Apply to the Childcare Fund!

The deadline to apply for the CUPE 3903 Childcare Fund is January 31. If you have already applied (and received money) in the fall term then you do not need to apply again.

The Childcare Fund is for all 3903 members who incur costs related to the care of children under the age of 13 (or 18 if the child has additional needs). The committee has heard from several members who thought they were not eligible because their child is not in daycare so we want to be clear that this fund is to help cover ANY cost related to children, not just childcare!

You can find the application form here (or as a Word document from the Childcare Fund page) or in the union office (143 Atkinson). The application does need to be mailed or dropped off to the union office as we do not accept applications by email. You will need to provide proof of parental responsibilities by providing documentation such as, but not exclusive to, copies of birth certificates or guardianship papers. Please note that you also need to provide you social insurance number and date of birth. For children with disabilities/additional needs a letter from a medical care provider shall be submitted.

If you have any questions email 3903childcare@gmail.com

January GMM: Tentative Agenda

General Membership Meeting
Thursday, January 19
12:30 pm – 3:30 pm
Leith Room
004 Atkinson building

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Tentative agenda:

  1. Roll call of officers and taking of the oath (5 mins)
  2. Reading of the Equality Statement (3 mins)
  3. Reading of the Mississauga Land Acknowledgement (2 mins)
  4. Approval of Agenda (5 mins)
  5. Reading and Approval of minutes (20 mins)
  6. Notices (5 mins)
    1. Donation to the striking workers of CUPE 2974 (Essex County Library Workers) – Amount TBD by the membership
  7. Treasurer’s Report (10 minutes)
  8. Nominations, Elections or Installations (15 minutes)
    1. Closing of BT, Grievance Officer, and VP Unit 3 nomination period
    2. Committee elections
  9. Unfinished Business (45 minutes)
  10. Matters Arising (15 minutes)
    1. Rhythms of Resistance donation request ($1000)
  11. New Business
    1. Anti-Racism Workshops
  12. Update on Unit 4 bargaining
  13. Reports of committees and delegates
  14. Executive Reports
  15. Good of the Union
  16. Adjournment

Please contact Sheila Wilmot at CUPE3903.equity.officer@gmail.com or at 416-736-5154 ext. 3 if you require any of the following: ASL interpretation, reimbursement for childcare/caregiver/attendant care, and/or transportation costs for members who are unable to secure Wheel-Trans, or other requests for accommodation.

Barry “Three Strikes” Miller Drags Negotiations Past 3AM for One Dollar

 

settlement

In the wee hours of January 10, the Unit 4 bargaining team reached a tentative deal for their first collective agreement. Unit 4, a unit that represents part-time librarians and archivists, certified in January 2015 and began bargaining in November 2015. Details of the tentative agreement are forthcoming, and, as always, there is no deal unless the membership of Unit 4 votes to ratify it.

The Unit 4 bargaining team showed a truly impressive level of patience in the face of York’s intransigence. In the course of last night’s negotiations, on wages alone, Unit 4 moved by $8.06/h, while the employer’s total moves amount to $1.31/h. This shows not only how far apart the parties were, but also which side was most willing to truly negotiate to reach a settlement.

Aside from wages, the two largest remaining issues were the extension of health benefits to cover temporary gaps in a member’s contract and the duration of the agreement — the union wanted a two year contract, while the employer insisted on three years. We moved on the duration with the understanding that giving York something they wanted so much would cause them to be more reasonable on wages. These expectations of fair exchange was shattered when Barry “Three Strikes” Miller, Executive Director well-known for forcing the other three units of CUPE 3903 out on strike three times through his intransigence, replied by saying that they wouldn’t discuss wages unless the union side went down further first.

In the last three hours of bargaining, the difference in wages which was inched at slowly amounted to one dollar. Barry Miller insisted on haggling at pennies into the early hours of the morning, while paying the university’s lawyer exorbitant amounts. Bargaining has been going on for sixteen months. The total cost of a fair agreement for the 20 people in Unit 4 could easily have been covered by the legal fees expended to prevent them from being treated with the dignity and respect their profession warrants. Meanwhile, administrators like Barry Miller make excessive salaries of their own.

A tentative deal may have been reached, but this is a time to shame York for everything it took to get here: the time, energy, and amazing patience of the bargaining team; and the sacrifices made despite the fact that Unit 4 deserves so much more respect from the administration. There is nothing fair about putting the price of a first agreement so high.

