its
demanded increase of 26.4 percent over two years would merely put
the faculty's income to where it should have been. This reasoning
was the Chapter's main argument in supporting its demands,
stressing that it was not unreasonable - the faculty just needed
to keep up with inflation. The proposal did not specify a
percentage figure, but was broken down into percentage points
plus fixed dollar amounts. It also included a provision to enable
lower income faculty to make up some ground. The AAUP proposal
also included merit pay of 3 percent annually and promotional
increases of 6.5 percent or $1,000, whichever was higher. Among
other issues, the AAUP also proposed an improvement of fringe
benefits, including dental insurance that would be paid by the
University and free parking.
In the Chapter Board Minutes of February 2, 1979, there is a
notation, referring to negotiations, that "in general,
things seem to be going well," but it was not until May 24,
after almost five months of negotiations, that the Administration
introduced its first economic proposal: approximately 1.5 percent
across the board increase per year. The 1.5 percent was presented
in dollar amounts. The proposal also contained merit pay and
bonuses. The average increase for faculty would have been around
3.5 percent for 1979-80 and about 4.3 percent for 1980-81. This
offer was immediately rejected by the AAUP, and on May 31, the
Chapter censured President Winkler "for the callousness of
his offer of 1.5% across the board," after "some 250
sign-carrying faculty members rallied outside the administration
building."
During the course of negotiations, apart from the
controversial economic issue, non-economic issues were also
highly contested between the AAUP and the UC Administration. The
Administration's proposals were geared towards weakening the
faculty's position within the University community. One of the
crucial issues was the Administration's proposal that academic
programs could be discontinued at the discretion of the
University, and that affected faculty could be fired. The
Administration also proposed "the periodic review of tenured
faculty" which prompted outrage among senior faculty
members. Another point of contention was the Chapter's demand
that grievances, if won by the grievant but overturned by the
President, should go to arbitration. To prevent arbitrary
decisions, the AAUP also proposed that the President and Board of
Trustees be bound by RPT criteria, in cases where a faculty
member was recommended for promotion on all levels below them.
In the months that followed, the AAUP accused the
Administration of stalling. This assumption was further fueled by
the fact that the Administration gave other University employees
dental coverage and raises that were significantly higher than
what they offered the AAUP. The Chapter concluded, therefore,
that the Administration was not interested in the well being of
faculty members. After all, they were an integral part of the
University, the educators of the institution. The Administration
claimed that the Chapter really did not represent the faculty,
because not every faculty member was an AAUP member, and doubted
the validity of AAUP's position in bargaining. As a result of the
Administration's claim and its stalling tactics, the Chapter
leadership heavily recruited faculty members to join the AAUP. It
realized that the University would take its concerns more
seriously if membership were higher. The result was stunning:
between April and October the number of AAUP members rose by
approximately 23 percent, from 535 to 656 .
By early October little progress had been made. Notable only
was the Administration's withdrawal of its proposal for the
periodic review of tenured faculty. On October 2, the Chapter
passed a resolution to censure the University Administration and
the Board of Trustees "for their failure to conduct
bargaining in 'good faith'" and supported a vote of no
confidence in President Winkler. On October 4, the Administration
unilaterally called for mediation. Its most recent offer of 4
percent increases across the board for each of the two years of
the contract was still on the table. The AAUP, which at that
point was waiting for a response from the Administration to its
latest proposal, was convinced that there was still room for
negotiations and rejected the call for mediation. Despite its
hope for achieving a settlement by continuing to negotiate, the
AAUP called for a Strike Vote Authorization Meeting, after the
Administration failed to show any positive movement. The meeting
took place on October 14, and the result was overwhelmingly in
favor of authorizing the Chapter to call a strike, with 631
yes-votes and 60 no-votes.
The AAUP did not want to strike because it was aware of all
the problems and concerns that such a radical action might cause,
but it also felt that faculty members had to demonstrate that
they were serious in their refusal to accept a virtual pay cut of
approximately 10 percent each year. In light of these facts,
negotiations continued with a lingering hope that a settlement
could be reached to avoid a strike. However, on October 21, the
Administration made its final offer: increases of 6 percent
across-the board for each of the two years. The AAUP rejected
this offer and gave an ultimatum. An acceptable settlement had to
be reached by 9 p.m., October 24, or the Chapter would call a
strike, beginning at 7 a.m. on the 25th. The AAUP
agreed to bargain around the clock to avoid a strike.
