UNIONIZATION: IS IT ENHANCING THE POSTDOC EXPERIENCE? NAS: March 8, 2012 Christine D. Des Jarlais Assistant Dean for Postdoctoral Affairs UCSF Graduate Division.

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Transcript UNIONIZATION: IS IT ENHANCING THE POSTDOC EXPERIENCE? NAS: March 8, 2012 Christine D. Des Jarlais Assistant Dean for Postdoctoral Affairs UCSF Graduate Division.

UNIONIZATION:
IS IT ENHANCING THE POSTDOC
EXPERIENCE?
NAS: March 8, 2012
Christine D. Des Jarlais
Assistant Dean for Postdoctoral Affairs
UCSF Graduate Division
University of California
Ten-Campus System
6,309
6,309 UC Postdocs
Postdoc Paid
Direct
8%
Postdoc
Fellow
12%
US Citizens
37%
Postdoc
Employee
80%
International
63%
female
40%
male
60%
paid-direct
12%
UCSF 1,100 Postdocs
fellows
22%
employees
66%
men
52%
women
48%
US 46%
intl
54%
AGE
VISAother
40-60
6%
F1 5%
5%
25-29
12%
H1B
20%
35-39
26%
J1
70%
30-35
56%
Policy/Unionization Timeline
Before Contract:
COSEPUP recs implemented at UC
• Postdoc-only policy, APM 390 (2003)
• Postdoc-only benefits plan (2005)
• Increased communication between
University and PD
• Annual review required (but not
written or enforced)
• 5-year time limit
COSEPUP recs, cont.
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Full access to Career Center (at UCSF, UCB)
Appointment letter required
Minimum salary established
Postdoc data collected
3 unique title codes
PDO and PDA established
International Office
Faculty mentoring program
Why did Postdocs Unionize?
Possible factors:
Postdocs…..
Faculty……
UAW……
Powerless
Stressed
Invisible
Faculty
Faculty Mentor?
Or Tor-Mentor?
The self-replicating professor…
Not enough faculty
positions
Need to train for
other careers
The UAW
UAW has represented 12,000 UC
graduate students since 1999
UAW Membership and Dues Dropping
Bargaining
• Teams
• Within team dynamics
• Unusual power dynamics
• Classic leverage points not applicable
--Will Postdocs Really Strike?
UAW said UC was stalling
• Congressional hearing
• 17 months
Needed to educate UAW & LR staff
• Brought in experts:
• Contracts & Grants
• Benefits Brokers
• International experts
Result: 1st stand alone PD union contract
The Contract:
~42% of all postdocs went to the polls
Of those who voted, 96% voted YES
UC-UAW Contract
• Pre-employment issues still in UC control
• Covers postdocs in all 3 title codes
• Preserved Academic Judgment
• What is not in contract is retained as
management right
• No Direct Dealing
• No Strike Article
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ACADEMIC JUDGMENT
• Preserved as a management right:
• Recruitment, Appointment, Qualifications
• Assignment of duties and responsibilities
• Communication & mentoring
• Work performance standards
• Decision to discipline, dismiss, layoff
• Determine research topics, goals, quality, etc
• Determine all aspects of presentations and
publications
• Timing & amount of merit increases
• Typically cannot be arbitrated
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COMPENSATION
• Phase in NIH/NRSA scale
• Starting June 1, 2011, all new appointments made to
NRSA scale
• Nothing precludes University from paying higher $
• All PD appointed Aug 31, 2010 or earlier got ATB
increase Sept 1, 2010
• Not required to provide salary increase between Sept
2010 through May 31, 2011
BENEFITS
• UC PSBP: health, dental, vision, STD, Life
Insurance, AD&D, optional LTD
• At UCSF and UCSC, PIs must continue to
cover benefits costs for dependents
• 2012: Postdocs started making contributions
to HMO
• Personal Time Off: 24 days/yr at start of
appointment
• Sick Leave: 12 days/yr at start of appt
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IDPs and Progress Assessments
• IDP Not Required: but if Postdoc wants to create one,
a process must be followed that includes PI input
• Required: PI must communicate research and
progress expectations at start of each appointment
year
• Required: informal periodic progress assessments
and written annual review
• Not Grievable: Quality of mentoring / content of
performance evals and progress assessments
