Bargaining session XVI is Friday at 9AM, Knight Library Collaboration Room.
For a live-blog check the faculty union’s facebook page, here. (Link fixed.)
The faculty union has made a 3-year economic proposal:
FY16: ATB 2%.
FY17:ATB 1.5%, Equity 1.5%.
FY18:ATB 1%, Merit 4%.
Previous bargaining posts are here. VPFA Jamie Moffitt has plenty of reserves and as Howard Bunsis explained, the bond raters love UO’s solid finances – and that was before the state increased what it gives UO by $10M a year. We’re finally closing in on the longtime goal of getting faculty pay to parity with the rest of the AAU. This spring the Board of Trustees approved huge raises for the athletic department and the new president. So it’s mystifying why the administration is proposing to do nothing about equity, and give raises that won’t even match likely cost of living increases. The union will have a counter-proposal Friday.
I’ve got to confess, I sort of miss the snark from former UO Journalism Dean Tim Gleason’s “fact-check” blog that we got during the 2013 bargaining round. UO archived some of it here, but, perhaps wisely, they first deleted at least one of that blog’s more problematic bullying, harassing, intimidating and unprofessional attacks on the faculty. Two months ago I paid UO’s public records office $225 for documents related to that, but haven’t got anything yet. In any case, everything is a lot more polite this time around. Maybe too polite, given the big differences between the two sides on some important issues. I’ve bolded some of the disagreements in the bargaining reports from the UO administration and from the faculty union, below.
The UO faculty union’s report on the current situation:
On Friday, July 10, United Academics and the University resumed negotiations. We discussed all outstanding issues and made some progress.
For the most part, we agree on all but three issues: contract security for NTTF; contract length for funding contingent faculty; and salary increases for all faculty.
We are still discussing what to call temporary faculty (the University proposed “pro tem”), access to faculty records, the degree of redaction of external review letters, and the role of General Counsel during a tenure denial appeal. The ongoing conversation mainly centers on word choice or fine details, with general agreement about principles. We agreed that faculty who work less than part-time should be eligible to purchase parking permits and use bus passes.
As for the three important issues bulleted above, in Article 16, we continue to insist that all NTTF should have a right to expect their contracts will be renewed if they have passed their performance review, there is funding for their position, their position is still needed in the unit, and there is no plan to replace the NTTF position with a tenure-track position. We clearly voiced our resolve that NTTF job security provides a foundation for shared governance, academic freedom, and NTTF collective bargaining rights.
We also returned to our earlier proposal that funding-contingent faculty have contracts of the same length as all other NTTF. We restated our agreement that should a unit lose funding mid-contract, then the contract could be terminated, but we remain skeptical that there are other justifications for a mid-contract termination outside of disciplinary factors. We did, however, invite the University to craft language explicating other legitimate reasons.
The University made their third salary proposal. We found their first proposal, 1.5% over two years, insulting. We found their second proposal, 2.5% over two years, disappointing. Unfortunately, their third proposal, 3% over two years, does not offer significant improvement, particularly in light of recent news that the University will see a windfall of dollars from the Legislature. The increase in their proposal represents an additional cost of only $500,000 over two years, despite an increase of $10 million in state appropriations for this next fiscal year alone.
The University’s proposal also failed to increase our appallingly low minimum salaries. Instead, the University offered that salaries should be (and are) dictated by “the market.” The UO’s quest for academic quality will not be well served by low-balling our dedicated and talented faculty, while suggesting they leave if they can do better elsewhere.
Bargaining is set to resume on Friday, July 17 in the Collaboration Room of the Knight Library at 9 am. We plan to counter the University’s economic proposal. Please join us!