On the morning of October 25, many faculty members were
worried about how many of their peers would go out on strike. If
only a handful had walked the picket lines, the strike would have
been a disaster. The AAUP Chapter had asked its attorney, James
Paradise, about possible legal consequences of going on strike
since, under the Ferguson Act, striking was illegal in Ohio.
Paradise advised the Chapter that, theoretically, faculty could
be fired for striking, but he affirmed that the likelihood of
repercussions was very slim. In order to invoke the Ferguson Act,
the employer had to notify its employees by mail that they were
engaging "in such prohibited activity." Moreover, once
the employer made this decision, it could not retract it.
Paradise also stated that he was not aware of any strike with a
large number of participants where the Ferguson Act had been
invoked. Therefore, the only concern remaining seemed to be the
willingness of the faculty to come together and show solidarity
in the first strike ever at the University of Cincinnati. All the
worries and fears proved unwarranted.
On the first day of the strike, only about 33 percent of
classes were held. The Administration proclaimed that the
University would operate as usual and its percentage figures were
different from those quoted by the faculty. But even the
Administration had to concede that faculty participation was
high. Support for the faculty was immense too. Although the
student government officially opposed the strike, which coincided
with mid-term exam time, many students supported the decision of
the faculty. Support came from all sides. The weekend of
homecoming at the University of Cincinnati, with which the AAUP
said the strike would not interfere, demonstrated that the
community at large supported the cause of the faculty. Concerts
at CCM were cancelled out of respect for the picket lines. Signs
in support of striking faculty were carried during the homecoming
parade. Letters of support were sent to the strike headquarters.
Local unions showed their backing. The Cincinnati Federation of
Teachers, the AFL-CIO, and the Cincinnati Firefighters among many
others supported the efforts of the faculty. Nationwide support
from other AAUP offices and unions rolled into the strike
headquarters. Many telegrams and letters poured into the office,
all emphasizing that they fully backed the faculty. One of the
telegrams pinpointed the interest and support shown: "We are
with you in spirit. Hang tough. Can we Help?" from Wells
Keddie, President of the Rutgers University Chapter, AAUP. The
AAUP publicly stated that the strike was not about money alone.
The crucial non-economic issues also had not yet been settled.
And these were just as important as the economic concerns.
As the strike continued, faculty participation increased and
the sense of unity among faculty grew. It inspired one striking
faculty member to write a poem, with references like the
following:
Hearts and minds these hours entwined,
Kindred souls, marching together,
Fears forgotten for these hours,
Spirits brightened in these hours,
We will win.
(The whole text of this poem may be found in Appendix III)
Even the newspapers, which had favored the Administration in
their reports about the negotiation process, admitted that the
faculty stood firm and that participation was high. Faculty
members, with sandwich boards attached to them, walking the
picket lines, received help from supporters who supplied coffee
and donuts. Passersby also showed their support, and many people
were persuaded to refrain from crossing the picket lines. As the
strikers walked the picket lines, negotiations continued. In the
process, the Administration, among other things, withdrew its
proposal for reduction of academic programs and agreed that RPT
decisions must be based on RPT criteria. The University also
"agreed to an internal grievance review panel with authority
to review procedural issues and make procedural recommendations
binding on the President and the Board", in cases were
grievances were rejected by the President. In turn, the AAUP
withdrew its proposal for agency shop.
On the night of the 30th, a tentative agreement was
reached. That night, at the Vernon Manor Hotel, the
Administration stated that "the bag was empty,"
indicating that it was not going to move any further on economic
issues. The AAUP Chief Negotiator, Sandy Golding, then proposed
.5% for merit and the Administration agreed to add it. The strike
was over. The settlement came just in time to satisfy an
ultimatum made by student leaders. The students put pressure on
the Administration to settle with the faculty; if not, they would
take the case to court in order to end the strike.
The economic settlement included a salary increase of
approximately 18 percent over the two years of the contract. The
AAUP was satisfied with the outcome, not only about the economic
terms, but especially about the non-economic terms which would
ultimately strengthen the faculty position. Faculty members did
not lose any pay for the days that they were on strike, but had
to agree to make up for lost time.
