NEWS FROM CUPE 3903

York U won't bargain

CUPE 3903 takes the high road, will not pursue lawsuit
to allow a resumption of classes

TORONTO, Ont. – After waiting in vain for the past critical day and a
half for York University to negotiate an eleventh hour settlement, the
union representing striking contract professors and teaching, graduate
and research assistants says it is shifting gears and preparing for
members to return to the classroom.

"It is obvious that the York administration has no desire, indeed has
never intended to reach a negotiated settlement," said CUPE 3903
spokesperson Tyler Shipley. "We have done everything in our power to
stand up for the quality and accessibility of education at York in
this round of negotiations but, for now, it's time to get our students
back to class. Our local has decided not to pursue a legal challenge
to Premier Dalton McGuinty's back-to-work legislation at this time."

CUPE 3903 Chair Christina Rousseau noted that the local's 3300 members
"have fought a courageous fight against an administration who put
their own narrow vision ahead of the interests of students, academic
integrity, job security and workers rights."

Shipley added, "Our members have shown tremendous determination, but
they are tired of waiting for York to take the process seriously.
Undergrad students are looking for some assurances. We aren't going to
let the university's game continue. It is time for someone to take
responsibility for getting campus life back to normal."

The Liberal government should not imagine that back-to-work
legislation resolves any of the key issues in the strike, particularly
the reliance of universities on underpaid, contingent workers to do
most classroom teaching.

"Our concerns are not going away, they are systemic and go well beyond
the York campus," noted Shipley, adding that the local will continue
to address the trend to insecure teaching jobs, the need for minimum
funding guarantees for graduate students, and the value of coordinated
bargaining through other channels.

"These issues are still alive at York and across the province. We'll
be working with our sister locals to make sure they are addressed in
ways that protect the interests of workers, students and hardworking
parents who are being asked to shell out more tuition fees every
year," said Rousseau. "Unless administrators change their priorities
and the Ontario government invests in our universities, they should
brace themselves for more job actions in the coming years."

For more information, contact:
Tyler Shipley, CUPE 3903 Spokesperson, 647-295-1674
Christina Rousseau, Chair, CUPE 3903, 416-347-4502

http://yorkstrike2008.wordpress.com/

Since 1978

The Teaching Support Staff Union (TSSU)