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                      | GEO Throws Down the 
                          Gauntlet by Ben Scott 
                          The 
                        events of March 13, 2002, marked a sea change in the movement 
                        for labor rights at the University of Illinois, led by 
                        the actions of the Graduate Employeesí Organization 
                        (GEO). At 7:45 that morning, forty-one GEO members and 
                        supporters entered Swanlund Administration Building to 
                        stage a peaceful protest. Within minutes, the activists 
                        occupied the building and blocked the doorways, preventing 
                        any further access by university staff or administrators. 
                        They ran through the halls, distributing chocolates and 
                        statements of purpose to individuals already at their 
                        desks, including Chancellor Nancy Cantor and Vice Chancellor 
                        Charles Colbert. During the first hour, tension levels escalated as administrators 
                        scrambled to assess the situation and decide upon a course 
                        of action. By 9 a.m., Chancellor Cantor and the remaining 
                        Swanlund workers had departed to makeshift workspaces 
                        in other buildings. Their departure was serenaded by the 
                        chanting of the picket line, the contingent of GEO activists 
                        who had not entered the building. Armed with a megaphone, 
                        a guitar, and sloganed placards, these supporters kept 
                        up a marching public presence on the sidewalk in front 
                        of Swanlund throughout the day.
 "Our demand was simple," recalled GEO Co-President 
                        Uma Pimplaskar in a speech at the GEO membership meeting 
                        of March 27. "ìThe administration should negotiate 
                        an out-of-court settlement with the GEO that respects 
                        the express wishes of graduate employees for union representation." 
                        After eight years of organizing and agitating, a lengthy 
                        and ongoing legal battle with the university, a walkout, 
                        and a previous sit-in, GEO members had opted for direct 
                        action and meant to stand firm behind their commitments.
 When two officers of the University Police (a unionized 
                        organization) arrived and informed the protesters that 
                        they would soon be removed from the building, this resolve 
                        seemed likely to be tested. At 10 a.m., supporters rallied 
                        on the steps of Swanlund. GEO members were joined by undergraduates, 
                        faculty, staff, community labor representatives, and religious 
                        leaders. Speeches in support of the sit-in were delivered 
                        to a chorus of cheers, both outside and inside the building 
                        as the occupying group crowded to the doors to listen.
 It was generally expected that confrontation was imminent. 
                        However, by 11 a.m., all was still quiet. The police officers 
                        now reported that the administration had changed its mind. 
                        By early afternoon, there still had been no word from 
                        the administration. Those sitting in prepared not for 
                        the arrest they had initially expected, but for an extended 
                        stay at Swanlund. The atmosphere remained upbeat throughout 
                        the afternoon, despite the absence of any credible indication 
                        of what was to come.
 At 4 p.m., Provost Richard Herman arrived on the scene 
                        to deliver a statement to the protesters. Though he intended 
                        to enter, he was persuaded to read the statement aloud 
                        from the steps of the building. In a move that took the 
                        assembled crowd completely by surprise, Provost Herman 
                        indicated that the university was now ready to engage 
                        in discussions with the GEO over the size of the bargaining 
                        unit to be submitted for Labor Board approval and an eventual 
                        election. As Uma Pimplaskar recalled, "We were just 
                        stunned."
 The GEO had good reason to be stunned. For nearly seven 
                        years, the university has preferred to go to court rather 
                        than engage in discussion with GEO representatives. Moreover, 
                        the size of the bargaining unit -the number of graduate 
                        employees (teaching, research, and graduate assistants) 
                        eligible to join a union according to the Illinois Educational 
                        Labor Relations Board - has been a central point of contention. 
                        Primarily, the debate over who qualifies as an employee 
                        hinges on the type of labor performed. GEO has argued 
                        that all graduate students who receive a paycheck from 
                        the university for services rendered should have the right 
                        to unionize. The university prefers to characterize graduate 
                        labor as part of the educational experience, an apprenticeship 
                        of sorts that prepares future teachers and researchers 
                        for careers in the field.
 GEO has rightly noted that the position of the Board of 
                        Trustees denies the emergent logic of university administrations 
                        around the country: "corporatization." It is 
                        no longer even seriously disputed that fiscal concerns 
                        and the pursuit of profit are the prime movers in the 
                        booming education industry of the "New Economy". 