All in all, the strike of 1979, the first at the University of
Cincinnati, was a big success. It gave the faculty a boost in
morale and proved vital in solidifying the faculty's position
within the University community. However, the AAUP and the
faculty did not enjoy going on strike. They just did what was
necessary and they did not do it easily. Lowell Leake, the
President of the AAUP at the time, was quoted in the newspaper as
saying that "We've been under terrible pressure... We're
responsible people. We wanted to get back to the classrooms. This
has been one of the most emotional experiences of my life."
IV. YEARS OF ACHIEVEMENT
The year 1980 was a pivotal one in the Chapter's history. In
February, 1980, Nancy Keely resigned her staff position and the
Chapter retained Dr. Betsy Sato, initially part-time and by the
end of the year as full-time Executive Director. At the same time
James Paradise retired from active practice, and in April the
Chapter hired labor lawyer Donald Mooney to serve as its
attorney.
In order to support staff, defray the costs of negotiations,
and provide other services, the current dues level of 0.75% of a
bargaining unit member's salary was introduced in 1988, and two
years later Chapter offices were moved from the Tangeman
University Center to 201 Old Service Building. In 1996, the
conference room was dedicated to the late Professor John Trela
who had served the Chapter long and well as a representative to
the University Budget and Priorities Committee. The portrait of
Professor Trela looks down on the Chapter Board of Directors when
it meets, and seems to be saying, "do the right thing."
The period from 1977-1993 was one of new challenges and new
innovations. Librarians at the University voted to join the
Bargaining Unit in April, 1977, and in September, 1989, were
granted faculty status and eligibility for tenure. A joint
faculty-administration committee was formed under the 1981-1982
contract to identify "possible salary inequities involving
women and minorities," and in September, 1982, the committee
recommended that increases totalling $13,300 be given to nine
women and one minority male faculty member. But despite efforts
by this and later committees to resolve it, problems of salary
and promotion inequity based on sex, race and ethnic origin
persisted.
From 1977 to 1993, there were negotiations resulting in eight
AAUP-University contracts. Perhaps the most creative clauses
involved a mediation process, first included in the 1986-1989
contract and a sick leave bank that made its appearance in the
1989-1992 agreement. Mediation would first be required in
attempting to resolve complaints not relating to reappointment,
promotion and tenure, to reduce the number of formal hearings.
The sick leave bank would give faculty members access to
compensated time-off up to 150 days for a single illness when
they had exhausted their accumulated sick leave. At the same
time, accumulated sick leave was capped at 300 days, and requests
for use of the bank for more than 150 days were subject to the
approval of the AAUP and the University Contract Administrator.
The 1989-1992 contract was also the result of a new form of
negotiations. The AAUP and University Administration teams were
trained in the "win-win" type of bargaining, leading
ultimately to the shortest period of negotiations with a contract
signed in July, 1989.
In between contract negotiations, the Chapter was almost
constantly involved in representing Bargaining Unit members in
grievances and in disciplinary hearings. Throughout the decade of
the 1980's approximately 180 grievances were brought, involving
denials of reappointment, promotion and tenure, allegations of
unfair merit awards and academic freedom violations, and proposed
disciplinary actions. Dr. Sato carried most of the burden of
representing grievants, while at other times Bargaining Unit
members received the assistance of voluntary counselors.
There were also two important arbitrations of contractual
disputes between the Chapter and the University Administration.
Both were resolved in the AAUP's favor. In 1985, after the
passage of the Ohio Public Employees Collective Bargaining
Statute, the University attempted to remove department heads,
supervisory librarians, and part-time faculty from the AAUP
Bargaining Unit. The University argued that since the bargaining
statute barred these categories of employees from belonging to
collective units, they should be excluded from the Cincinnati
AAUP organization. On the other hand, the AAUP contended that
department heads, supervisory librarians and certain part-time
faculty were grandfathered into the Chapter's Bargaining Unit and
could not be unilaterally removed from it.
The arbitrator's straightforward award was handed down on
March 22, 1986. "The AAUP," the award stated, "did
not make a binding bargain with the University for the exclusion
of department head, division head, school head, and library
supervisory positions, and part-time faculty from the existing
Bargaining Unit..., and these positions are grandfathered into
the Unit by the current recognition language of Article 1 of the
[Collective Bargaining] Agreement."
Again in October, 1991, President Joseph Steger unilaterally
cancelled all paid academic leaves for the year 1992-1993.
Fifty-five leaves had already been approved by college deans, and
the University's status as a research institution was at stake.