• Grievable: Not following process for creating IDPs,
doing progress assessments and performance evals
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Significant Changes:
APM 390 vs Contract
• Policy was not as enforceable
• Just Cause standard for D&D (not “just because”)
• Arbitration
• FMLA-like leave for those not eligible for FMLA
• Paid PTO & Sick Leave not accrued – given up-front
• IDPs & written evaluations
• Labor-Management Meetings for ongoing
discussions and flow of information
• Union requests for information
No Substantive Changes
• Definition of a PD – still trainees
• Recruiting and hiring process
• Benefits
• Retirement for PD Employees
• Layoff procedure
• D&D procedures
• Grievance procedure
Union Contract and COSEPUP
• Compensation commensurate with PD
contributions to research…
• Written performance expectations &
annual review
• PD have major input into union contract
• Requiring better quality data
• Forces university to review PD status and
experience
Faculty Reaction
• Slow to respond to organizing campaign
• Very apprehensive
• After contract
• Relationship with individual PD – no real change
• Research & lab dynamics – no real change
• Mostly unaware of contract provisions
• Not really doing anything differently
Postdoc Reactions
• Positive: LARGE ally behind them
• Positive: Salary now must increase each appt
year
• Negative: Union tactics too aggressive
• Negative: Mandatory fees (for those who don’t
join)
• Wary of going to union about PI problems
• Confusion about distinctions among union,
PDA, and PDO
Power Differential
Still a Big Issue
• Union has not made a big
difference at the individual level
• Union does make big
difference at institutional
level
• PD see Union as “watchdog”
International Postdocs
• Increasing numbers and percentages
• Differing cultural issues
• Role remains largely unexplored
• US offers prestige & better wages
• Some hope H1B will lead to PR
• Some evidence that Faculty treat international PD
differently
• Some internationals appointed in non-PD titles
• Lower wages
• Little PI accountability
Impact of unionization?
• Too soon to tell
• Will UC be more or less competitive for
postdocs?
• Fewer or more postdocs?
• Will faculty behavior change?
• Will relationship between PI and postdoc
change?
• For vast majority of PIs and PD, probably not much
difference
• For the few problem PIs and PDs, unionization
likely to make significant difference
Enhancing the PD Experience: Vol 2
• Focus on International PD
• COLA
• More guidance in choosing a lab
• More attention paid to the needs of
women PD: Improved childbearing
and parental leave
• Learn from URM PD
• Retirement options for PD on stipends
• Allow postdocs to be PIs
• Exit surveys and tracking esp for PD
networking
Fundamental Disconnect
Funding
agencies and
COSEPUP need
more dialogue to
get in sync –
there is a NEW
REALITY
Changing the research system?
• Faculty?
• Cheap and disposable trainees
• System itself is exploitative
• Career structure is broken
• Would research grind to a halt without ready
supply of PD?
Who can fix the Research Enterprise?
What’s good for the Postdoc
is good for the Research Enterprise
Is unionization necessary?
It boils down to the individual faculty member:
Additional Resources
UC-UAW Postdoc Union Contract:
http://atyourservice.ucop.edu/employees/policies_employee_labor_relations/collective
_bargaining_units/post_docs/agreement.html
Publications on international postdocs:
• “Unseen Workers in the Academic Factory: Perceptions of Neoracism Among
International Postdocs in the United States and the United Kingdom,” Brendan
Cantwell & Jenny J. Lee
http://her.hepg.org/content/w54750105q78p451/
• “Academic in-sourcing: international postdoctoral employment and new modes of
academic production,”
http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/1360080X.2011.550032
• Transnational Mobility and International Academic Employment: Gatekeeping in an
Academic Competition Arena”
http://www.springerlink.com/content/e17t0168633x200h/
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Chris Des Jarlais
[email protected]