History
Prehistory
While graduate employee unions are commonplace outside of the United States they exist at less than half of American public universities, and there has been only one recognized union at a private American university. The first graduate employee union in the USA was formed in 1970 at the University of Wisconsin–Madison when theGET-UP 1.0
The movement between the years 2001-2004 was GET-UP's first campaign, where according to The Daily Pennsylvanian, 60% of the grad employees voted for a union. However, in 2004, as NLRB reversed their decision, an actual vote tally never occurred.GET-UP Certification Campaign
A flurry of student initiated organizing activity took place at private universities in the wake of the 2000 NLRB decision. By the end of 2001 there were active recognition campaigns taking place at many Ivy League schools, including UPenn. The Penn campaign started when a diverse group of graduate students began meeting in the fall of 2000 to discuss concerns related to their employment status. A group formed at UPenn and chose the name GET-UP. A vote was taken by the students and the decision was made to affiliate with the American Federation of Teachers, AFL-CIO. The new union began a certification card drive, and on December 27, 2001 GET-UP filed a petition to the NLRB for a union authorization election. A certification election was scheduled for February 26, 2003; however, the National Labor Relations Board overturned the decision to allow graduate students to unionize before the votes could be counted.GET-UP Authorization Election
The November 2002 decision by the NLRB allowed for an election to take place in early 2003. However, an appeal was filed in regards to the NLRB decision and the votes were sealed and left uncounted until a ruling could be reached. The NLRB decided to overturn the decision in 2004.Election Anniversary Strike
After a year of increasing pressure from GET-UP and its allies failed to convince the University to drop its appeal and allow the NLRB to count the ballots cast in the certification election, the union members felt that a significant action was necessary to move the process forward. At the Spring 2004 GET-UP general membership meeting, after a half-hour debate, an 83 percent majority voted to withdraw their labor on the two days of the election's anniversary. The plan was not for a full academic strike, as GET-UP did not ask professors to cancel classes or for undergrads not to attend. Rather, the membership approved of the limited strike as a way of demonstrating their seriousness while still giving the University a chance to drop its appeal and negotiate. There was debate among undergrads, grad students, grad employees, and faculty about whether the limited strike was a good tactic or not, with people from all four groups both for and against the strike.2004 NLRB National Board Decision
At the start of the fall semester of 2004 the National Labor Relations Board announced a complete reversal of its 2000 decision in the case of NYU in a 3-2 decision regarding graduate employees atGET-UP 2.0 (Today)
History
In the fall of 2015, graduate students from the University of Pennsylvania decided to start another unionization campaign, ten years after initial unionization efforts. In the spring of 2016, they ratified a constitution and formalized their presence. According to the organization’s website, the effort named itself GET-UP as a tribute to the first unionization effort (GET-UP 1.0). GET-UP members voted once again to affiliate with the AFT in the fall of 2016.NLRB Columbia Decision
On August 23, 2016, the NLRB ruled that graduate student assistants in private universities are statutory employees covered by National Labor Relations Act; this decision is also known as Columbia decision. The 3-1 decision reversed the 2004 Brown University ruling. The majority justified the new ruling by stating that the Brown University decision “deprived an entire category of workers of the protections of the Act without a convincing justification.”Certification Campaign
Following NLRB Columbia Decision, GET-UP began to organize graduate students. On March 2, 2017, according to The Daily Pennsylvanian, GET-UP went public with their campaign in a meeting of more than 200 GET-UP members, who voted unanimously to begin public unionization efforts at the University. The campaign is still ongoing as of December 2017.Petition for Recognition Election
On May 30, 2017, GET-UP/AFT announced that they had filed a petition to the NLRB to hold a recognition election.See also
* American Federation of Teachers * AFL-CIO * Coalition of Graduate Employee Unions *References
{{DEFAULTSORT:Graduate Employees Together - University of Pennsylvania University of Pennsylvania Graduate school trade unions American Federation of Teachers Trade unions established in 2001