Nominations Open for Bargaining Team, VP Unit 3, and Grievance Officer

Nominations opened for three different elections/by-elections on Tuesday December 13: Grievance Officer, VP Unit 3, and the bargaining teams for Units 1, 2, and 3. Candidates must fill out a nomination form, available at the CUPE 3903 office (143 Atkinson), and sign the register. For the bargaining team positions and VP Unit 3, candidates must be members in good standing of that unit. The members who sign the nomination form must also belong to that unit. Grievance Officer is a position open to all units. Nominations will close and campaigning begin at the January 19 GMM.

The Grievance Officer position is vacant because Sarah Hornstein, our current GO, has been offered a job in British Columbia. Congratulations and best of luck to Sarah!

The VP Unit 3 position will be vacant as of December 31 because the union membership of the current VP Unit 3, Jeffrey Zavala, will expire on that date. As the bylaws do not specify what to do in the case of an expired union membership, and to simplify the election process, nominations for this position will open before the position is vacant, following the precedent set by the yearly general elections.

The bargaining team is composed of three members each for Units 1, 2, and 3. The Grievance Officer is automatically part of the bargaining team, and counts towards their unit’s total number of bargaining team members (for example, if the Grievance Officer is a Unit 2 member, Unit 2 only elects two more bargaining team members). While our contracts expire on August 31, 2017, it is important to get the bargaining team elected early so that they can be active participants in the development of bargaining surveys and bargaining proposals.

Voting will begin at the February 8 GMM. Executive committee positions are filled until April 1, while bargaining team positions will be filled until we achieve a new contract. The decision to run these elections simultaneously was made in order to lessen expenses and avoid having multiple timelines.

LSTA and Conversion Programs 2016-2017 Deadlines

Members of Unit 2 are encouraged to become acquainted with the following deadlines for the Long Service Teaching Appointments (LSTA) and the Conversion program.

LSTAs PROGRAM CONVERSIONS PROGRAM
Call Announced to Deans Wednesday November 30, 2016 Wednesday November 30, 2016
Hiring Unit/Member to submit application to Dean** Monday January 30, 2017 Friday February 3, 2017
Deans provide Recommendations to  the Provost Friday March 10, 2017 Wednesday March 15, 2017
Provost’s Announcement to the York Community Friday April 7, 2017 Friday April 7, 2017
Appointment begins Friday September 1, 2017 Saturday July 1, 2017

**Please note that the deadline for applicants to submit to hiring units has been left to the determination of the hiring unit. Please consult the relevant hiring unit(s) for their internal deadline if you are planning to apply to the hiring unit. For LSTA renewals the deadline to submit applications to the hiring units is 31st January 2017.

Employer Finally Answers on Fellowship Model

On Friday, November 25, members of the executive committee met with the Employer. The purpose of this meeting was to get answers about the fellowship model. This meeting came after months of unresponsiveness and intransigence on the part of the Employer, who refused to answer our emails in the wake of the crisis situation the fellowship model had unleashed.

A list of questions was compiled in consultation with the membership, and shared with the Employer in advance of the meeting. The presentation prepared by the Employer went through these questions one by one. The employer’s presentation slides are available in full.

Funding and Teaching Assistantships (TAs)

We were assured that getting a TA in the summer semester would not be clawed-back in any way, constituting additional funding. In the past, those who worked a 0.5 TA in the summer semester did not receiving the minimum guarantee in the summer. This sudden generosity makes us suspicious that they may be reducing or altogether eliminating summer TAs.

We confirmed that for Master’s students who are offered a TA, their fellowship is reduced to $5403, regardless of the size of the assignment. We pointed out that this is unfair, especially for those who are offered a 0.5 or smaller TA. The employer promised to see how many 0.25 TAs exist, but did not respond to the fact that Master’s students are being asked to work for barely more funding than their classmates who have no work assignment. This speaks volumes to the value York puts on our labour.

Funding and Scholarships

For matching fund awards, we were told that the portion of the award matched by York will be clawed back from the fellowship. The most common example is the $15,000 OGS, where $5000 is paid by York. For a domestic PhD student who is owed a $5403 fellowship, they would only receive the $403. We were assured that an exhaustive list of matching fund awards and their interaction with the fellowship is forthcoming. However, it is unacceptable that this list does not yet exist, three months after the rollout of this funding model.

Funding and Research Assistantships (RAs)

We were told that RAs will not count against the fellowship. This is in direct contradiction to earlier communications; we were told back in the spring that RA income could count against the fellowship model. When pressed to say whether this answer holds going forward, the Employer claimed they have no plans to change it “right now”, but refused to guarantee this, which does not inspire confidence.