While conceding that it had made no effort to bargain with the
AAUP Chapter in regard to its new and "difficult"
policy, the Steger Administration argued that the cancellations
were necessary to "preserve the fiscal integrity of the
University." The AAUP retorted that cancellations would not
save funds for the University, but were "simply 'political'
and symbolic." More significant, the Chapter contended that
the cancellations violated two articles of the 1989-1992 AAUP/UC
Contract. In June, 1992, at the arbitration hearing, a faculty
member testified that his leave had been cancelled even though he
had arranged for other faculty to cover his classes at no cost to
the University. Administration representatives admitted that the
suspension of academic leaves was not "aimed at achieving
budget savings."
On July 18, 1992, Arbitrator James Feree ruled that, in
unilaterally cancelling the 1992-1993 academic leaves, the Steger
Administration had contravened contractual guarantees. He
thereupon directed the University to review the 55 leave
proposals "submitted to the Provost using criteria which
have been applied in previous years."
Dedicated to a unique marital and professional partnership,
the James and Charlotte Paradise Scholarship Award was
established in 1980 and revived in its present form seven years
later. James and Charlotte Paradise served the Chapter
respectively as legal counsel for five years and three collective
bargaining agreements and as legal secretary. The Scholarship is
given to a University of Cincinnati student with a good academic
record who "exemplifies the unselfish commitment to
community service, concern for others and willingness to defend
human rights and civil liberties that have characterized the
lives of James and Charlotte Paradise." Two other honors
given periodically by the Chapter are the long-standing Dillwyn
Ratcliff award for the defense of academic freedom, and the more
recent Maita Levine award for "persistent loyalty and
commitment to the goals and ideals" of the AAUP and
"for courageous leadership and service over many years to
the UC chapter."
V. THE STRIKE OF 1993
As in 1989, the 1992 negotiations for the University of
Cincinnati/AAUP bargaining agreement were conducted utilizing the
mutual gains method. However, the negotiations dragged on for
months and finally ended in a rejection of the proposed contract
and a strike at the end of March, 1993. During the months of
negotiations, the AAUP accused the University Administration of
not abiding by the mutual gains method, which "the faculty,
with great reservation" had agreed to test in 1989, and
"the AAUP board [had] agreed to use the process [again] in
1992." The AAUP also claimed that the Administration had
demonstrated during the previous few years that it did not care
about the faculty. In the end the faculty were pushed to go on
strike, as it did in 1979. This time though, things evolved
differently than in 1979.
The relationship between the faculty and the University
Administration had been tense and had culminated in the faculty's
vote of no-confidence in the Administration in 1991. The vote,
72% in favor of no-confidence, derived from the University's
threat to eliminate sabbatical leaves without consulting with the
faculty and to not reappoint 177 junior faculty members. The
Administration justified these provisions with the explanation of
"budget restraints." At roughly the same time however,
new buildings, most prominently the renovation of Nippert
Stadium, were authorized. The faculty had enough and its dismay
resulted in a vote of no-confidence, in which over 1,000 faculty
members participated. Therefore, the negotiations of 1992 took
place in a tainted atmosphere. Moreover, the AAUP claimed that it
had no knowledge of the real positions of the Administration. It
appeared that the Administration wanted to keep the faculty in
the dark about their intentions. The faculty concluded that it
was not really "mutual gains" but rather a one-way gain
situation, in which the Administration had all the advantage.
In the end and after mediation, the contract that was
negotiated proposed an increase in salaries of 0% in the first
year, 2% in the second year and 4% in the third year. More
importantly, the non-academic issues were very controversial. The
tentative contract provided that during disciplinary procedures,
a faculty member could be suspended without pay, before a hearing
had even taken place. Another provision allowed for faculty
members to switch from tenure-track to non-tenure track
positions, therefore posing a possible threat to tenure. There
were also provisions about Management Rights, Governance and
Maintenance of Practices, all aimed towards strengthening the
Administration's position and limiting the faculty's role within
the University. $2.8 million were to be granted as incentives to
retirees who stayed at the University the longest. About 25
faculty members would have benefitted from this incentive and
would have been discouraged from retiring at a "normal"
retiring age.
In February of 1993, the 778 voting AAUP members, by mail
ballot, rejected the tentative contract 379 to 239. The weeks
leading up to the vote were devoted to letters and flyers,
informing the membership about the content and implications of
the contract. There seemed no plausible reason to endorse a
contract that would infringe on faculty rights and principles.
