Monday, July 23, 2007

Absentee Ballots - Ratification Vote

The ratification vote on the 2007-2011 Faculty Tentative Agreement will be taking place in the next few weeks. Ballots will be mailed to the home addresses of all faculty who are APSCUF members. If you will be away between July 30 and August 11 and wish to obtain an absentee ballot that will be mailed to your summer vacation address, please email Ty Marks at tmarks@apscuf.org with your summer vacation address by July 27, 2007. If you will be vacationing where mail receipt is not possible, please also notify Ty Marks via email by July 27, 2007. She will send you instructions on how to cast your vote.

Monday, July 02, 2007

Comment and Reply

STUDENT QUESTION posted in Comments:
Why is no one concerned about us students??? who will
pay for this raise? the students. who will suffer from
a strike? the students. It doesnt make sense. Either
way students are being hurt. How many kids trying to
get into school are going to be turned away becuase
they cant afford it? More students hurt. How many
parents will have to mortgage their homes to pay for
the last year of their child's school, which is
turning into a year and a half because of the strike?
again mroe students hurt.

OUR ANSWER:

APSCUF is extremely concerned about the students, and
has been all along. Consider these factors:

  • The strike date was set for July 1st, rather than during a regular semester because fewer students will be affected

  • Chancellor Hample refused to include even a slight increase in faculty salaries in her budget request to the state legislature

  • The faculty workload, salary, and benefits package has deteriorated so that it is now difficult to recruit highly qualified faculty. This must be reversed to assure students they have qualified professors

  • The state's appropriation for supporting public higher education has been cut almost in half over recent years. That is the primary reason tuition has increased. Statistical analysis shows that tuition is not closely tied to teachers' salaries

  • State leaders do not consider higher education a significant priority. Otherwise, we would not have the low salaries and high tuition that have brought us to this point.

  • Finally, financial aid offices are willing to work with students and their parents to ensure that students complete their educations. Then contact President Smith and Provost Williams’ offices to ask them what to do in your difficult situation.

You may ask administrators what their raises have been. At some PASSHE universities administrative salaries have increased nearly 50%. Managers averaged more than 10% raises when faculty contracts offered 0% raises over half of the last agreement, and the current "generous" baseline offer is 7% over four years. 0%, 2%, 2%, 3%--add it up, and you get less than an administration raise in ONE YEAR, then ask who is raising your tuition.

Sunday, July 01, 2007

Negotiations Update

July 1 6:00 pm

The mediator in PASSHE-APSCUF negotiations has requested that APSCUF refrain from initiating any job action for the next 24 hours.

Neither side is conceding.

However, the two sides have made enough progress that cutting off talks at this point would be counter-productive.

The two sides will meet on neutral territory tomorrow.

If you are scheduled to teach Summer Session II, report to class on Monday.

Watch for additional information Monday evening.