Process for Hiring Graduate Assistants (GAs)

Perhaps most baffling was the Employer’s insistence that the process for hiring GAs has not been changed by the new funding model. We were told that all applications for GAs have been approved. An example was given of a specific department that lost all of its GAs — the employer assured us that this department had not applied to hire any GAs, which is demonstrably false. If the Employer is to be believed on this point, it would mean the loss of GA jobs – 691 jobs, according to our most recent count – is due to a lack of applications for those jobs. We know that this is patently untrue.

We encourage every department to apply for GAs for the winter and summer semesters. Since FGS is now claiming they will approve and fund GAs, there’s nothing to lose!

The Employer Reveals “Resources” for Grad Students

The Employer continues to refuse to acknowledge the most dangerous implication of this funding model, namely the loss of disability protections and health benefits for many graduate students. They continue to insist that the $1000 benefits plan available through YUGSA makes up for this loss, reflecting a gross misunderstanding or outright indifference to what the difference between this plan and the CUPE 3903’s benefits plan means in our everyday lives. As one executive member pointed out, in some situations medications alone can exceed the $1000 mark in a single month, which is to say nothing of dental, vision, and paramedical services. The Employer’s side of the table was unmoved.

They closed their presentation by offering a list of resources available to members. They are working on a funding calculator. Several websites are also in the works to help better clarify the funding model. While these are welcome developments, it is unclear why they could not have been put in place for the old funding model and saved everyone the turmoil of this overhaul. Nor is it clear how a funding model that requires multiple explanatory websites can possibly be called “simpler”.

We Need Better Funding, not “Financial Literacy”

The Employer continues to insist that the new funding model is in place to simplify things, and to ensure that students can comfortably pay their tuition. We do not understand how doing away with a system that ensured 12 months of fairly regular income is supposed to make it easier to manage our finances. To this, the Employer plans to respond by introducing a “Financial Literacy” program, entitled “Own your financial future: Managing debt and making credit work for you”, a solution that is as condescending as it is ineffectual. The message here is clear: be independently wealthy or go into debt to complete your graduate studies. This attitude disproportionately impacts those who are already the most marginalized, reinforcing the race, ability, gender, and class disadvantages endemic to the university in general and graduate studies in particular.

While there was greater transparency at this meeting than in the past, the massive delay in setting a date as well as persistent disregard for the well-being of members leaves us skeptical at best. York shows no signs of backing down from this union-busting funding model, and no amount of consultation will make it tolerable to the union. It is critical that we keep the pressure up and make it clear that we will accept nothing less than the reversal of this model and the restoration of nearly 700 lost jobs and all the attached benefits and protections.

Committee Election and Bylaw Amendment Results

During the November 25 General Membership Meeting, committee election and bylaw amendment votes were held by closed ballots. The results of those votes are below.

Committee Elections

Ways and Mean Committee (3 positions)

Hossein Banitabaei: 19 votes
Tracy Mack: 17 votes
Johanna May Black: 14 votes
Sujanthan Sriskandarajah: 13 votes
Kyle Belozerov: 11 votes
Evelyn Kissi: 11 votes

Posting officer (1 position)

Kyle Belozerov: 16 votes
Tracy Mack: 15 votes

Senate Rep (Alternate) (1 position)

Rupi Minhas: 17
Julie Allen: 12

Professional Development Fund Committee

Rob Leblanc – acclaimed
Rupi Minhas – acclaimed

Professional Development Fund Coordinator

Michael Laurentius – acclaimed

Toronto and York Labour Region Council

Denis Adigamov – acclaimed

Joint Health and Safety Committee

Iouldouz Raguimov – acclaimed

Bylaw Amendments

Article 8 (k): Executive Honoraria

Yes: 20
No: 4

Text of the amendment:

(k) Each member of the Executive Committee shall make a report of their activities to the general membership, in writing and communicated through union channels, and in person at General Membership Meetings, one (1) time per month. Monthly honoraria for Executive service will only be released by the Treasurer upon receipt of these reports, and by the Recording Secretary and after they were presented to the general membership.

Article 10: Election Committee

Yes: 24
No: 2

Text of the amendment:

(iii) There shall be a base honoraria of $750 to conduct the annual Executive elections. An additional $500 shall be added to the honoraria for the election of the Bargaining Team. For each subsequent by-election throughout the year, $150 shall be added to the honoraria. The dates and the duration of each by-election shall be included in the committee report.