The AAUP Board of Directors hoped that refocusing on bargaining
by both sides would quickly conclude the process and provide for
a fair contract. President Steger seemed to share this notion and
"so informed the Faculty Senate." The Chapter organized
a new Negotiating Team and was soon ready to negotiate. However,
the new Chief Negotiator, Bill Joiner, also stated that
"mutual gains bargaining is dead!" and that it had
"weakened our position and gave the administration every
advantage, and the outcome indicates they pressed it to the
fullest extent." Despite President Steger's earlier
statement, the Administration Team was not in place quickly, and
negotiations stalled and did not resume until early March. The
AAUP leadership frequently stated that if results were not
reached quickly, it would push for a strike the first week of
spring quarter. In June, 1992, the Board of Directors had been
authorized by AAUP members to call a strike. On March 16, 1993,
they reaffirmed their authorization in a meeting at which more
than 400 faculty members were present. 97% of them voted in favor
of strike authorization.
The Administration moved neither on salary nor on non-economic
issues. There was a perception among faculty members that the
University wanted revenge for their vote of no-confidence in
1991, and that the Administration was under the impression that
the "AAUP cannot get a significant percentage of faculty to
walk out and stay out." The night before spring quarter was
scheduled to begin, the AAUP Board of Directors voted to strike
starting the following morning. The strike committee was well
prepared. Headquarters were set up, signs were ready and so were
faculty members. They went on strike for the first week of the
spring quarter of the 1992-93 academic year. Similar to 1979,
strike support was strong and came from all over the University
community. The teamsters and other local unions supported the
faculty's efforts. Other AAUP chapters such as Ohio State
University, Bowling Green State University and Central State
University sent letters of support. AAUP colleagues from other
campuses came to Cincinnati to support the strikers in person.
Among them was a delegation from Central State University,
including Ohio Conference AAUP President David Rubin. They
visited the strike headquarters at Old St. George Church and
encouraged picketers on the lines.
Many students signed a "Student in Support of the Faculty
Petition" which stated that "we, the students of the
University of Cincinnati, support the Faculty in their attempt to
negotiate a fair contract, and in their strike. We support their
efforts to secure reasonable salaries and health benefits,
continued democratic governance of the University, and leaves
which make it possible to maintain academic excellence. We call
upon the Administration to bargain fairly and in good faith with
the faculty." Parents of students also publicly backed
faculty members by declaring "they are teachers. They equip
our students with knowledge to face the tough challenges as they
prepare to move on into the world. They deserve respect."
Although support was strong and the faculty's morale was good,
there were serious concerns which had to be dealt with. The
Administration filed a request with the State Employment
Relations Board (SERB) to determine if the strike was
unauthorized, and if the contract between the University and the
AAUP had been improperly terminated. However SERB held on March
30, that "the Board finds that the strike is authorized.
Specifically, the Board finds that the Union's notice of intent
to strike served also as a notice of contract termination, and
that the contract was expired at the time of the strike."
The finding boosted the spirit of faculty members, but economic
needs became more and more crucial, since those who were on
strike were not paid by the University. The Chapter, therefore,
set up an Emergency Fund for striking faculty members to which
people were encouraged to contribute. The AAUP was able to supply
interest-free loans to faculty members who applied for financial
assistance.
Faculty participation was not as overwhelming as during the
1979 strike but it was still high. According to the Cincinnati
Enquirer, the AAUP stated that 70% of the faculty honored the
strike, whereas the University claimed that 65% of scheduled
classes were held. Although these numbers differed significantly
and are not as impressive as the ones from the first strike, they
still illustrate that the faculty was determined to once again
fight for its rights. Negotiations continued while the strike was
in effect and, after one week, a settlement was reached.
Economically, nothing was accomplished. Salary increases of 0% in
the first year, 2% in the second year, and 4% in the third year
remained. The crucial changes were among the non-economic issues.
The contract provided that during grievance procedures a faculty
member could not be suspended without pay prior to a hearing;
there would be academic leaves and the $2.8 million, which had
been designated for retirement incentives, was to be used for
medical and dental benefits for retirees. Moreover, the switch
from tenure to non-tenure track positions was eliminated except
at the College of Medicine where such a provision had long been
in effect.
