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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- C ampus System. 6,309. 6,309 UC Postdocs. UCSF 1,100 Postdocs. AGE. VISA.
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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
UCSF 1,100 Postdocs AGE VISA
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. • 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……
Faculty Mentor? Or Tor-Mentor?
The self-replicating professor… Not enough faculty positions Need to train for other careers
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: 1ststand 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
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
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/yrat start of appointment • Sick Leave: 12 days/yr at start of appt
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 writtenannual review • Not Grievable: Quality of mentoring / contentof performance evals and progress assessments • Grievable: Not following processfor creating IDPs, doing progress assessments and performance evals
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
PowerDifferential 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 haltwithout ready supply of PD?
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/
Chris Des Jarlais Christine.desjarlais@ucsf.edu