TFAC statement on our withdrawal from the Sexual Violence Policy Working Group

The TFAC logo, a graphic image of a black cat.

The TFAC logo, a graphic image of a black cat.

On September 30th, TFAC was invited by CUPE 3903’s Joint Health and Safety Committee (JHSC) to participate in York University’s Sexual Assault Policy Working Group. Prior to this invitation, JHSC had been pressuring York for over a year to properly consult CUPE 3903 on their sexual assault policy. After months of being denied information, of being told that there was no written policy or procedures, and of ignoring our feedback, York invited CUPE 3903’s JHSC to sit on their Sexual Assault Policy Working Group. Upon entering this working group and attending meetings in November, TFAC has discovered that York has already drafted a policy, a policy that does not respond to the criticisms CUPE 3903 has raised, and that its policy is not being used as a basis for informed consultations with community members.

For all of these reasons, TFAC is withdrawing from York’s sexual assault policy working group. TFAC is disappointed in the policy that York seems determined to push through the Board of Governors. And we call on CUPE 3903 to push back against the employer and demand a survivor-centric policy in replace of the poor substitute that York is determined to offer.

The Process

Before this chair at the table had been offered, CUPE 3903 raised issues with York regarding the need for substantive consultations, not just with CUPE 3903 but with various student, staff, faculty and community groups, that will be affected by this policy and who have been active in fighting sexism and rape culture within the York community. To date this form of substantial consultation has not taken place. Instead, York continues to sideline these groups while pointing to the inclusion of singular representatives from a few student groups on the working committee as constituting proper consultation.

Consultations with staff, faculty, and community groups have only recently been initiated. These consultations are taking place too late in the process as York is planning to pass their policy through the Board of Governors in December and to release a policy by January 1st as Bill 132, the Sexual Violence and Harassment Action Plan Act, mandates. By only being invited to participate in this process when the policy’s due date is mere weeks away, it is clear that input on this policy is not actually desired.
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Furthermore, it was only after entering the working group and attending meetings that TFAC was told by the administration that all information pertaining to the working group (including both discussion in meetings and the policy itself) was to be kept strictly confidential. This is something that TFAC never agreed to, and in fact spoke up against in a meeting with the employer when conditionally accepting a spot on the working group. TFAC rejects the false confidentiality that is given to this policy process. We see this as a tool to keep dissent hidden, to avoid open and substantial consultation, and as a mechanism for pushing through a problematic sexual assault policy against the interest of our members.

The Policy

TFAC has pushed back against both the interim policy released by York on September 20th, and the draft policy which is being kept secret behind the closed doors of the working group. TFAC has insisted that any policy must be survivor-centric, which means active, informed, and engaged consultation with survivors at every stage of the process. Nothing in the process indicates that survivors have been actively engaged. While York continues to use the language of ‘survivor-centric’ throughout all documents that have been made public thus far, this has been merely a rhetorical device. TFAC condemns this rhetorical sleight of hand.

The interim guidelines (in themselves and as an example of the policy to come) continue to be perpetrator-centric. Further concerns that TFAC have raised include (but are by no means limited to) calling attention to the needs of survivors to take a lead role in all processes and allowing survivors to be the primary decision makers. York interim guidelines fail these suggestions in many ways; for example, in not being committed to keeping survivor confidentiality when requested. These criticisms of York’s interim guidelines, and the policy yet to be released, have been brought to York’s attention for over a year, and yet the administration continues to ignore the voices raising these concerns and instead continues to misleadingly use the language of survivor-centric. York’s refusal to acknowledge the shortcoming that CUPE 3903 continue to raise not only leaves this criticism unaddressed, it gives off a false sense of confidence in the policy to provide proper assistance. For all of these reasons, TFAC is withdrawing from York’s sexual assault policy working group.

What do we want?

A Survivor-Centric Sexual Assault Support Centre and Policy. A survivor-centric sexual assault support centre would be open 24 hours a day, staffed with specially trained nurses and counselors who are available to help survivors with whatever it is the survivor needs: medical care, emergency housing, how to navigate establishing a safety plan at the university etc. The staff will be under no obligation to break the survivor’s confidentiality in any way at any time. A survivor-centric policy puts the needs of the survivor first because it is developed and written by survivors and clearly incorporates research on survivor-centric responses and the testimonials of survivors. It is neither concerned with protecting the university nor protecting the assailant. Instead, it demands survivors be heard, respected and believed.