There was one more victory for the faculty. The
"Administration refused to negotiate anything about back pay
or return to work as part of the strike settlement." When
the strike was over, the Administration sent a memorandum to
those faculty members who went on strike telling them that they
were expected to complete a full quarter of instruction, meaning
that they should make up for lost classes even though they would
be "docked 1/160" of their annual salary for each day
they went out. The AAUP filed for arbitration over this issue.
The University's calculation assumed that faculty work consisted
only of teaching, although it was specified in the contract that
faculty members spend a substantial amount of their time on
research, governance and public service. The AAUP, represented by
its attorney Donald Mooney, claimed that if faculty members were
required to make up for lost time of instruction during the
strike, they should be entitled to full back pay, since the
strike was restricted to provision of teaching, and faculty
members continued to pursue their other responsibilities while
the strike went on. The arbitrator held in favor of the AAUP. The
University did not accept the arbitrator's decision and
threatened to go to court. After numerous talks and negotiation
sessions, the AAUP and the Administration settled and agreed that
striking faculty members would receive 85% of the salary which
had been withheld because of the strike.
The second strike of the faculty at the University of
Cincinnati was as equally successful as the first strike in 1979.
It strengthened the faculty's position and promoted solidarity
among faculty members. They did not strike easily because of
concerns for their mission of educating students and their own
financial well being. Although faculty members risked losing
wages and the University community's support, they stood up for
their rights and principles because they were pushed by the
University Administration to take the least wanted measure to
support their demands, a strike. In the end, the strike forced
the Administration to take the faculty and its concerns seriously
and to go back to the table and negotiate in good faith.
VI. THE CULMINATION
In August, 1994, Dr. Sato, after serving as Executive Director
for fourteen years, resigned, and her position was filled by
David Sterling, recently retired from the A&S History
Department. Sterling, first in an acting position, and then as
Executive Director, held office until May, 1996, when David
Rubin, retired from Central State University, succeeded him as
Executive Director. Other Chapter members have been and continue
to be prominent in state and national AAUP offices. Maita Levine
was President of the Ohio Conference in 1978-1979, First
Vice-President of the National AAUP in 1986-1988, Chairperson of
National's Committee W, 1994-1997, and was honored in 1996 with
the Marilyn Sternberg award, given by the National Collective
Bargaining Congress to an AAUP member "who best demonstrates
the concern for human rights, the courage, persistence, political
foresight, imagination, collective bargaining knowledge and
skills...." James Hall and David Rubin also served as
President of the Ohio Conference respectively in 1984-1985 and
1992-1993. James Cebula serves on the National Council of the
AAUP and its Executive Board, while John Brackett is a member of
the Board and Treasurer of the Collective Bargaining Congress.
In the aftermath of the 1993 strike, the Chapter negotiated
two contracts with the University Administration. With James
Sullivan, College of Applied Sciences, as the Chapter's Chief
Negotiator, bargaining for the 1995-1998 agreement went
relatively smoothly. Negotiation of the 1998-2001 contract was
more difficult. Until the fall of 1998, after several months of
meetings, the University Administration stood by its offer of a
salary increase of zero, one percent, one percent for the three
years of the agreement. It also proposed to abandon the sick
leave bank and the health plan by which faculty members could
choose their own physicians and their own hospitals. It wanted to
increase co-payments for prescription drugs and to reduce the age
limit for dependent children from 25 to 23.
These proposals, among others, were totally unacceptable to
the AAUP Negotiating Team, the Chapter Board and the faculty in
general. In September, 1998, after the expiration date of the
1995-1998 contract, AAUP's Chief Negotiator, John Brackett, on
behalf of the Chapter, declared an impasse in bargaining; a
mediator was appointed, but still there was no progress. On
Sunday, October 18, 1998, approximately 250 chapter members met
at Old St. George Church, listened to a rousing speech by
Professor Amy Elder and voted to authorize a strike. "If we
are," she said, "to combat an intransigence that does
not respond to reason, that does not respond to fairness, we must
use our just reasons to join hands to oppose it."
It had always been conventional wisdom that the faculty would
not strike for economic reasons. But 0, 1 percent, l percent was
regarded as a gratuitous insult in a year when salary increases
at public universities throughout the state were in the three to
five percent range. Confronted by the serious threat of a
November walk out, the University Administration agreed on
October 27, to a salary increase of two percent, three and a half
percent, three and a half percent with the first year increase
given as a fixed dollar amount and the second and third years as
a percent. All of the proposals for health insurance
modifications were withdrawn.