The UO administration’s report is hosted on the UO Foundation’s website, presumably so they can easily track who reads it: http://www.uofoundation.org/controls/email_marketing/admin/email_marketing_email_viewer.aspx?sid=1540&gid=3&eiid=3639&seiid=1572&usearchive=1&puid=e0e1d0f0-29f5-4b05-8b05-ce5b417d783c&csid=625403
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I’m dissapointed in the union’s counteroffer. They are sending the message that we’ll take lower raises now for bigger raises down the road. This is what they did last time. The problem is the admins don’t hold enough back for the big raise year and so they claim poverty at the start of the next bargaining cycle. Plus it doesn’t matter for recuuring dollars if we get the big raise now or 3 years from now it only affects reserve dollars which Moffit has said don’t matter for their salary proposals. The union is caving too fast. Why are we paying 1 percent of our salaries if they are going to gve up so quickly?
As the poster below gets at, don’t forget the “1 percent” is taken out of gross pay, yet we have to pay for it out of our net salaries (i.e. union dues do not reduce taxable income). Union fees lower our take home by pay about 1.5%.
The union has done more to move UO salaries towards the Senate White Paper/Lariviere/Coltrane goal of AAU parity than anyone. Even more than Lariviere did.
Since Lariviere did not last long we do not know what he might have done during the same period. The union’s offer was disappointing, does not justify the ~1.5%, we should be looking at net pay increase. And pushing bulk of the increase to year 3 means we don’t benefit from a larger base *and* makes it unlikely the administration will agree to a healthy increase in years 4 and 5.
Sure. But this answer why the union is proposing boom and bust cycles of raises. Only helps Moffit keep a couple extra million in reserves.
Sorry meant ‘this doesnt answer’
Comparing the union’s success to what now? As much as I appreciate the movement they’ve achieved… its not like they could have done worse than the pre-union days.
Yes, I am paying 1.1% of my total gross salary (from all UO sources including stipends …) and currently the Union is not even proposing a COLA that is consistent with the current rate …
I’m no tax accountant but union dues are deductible on Schedule A of Form 1040. There are more important reasons to support the union than this, but if you’re complaining about dues levels, let’s get the facts straight.
Only if they are more than 2 percent of your gross.
Can I deduct union dues, and where do I enter them in TurboTax?
You can deduct union dues and union membership initiation fees on your federal return, provided you are able to itemize deductions.
However, you’re only allowed to deduct the amount above and beyond 2% of your Adjusted Gross Income (AGI).
For example, if your AGI is $35,000, and your union dues are $1,000, the IRS will let you deduct [$1,000 – ($35,000 x .02)] = $300.
https://ttlc.intuit.com/questions/1901552-can-i-deduct-union-dues-and-where-do-i-enter-them-in-turbotax
So no, ours are not deductible.
The two percent threshhold is not only for dues. It’s for unreimbursed business expenses, so if you buy books or journal subs for your profession, incur unreimbursed travel to conferences or for research, etc. those count towards the two percent. I don’t know many academics who itemize deductions and don’t already reach the two percent level from other unreimbursed expenses. I don’t know grossfees’ situation, but for most of us the deduction should be available.
have any readers of this forum actually tried to do what D. Pope suggests? If so, did you also have to file a schedule C. My entire experience at the UO is that travel – whether reimbursed or not –
its just a gigantic headache. I also seriously doubt you can deduct research expenses as a business expense.
Also, if you take a day trip the UO charges you a perquisite expense which is treated as income – if you don’t know what I am talking about, don’t try to get reimbursed for a day trip – just stay somewhere overnight – it will be easier
You can easily do this on Schedule A, you do not need to use Schedule C. From http://www.irs.gov/publications/p529/ar02.html:
Disclaimer: I have a PhD in public economics and I still don’t understand the tax code. I have deducted research expenses with no problems, however.
Thanks UO matters – that is quite useful information – since I also do educational consulting, in my own case, I need Schedule C which tends
to make things even less understandable, at least for me.
But overall, it does sound like dues can be aggregated with other expenses for the purposes of an additional itemized deduction.
All my job-related expenses are reimbursed and as far as I know it’s the same for all my colleagues. I’m surprised you’re subscribing to journals and attending conferences on your own dime.
As a part of the School of Music & Dance I am very disappointed with the union’s offer. Our salaries are SO low and 1.5% of peanuts is still peanuts.
I only read UO Matters for the tax advice.