From the Open-Publishing Calendar
From the Open-Publishing Newswire
Indybay Feature
Students and Workers Block Road at UCSC to Protest Poverty Wages
On February 28th, UC Santa Cruz workers represented by the American Federation of State, County & Municipal Employees (AFSCME) Local 3299, and backed by students, demonstrated for justice, dignity and a fair working contract. The demonstration, aided by the sunshine, was organized by AFSCME and the Student and Worker Coalition for Justice. Over 350 people took part in the largest demonstration of the school year in support of UCSC's most underpaid workers. Instead of making demands outside the Chancellor's office, workers and students decided to get UCSC's attention by lining McLaughlin Drive and twice shutting down Hagar. Students and workers felt empowered by seeing how easily they can bring UCSC to a halt, especially when they have a lot of support from faculty and staff, as in 2005 when UCSC was shutdown for an entire day.
Workers are concerned that UC is replacing certain full-time career jobs with un-benefited per diem positions or hiring temporary workers, like registry or travelers, who have little experience working at UC. AFSCME Local 3299 Members believe that contracted jobs create a second class of workers at UC, usually with lower wages and benefits. AFSCME Local 3299 Members also believe that UC's use of sub-contracted, student, temp, registry workers hurts the ability of all UC workers to provide the best students services. In addition, AFSCME Local 3299 members feel that UC has been taking advantage of working students by hiring them to do the same work as AFSCME Local 3299 members but for less pay and benefits.
Workers are concerned that UC is replacing certain full-time career jobs with un-benefited per diem positions or hiring temporary workers, like registry or travelers, who have little experience working at UC. AFSCME Local 3299 Members believe that contracted jobs create a second class of workers at UC, usually with lower wages and benefits. AFSCME Local 3299 Members also believe that UC's use of sub-contracted, student, temp, registry workers hurts the ability of all UC workers to provide the best students services. In addition, AFSCME Local 3299 members feel that UC has been taking advantage of working students by hiring them to do the same work as AFSCME Local 3299 members but for less pay and benefits.
The contracts for over 20,000 essential healthcare and service workers represented by the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees Local 3299 have expired. The members of AFSCME Local 3299 are concerned with the ongoing direction of the University and how it is affecting their ability to provide the highest quality patient care and student services.
At UC's five medical centers, below-market wages, expensive benefits and the failure to implement a step system have created recruitment and retention problems, resulting in a less-experienced workforce, reliance on temporary workers and heavy workloads for essential patient care workers. Wages in many classifications are 25% to 30% below workers doing the same jobs at other leading hospitals in the state. On UC's campuses, low wages and unaffordable benefits have led to service cuts for students and faculty and have created a workforce that struggles to make ends meet for their families.
AFSCME Local 3299 represents 20,000 plus University of California employees at all five medical centers and ten campuses. AFSCME Local 3299 members are essential healthcare providers and technicians, custodians, food service workers, bus drivers, groundskeepers and security officers.
Other AFSCME Demonstrations at UCSC in the 2007 - 2008 school year:
At UC's five medical centers, below-market wages, expensive benefits and the failure to implement a step system have created recruitment and retention problems, resulting in a less-experienced workforce, reliance on temporary workers and heavy workloads for essential patient care workers. Wages in many classifications are 25% to 30% below workers doing the same jobs at other leading hospitals in the state. On UC's campuses, low wages and unaffordable benefits have led to service cuts for students and faculty and have created a workforce that struggles to make ends meet for their families.
AFSCME Local 3299 represents 20,000 plus University of California employees at all five medical centers and ten campuses. AFSCME Local 3299 members are essential healthcare providers and technicians, custodians, food service workers, bus drivers, groundskeepers and security officers.
Other AFSCME Demonstrations at UCSC in the 2007 - 2008 school year:
- Student and Worker Solidarity Kicks Off School Year at UCSC (September 27th, 2007)
- UC Workers and Students Picket in Support of AFSCME's Contract Fight (December 6th, 2007)
- Rally in UCSC's Baytree Plaza Demands Justice for UC's Lowest Wage Workers | More Photos (January 31st, 2008)
Add Your Comments
Comments
(Hide Comments)
AWESOME photos, Bradley! Many thanks for your work.
Thanks for being there Bradley, awesome photos.
Thanks to all those who were there :)
Thanks to all those who were there :)
great work! the text is great and the pictures are awesome.
We are 100% volunteer and depend on your participation to sustain our efforts!
Get Involved
If you'd like to help with maintaining or developing the website, contact us.
Publish
Publish your stories and upcoming events on Indybay.
Topics
More
Search Indybay's Archives
Advanced Search
►
▼
IMC Network