| GEO Gears Up for a Spring Election
 By Ben Scott
 This fall, the Graduate Employees' 
                            Organization, IFT/AFT (GEO) at the University of Illinois 
                            is doing something it has never done before: preparing 
                            for a union election. As early as the spring semester, 
                            graduate employees will be able to democratically 
                            elect union representation. In so doing, they will 
                            fulfill the goal of nearly a decade of organization 
                            and agitation, to establish a firm voice in the administration 
                            of their working lives. For the first time, the conditions 
                            of graduate student labor-most importantly health 
                            care, workloads, grievance procedures, wages, and 
                            work environments-will be made to answer, at least 
                            in part, to those who live within them. "The 
                            logic behind our cause is plain and simple, fair and 
                            reasonable," says GEO officer Jeff Scott of the 
                            Department of Social Work. "That's why so many 
                            folks are coming out to help with this election campaign." 
                           The upcoming election represents 
                            a huge victory for organized labor in this community 
                            and the culmination of many years of struggle, setbacks, 
                            and perseverance. A generation of GEO activists has 
                            come and gone since some 3,226 graduate employees 
                            singed on to a petition calling for just such a union 
                            election back in 1996. In the intervening years, the 
                            conflict between graduate employees and university 
                            administrators played out on many fronts: on campus, 
                            in the courtroom, and in the state house. In 1998, 
                            GEO held a "Work-In" at the Henry Administration 
                            Building, garnering over 1,000 letters of support. 
                            In 1999, the Illinois State House of Representatives 
                            passed a bill confirming the employee status of graduate 
                            assistants. The bill, however, never made it to a 
                            floor vote in the State Senate after failing to emerge 
                            from the Rules Committee. Numerous legal battles involving 
                            the Illinois Educational Labor Relations Board, the 
                            Illinois Appellate and Supreme Courts resulted in 
                            an unacceptably small potential bargaining unit of 
                            merely 300 graduate employees. With no progress and 
                            no compromise in sight, the GEO reluctantly called 
                            a 2-day work-stoppage in November 2001 toencourage the university to open negotiations. Finally, 
                            on the morning of March 13, 2002, GEO activists occupied 
                            the Swanlund Administration Building. That afternoon, 
                            in a now legendary moment, representatives of the 
                            university reversed years of entrenched anti-union 
                            policy and came to negotiate with the GEO-in their 
                            own boardroom, bedecked with a union banner.
 On the strength of a handwritten 
                            agreement penned that evening on a yellow legal pad, 
                            a GEO bargaining team went behind closed doors for 
                            almost six weeks of intensive meetings with university 
                            administrators and lawyers. On May 1st, the membership 
                            ratified the bargaining unit that had been painstakingly 
                            won in the talks and celebrated the upcoming election 
                            that the university had agreed to accept. Teaching 
                            Assistants and Graduate Assistants will be included 
                            in the unit-the group of graduate employees whose 
                            job descriptions permit them to vote in a union election 
                            according to the negotiated regulations. The size 
                            and composition of what will become the graduate union 
                            (should the election be successful) compares favorably 
                            to those of the more than 30 other campus unions around 
                            the country-including Big Ten neighbors Wisconsin 
                            and Michigan. The GEO is confident that those graduate 
                            employees not included in the unit, most notably Research 
                            Assistants, will still benefit from union representation 
                            and agitation as victories won on behalf of members 
                            will benefit the entire graduate student body. As 
                            Rosemary Braun, GEO Co-President and Research Assistant 
                            in Physics said, "All graduate employees, regardless 
                            of their job category, will benefit from a unionized 
                            campus where grads have an official seat at the table 
                            where decisions are made about their pay, health care, 
                            workloads, and other issues relating to their vital 
                            roles as academic employees."  The importance of the opportunity 
                            to officially elect union representation is not lost 
                            on the GEO or the graduate students it represents. 
                            Record numbers have come forward to volunteer their 
                            time and energy, to serve on coordinating committees, 
                            to organizing within their departments, and to spread 
                            the word to students generally about the purpose of 
                            the union and the significance of the vote. (Though 
                            the GEO must still negotiate with the university to 
                            determine the exact dates of the election, it will 
                            likely happen in the middle of the spring semester, 
                            administered by the Illinois Educational Labor Relations 
                            Board.) Among the new activists are long-time graduate 
                            students who have come forward to assist in the final 
                            push after years of quiet support for GEO efforts. 
                            But there are also many new students joining the union 
                            cause, glad to have the chance to enrich their future 
                            at the university. It is a high water mark for the 
                            GEO, in membership, activism, and campus-wide support. The momentum generated by the victories 
                            of last spring has swelled campus-wide support for 
                            the GEO to a critical mass. Concerted agitation has 
                            finally yielded the avenue toward an established institution. 
                            Organized labor in the graduate student body is no 
                            longer compelled to defend its position, for it is 
                            now well understood and accepted, even within the 
                            university administration. Graduate employees need 
                            only offer up the simpleprecepts that lie at the base of the campaigns for 
                            recognition and election: human decency and common 
                            sense. It is just and reasonable that graduate labor-the 
                            notoriously low-wage backbone of undergraduate education, 
                            faculty research, and the academic community-should 
                            be permitted a democratic voice in the conditions 
                            of their working lives. That graduate students now 
                            have the chance to make this ideal a reality at the 
                            ballot box is a long awaited confirmation of an unimpeachable 
                            principle: Solidarity.
 Ben Scott is a graduate employee in the 
                            Institute of Communications Research. Ben grew up 
                            in West Texas, though he is by lineage a third generation 
                            resident of Champaign-Urbana. In recent years he has 
                            lived in England and Germany, where he was fortunate 
                            to stumple upon a masters degreee as well as a caring 
                            and careful wife. Ben is currently a doctoral student 
                            who practices an active form of citizenship as often 
                            as possible. |