                        Public budget cuts, heavy investment from the private 
                        sector, micro-management of intellectual property, disproportionate 
                        financing of profitable disciplines, exclusive product 
                        licensing agreements, concentration of resources on high-profile 
                        athletic programs, and the "branding" of university 
                        monikers for sales promotion are now familiar trends on 
                        campus. In the classroom, the number of students is rising 
                        faster than tuition rates, while the number of expensive 
                        tenured faculty positions is plummeting. More and more, 
                        universities are dependent on the labor of non-tenured 
                        faculty, adjunct lecturers, and above all graduate students 
                        (who earn one-quarter to one-tenth the salary of a tenured 
                        faculty member) to conduct the education of undergraduate 
                        "clients." However, the ranks of graduate students 
                        swelling to meet these labor demands are confronted upon 
                        graduation by a declining number of available faculty 
                        positions - a serious Catch-22.
 Small wonder that grad students across the nation are 
                        unionizing, rejecting the label of apprentice and demanding 
                        recognition as paid labor. Over thirty campuses across 
                        the country currently have graduate employee unions, including 
                        New York University and the Universities of Wisconsin, 
                        Michigan, Iowa, Kansas, and California. Small wonder also 
                        that the GEO has rejected the university legal teamís 
                        argument that only 300 of the 5,500 grad employees qualify 
                        for a union bargaining unit. And so the debate has raged 
                        for years without formal negotiations ñ that is, 
                        until Provost Herman walked to the entrance of Swanlund 
                        Administration Building on March 13 and stated the administrationís 
                        readiness to talk.
 During the next ninety minutes, GEO leaders took stock 
                        of the situation. They had potentially just been handed 
                        the biggest victory in the history of the organization. 
                        But agreeing to talk to the GEO was hardly agreeing to 
                        recognize the GEO, and those sitting in were wary of abandoning 
                        their position of negotiating strength without adequate 
                        assurances. It was also known, however, that the Board 
                        of Trustees was in town the very body which had pressured 
                        its administrators not to deal with graduate unions. Television 
                        and newspaper reporters had been around the scene all 
                        day, including those from both Chicago dailies. There 
                        was reason to believe that a turning point was at hand.
 At 5:30 p.m., Provost Herman was escorted with his attorney 
                        to his own conference room on the second floor of Swanlund, 
                        now decorated with a GEO banner. GEO presented a counterproposal, 
                        developed on the fly after hasty phone calls to legal 
                        counsel, which included specific time lines for the proffered 
                        discussions and expected outcomes for union recognition. 
                        Uma Pimplaskar recalled the sentiment at the bargaining 
                        table:
 "After waiting eight years for some compromise with 
                        the University, weíd be damned if we would let 
                        them get away with fuzzy timelines and half promises." 
                        Four hours later an agreement was reached, and ratified 
                        by the occupants of the building. The Provost stated that 
                        it was not the sit-in which had prompted this turnabout 
                        in administration policy, but that he would appreciate 
                        it if GEO would clear out of the building. The agreement, 
                        written longhand on a yellow legal pad, reads as follows:
 "The University and the GEO will meet at least 
                        once a week beginning March 29, 2002, with a goal of reaching 
                        an agreement by April 28, 2002 on the composition of a 
                        bargaining unit. The parties hope that substantial progress 
                        will be made by April 15, 2002 so that said progress can 
                        be communicated to the various constituencies. The final 
                        agreement would be jointly submitted to the Labor Board 
                        to certify a bargaining unit and conduct an election."
 The GEO is now hopeful that the upcoming series of negotiations 
                        with the university will produce a bargaining unit acceptable 
                        both to the GEO membership and to the Labor Board. The 
                        years of work in pursuit of smaller class sizes, better 
                        training, reasonable wages, fair workloads, better health 
                        care, and the genuine respect of the university community 
                        may finally come to fruition in the form of a recognized 
                        union.
 In larger terms, many GEO activists view this struggle 
                        as the beginning of a counter-offensive against the forces 
                        of privatization that threaten to commodify public education. 
                        A union that redresses the atomization and exploitation 
                        of graduate labor is an integral part of the larger progressive 
                        movement for a public-spirited society. GEO is drawing 
                        a line in the sand around the sanctity of education: this 
                        far and no farther. Solidarity.
 
 The author owes a great debt to the detailed recollections 
                        of March 13 presented in the March 27 speech by GEO Co-President 
                        Uma Pimplaskar.
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