After some further delays, there were improvements in
disciplinary procedures with the burden of proof placed on the
Administration. And there was a language clarification in regard
to prior service and new requirements that give librarians more
consultative rights when their job descriptions change.
As the University of Cincinnati Chapter of the AAUP celebrates
the twenty-fifth anniversary of collective bargaining on the eve
of the millennium, it faces unresolved issues and new and in some
cases ominous developments. A generation of faculty members has
taken early retirement, and the Chapter must offset the loss to
its membership roll. The University Administration has
periodically proposed the removal of the College of Medicine
faculty from the Bargaining Unit, and the Chapter has sought to
resolve the problem of salary and rank inequity for women and
minorities and has asked for fringe benefits for domestic
partners. Neither has thus far been successful. There are
questions involving distance learning and intellectual property.
And there are the more basic issues of university governance and
the corporatization of higher education and the increasing
reliance on and exploitation of part-time faculty.
Through periodic luncheon meetings, the annual basketball
parties, the faculty follies and, although no one wanted them,
the two strikes, the Chapter has developed a real sense of
community, committed to academic freedom, faculty governance, and
due process. Its reliance on democratic processes represents the
best that a free society has to offer and reaffirms the promises
it made to the University of Cincinnati faculty before the
collective bargaining election in November, 1974.
It would be foolhardy to underestimate the determination and
the power of the faculty of the University of Cincinnati. With
the courage, initiative, inventiveness and sheer hard work that
characterized the collective bargaining campaign and the first
negotiations in the 1970's and that sustained the chapter in the
decades of the 1980's and 1990's, the University of Cincinnati
faculty and the AAUP can look forward to the new century with
hope and confidence.
APPENDIX I
PRESIDENTS
1971/72 Daniel Hershey
1972/73 Lowell Leake
1973/74 David Sterling
1974/75 Maita Levine
1975/76 James Hall
1976/77 Herbert Shapiro
1977/78 David Hartleb
1978/80 Lowell Leake
1980/82 Verna Armstrong
1982/84 Sally Moffitt
1984/86 Robert Hornyak
1986/88 Lowell Leake
1988/90 Barbara Schare
1990/94 Norman Murdoch
1994/96 Maita Levine
1996/2000 James Cebula
APPENDIX II
CHIEF NEGOTIATORS
1975/77 Contract William Joiner
1977/79 Contract William Aeschbacher
1979/81 Contract Sanford Golding
1981/82 Contract Marvin Garrett
1982/85 Contract Jonathan Kamholtz
1984/86 Contract James Hall
1986/89 Contract Barbara Schare
1989/92 Contract Norman Murdoch
1993/95 Contract Roger Wright/William Joiner
1995/98 Contract James Sullivan
1998/2001 Contract John
Brackett
APPENDIX III
"STRIKE" by Marion Brown, 1979 (printed
with the author's permission)
- 7:00 a.m.
-
Standing on the line
Cold rising through my bones,
Dark hours, murky hours,
Loneliness creeping round the corner;
Haunting echoes,
Taunting curses,
Nearer, nearer,
But
A word, a smile, a wave
Warms trembling bodies -
It's easier to be brave.
- 7:55 a.m.
-
Don't cross my line, friend,
Don't cross our line,
Turn around for your sake
Not just for mine.
Spurn intimidation,
Scorn manipulation
Stand firm in this fight,
Don't waver or quaver,
Do what is right.
Don't cross my line, friend,
Don't cross our line,
Turn around for your sake,
You still have time.
- 8:45 a.m.
-
The pulse quickens,
The heart sickens,
The enemy approaches
Encroaching on my line,
Once vowed to stand tall, not fall,
Now marching to their tune:
Faint-hearted soul
Sold out.
- 10:00 a.m.
-
Let us break bread together:
Coffee steaming in plastic cups,
Donuts rolled in sugar,
Filled with jelly, with nuts,
Twists with crunchy covers,
Sweetrolls fruited full;
Festive moments sealed with sweetness.
- 11:00 a.m.
-
Time's up!
Time to leave comraderie behind,
Hearts and minds these hours entwined,
Kindred souls, marching together,
Fears forgotten for these hours,
Spirits brightened in these hours,
We will win.
Alone now.
Walking alone now.
Badges stashed in trunks and closets,
Identity lost for now;
Alone now. Alone now.
Spirit, sustain me until tomorrow.
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