Law gives graduate students bargaining rights
Jessica Yorama
Daily Egyptian
A law passed last week gives some graduate teaching assistants the right
to collectively bargain through organizations such as unions.
Signed by Gov. Rod Blagojevich Wednesday, the law allows graduate
teaching assistants at public universities to meet for organized
bargaining, but it limits the right to those who teach university
classes.
The law, which went into effect immediately, recognized the
responsibility and time that comes with being a teaching assistant at
the university level. The duties often include regular responsibilities
of teachers including grading and instruction.
"If we had the rights of and got treated more like the regular
lecturers, it might take away some of the stress of being a grad
student," said Courtney Lanute, a graduate student studying French from
Chicago. "If they didn't have us, they'd end up having to pay a regular
professor to teach."
The law points out that though they are considered university employees
through the Illinois Educational Labor Relations Act, prior to the
signing they were not allowed to participate in unions.
It distinguishes between those who perform research, those who are
involved with pre-professional work and those who teach. Only those who
fall into the latter category, like Lanute, will be eligible for
bargaining under this law, which, Gov. Blagojevich said will "allow the
rights that all employees of public institutions deserve."
Don Sevener, president of the Illinois board of Higher Education said
the organization has not taken a particular stance on the issue.
However, he recognized its efforts in defining who is a university
employee and who is not.
Gerardo Cardenas, a press secretary for Blagojevich, agreed that the law
would provide more rights for graduate students who teach.
"I obviously think it is a positive in terms of all students' ability to
fight for organized rights," Cardenas said.
Although graduate students do have the same status as professors, Lanute
emphasized the importance of graduate assistant teachers for both
instruction and financial purposes.
"We do the work just like any other teacher does, and we're well on our
way having our master's or doctorate degrees," said Lanute, who teaches
Spanish. "It would make us feel more like they want us to stay and not
like they see us just as transient at the university."
During the spring semester, the Graduate Professional Student Council at
SIUC discussed unionization as a means to improve wages and working
conditions. The council has not yet voted on unionization.
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