Strike Updates Day 9

From Joe Klein
February 21, 2020

Dear Colleagues, 

I wanted to write again with some updates from the ongoing strike. 
Today was a historic day in labor history at the University of California. For the 9th day, graduate students, undergraduates, faculty, staff, lecturers, and others rallied at both entrances to campus. For the 9th consecutive working day, metro bus drivers refused to cross the picket line in solidarity with striking graduate students. Energy was incredibly high all morning as strikers donned costumes and danced to celebrate DOOMSDAY which many noted marks a new beginning, not the end, of the fight for COLA. In a massive show of strength, strikers peacefully shut down the entire campus. 

Late in the morning, a huge group of STEM graduate students marched from science hill to quarry plaza to join rallying undergraduates. From quarry plaza, a group of about 200 strikers marched to the west entrance of campus and peacefully closed it down, while allowing traffic from family student housing to flow. Meanwhile, hundreds of strikers marched through the streets from quarry plaza down towards the base of campus. A large group of faculty members met the march in front of faculty housing, and together faculty and students marched to the base of campus, where strikers had already peacefully closed the main entrance to campus. Students and faculty held a rally in the streets at the main entrance and shut down the intersection of Bay and High. Later, strikers from the west entrance marched down Empire Grade to join the main entrance picketers. By my own estimates, there were more than 1,500 students, staff, faculty, lecturers, and supporters rallying in support of the COLA movement. UCSC has now spent approximately $2.7 million dollars on the police presence at the picket line–and this is likely a conservative estimate.

Meanwhile, the COLA movement has now spread to all 10 campuses in the UC system. Today simultaneous actions were held across the state, as UCSB occupied an administrative building, UCLA held a 1-day strike, and massive rallies were held at UC Davis, UC Berkeley, UC San Diego, UC Merced, UC Riverside, while UCSF is beginning to organize their own COLA campaign. UC San Diego, UC Santa Barbara, UCLA, UC Davis, and UC Berkeley have all committed to striking in solidarity with UCSC strikers if threats of retaliation are carried out. Here at UCSC, hundreds of graduate students have pledged to refuse Spring TA appointments in the event of mass firings. 

Although strikers were prepared to submit grades if administration met them at the bargaining table, today in a meeting UCSC administration rejected graduate students’ attempts to discuss solutions to the strike, and reiterated their commitment to retaliation against strikers engaged in this labor dispute. Among other revelations, it was also disclosed today that UCSC administration has been censoring communications from at least some department chairs to their students and faculty, claiming the right to “vet” correspondence. 

In a stunning rebuke to administration’s punitive and divisive tactics, striking graduate students held a general assembly where they voted almost unanimously to stand together in solidarity and to continue withholding grades–and so the strike continues!

The COLA campaign was born out of the dire circumstances of graduate students at UC Santa Cruz who have been repeatedly thrown under the bus by their own administrators–administrators whose $500,000 salaries are topped off with lavish monthly housing stipends. And still, administration is and has been continually invited to negotiate in good faith to bring the strike to close. Graduate students ask for dialogue and a living wage; administration asks for obsequious compliance to a system of worker exploitation. UCSC is morally, not financially, bankrupt. 

However, today we saw something new: a new community of students, faculty, lecturers, and staff rising together in solidarity to demand the university that we want. The doomsday clock is just a few seconds to midnight, and midnight is just the beginning. 

Some of today’s action items: 

  • Join strikers on the picket line, beginning Monday at 7:30am. Please bring friends! You can also bring supplies: sunscreen, coffee, hand sanitizer, healthy food, and large containers of drinking water are always in demand.   
  • Donate to the strike fund to support striking grads and to provide material relief in the event of mass firings: gofundme.com/f/support-fund-for-striking-workers-at-ucsc  
  • Faculty are encouraged to organize among themselves and to consider striking in solidarity with graduate students. 
  • Cancel your classes and sections, and do not ask your students to cross the picket line. 
  • Lecturers should consider holding their classes at the picket. 
  • Push back the dates of large assignments, or as some instructors have done, cancel them. 
  • Write to the administration asking them to come to the table to work with graduate students and to rescind threats of retaliation for students demanding the ability to live where they work. 

As always, thank you so so much for your support, and extra special thanks to our undergraduates and to the faculty who have been coming out to support strikers in the streets–we are so grateful. 

See you Monday!