In the Interest of Transparency; York’s Sexual Assault Policy Documents

Because you can’t have open consultation without transparency, here is the Draft Sexual Violence Policy, v.7, October 26, 2016

Statement to accompany the release of York’s Draft Sexual Violence Awareness Policy

Upon attending the Open Consultation called by the York Sexual Assault Policy Working Group, CUPE 3903 feels that we have a duty to immediately release York’s Draft Sexual Violence Awareness, Prevention, and Response Policy, Version 7, which has so far only been released to the Working Group and not the wider York community or the public. We are releasing this now for a number of reasons:

1. There is no reason for this document to be hidden from the broader York community. In order for this document to be representative of the interests of the whole York community, it needs to be widely available in its fullest form at all stages of the consultation process. This has not happened at any point in the process.

2. York has stated that they will be releasing an updated version of the draft to the public on Friday December 2nd , which will encompass all feedback from consultations thus far. CUPE 3903’s experience with Rob Castle (the head of the working group) is that none of our feedback, comments, or critiques have been seriously taken up or integrated in the policy. Releasing this version allows community groups to determine if York is listening to and incorporating their feedback.

3. As far as we can tell, to date, only student groups have been involved and/or consulted in the process. It was only after two years of agitation, on September 30th, 2016, that CUPE 3903 was finally included in the Working Group. However, after only two meetings, we were given no choice but to withdraw our support and our bodies. Details here: â€ȘCUPE 3903 press release. Furthermore, today at the open consultation it was confirmed that other groups have also been actively excluded. YUSA spoke to this eloquently today at the consultation. We acknowledge that groups like YUSA have so much to add to this process and this policy, and it is both disappointing and discouraging to see their voices silenced.

4. This policy is going to be presented to the Board of Governors for approval in less than a month (mid-to-late December, as yet the meeting is unscheduled). The legislation that is driving this process (Bill 132) requires that a policy be in place by January 1st. Withholding consultations on the most complete document until the 11th hour ensures that vital feedback will not be genuinely incorporated into the policy. Nor is this fair to the Board of Governors who will, due to the legislative demands, be force to rubber stamp whatever policy falls before them.

The urgency of this issue requires the immediate release of the document. A more detailed analysis and response to the policy will be provided by CUPE 3903 shortly.

 

November GMM: Tentative Agenda

General Membership Meeting
Friday, November 25
12:30-3:30pm
Harry Crowe Room
109 Atkinson

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Tentative agenda:

  1. Roll call of officers (5 mins)
  2. Reading of the Equality Statement (3 mins)
  3. Reading of the Mississauga Land Acknowledgement (2 mins)
  4. Approval of Agenda (5 mins)
  5. Reading and Approval of minutes (15 mins)
  6. Notices (5 mins)
    1. Rhythms of Resistance donation request ($1000)
  7. Treasurer’s Report (10 mins)
  8. Nominations, Elections or Installations (15 mins)
    1. Committee elections
    2. Conference delegate elections (CUPE Ontario Women’s Conference)
  9. Unfinished Business
    1. Motion to destroy the ballots from CO by-election
    2. Motion to destroy the ballots from GO and VP3 by-election
    3. Donation to Citizen film project ($1000)
    4. Donation to OPIRG at U of T Disorientation 2016
    5. Donation to Justice for Migrant Workers’ Long March
    6. Donation to Regenesis York affordable housing project ($500)
    7. Donation to 15 Years of War in Afghanistan ($500)
    8. Endorsement for 15 Years of War in Afghanistan
    9. Endorsement for Justice for Migrant Workers Long March
    10. Endorsement for The Real Food Real Jobs Coalition
    11. Donation to “CHILE: SEPTEMBER 11TH, 1973– Black Bird Liberation Cinema Film Screenings”
    12. Donation to TAO ($1000)
  10. Matters Arising
    1. Donation to Briarpatch labour magazine (Amount to be determined by the membership)
    2. Donation to Toronto350 for the Chippewas of the Thames First Nation Fighting Line 9 ($2000)
    3. Donation to War Resisters ($750)
  11. New Business
  12. Reports of committees and delegates
  13. Executive Reports
  14. Good of the Union
  15. Adjournment

Please contact Sheila Wilmot at CUPE3903.equity.officer@gmail.com or at 416-736-5154 ext. 3 if you require any of the following: ASL interpretation, reimbursement for childcare/caregiver/attendant care, and/or transportation costs for members who are unable to secure Wheel-Trans, or other requests for accommodation.