http://www.insidehighered.com/views/2010/12/09/hoeller
We Need an Adjunct Union
December 9, 2010
By Keith Hoeller

“TIME FOR ADJUNCTS TO FORM THEIR OWN UNION — ARE YOU IN?” screamed 
the headline of an email recently sent to the decade-old national 
adjunct listserv. The letter pointed out that the higher education 
unions "are busy dealing with K-12 issues or otherwise attending 
to the 'needs' of their tenured and tenure-track faculty." 
Paradoxically, it asked that "adjuncts 'stand up' to be counted 
(ANONYMOUSLY)" and directed people to a website where they could 
fill out a questionnaire in order to find out how many adjuncts at 
their college wanted to form a union. The anonymity was to protect 
the adjuncts from "fear and retaliation."

It was sent after another of many listserv discussions about the 
inadequacies of the three faculty unions (American Association of 
University Professors, American Federation of Teachers and 
National Education Association) in providing "fair representation" 
to adjuncts. Wisconsin’s Madison Area Technical College adjunct 
union had just lost an unfair labor practice lawsuit it brought to 
stop the tenured faculty union from teaching extra courses 
(overloads) and taking income away from the adjuncts. Both the 
adjuncts and the full-timers at this college are represented by 
the AFT, in separate chapters. I believe that the national AFT’s 
refusal to intervene ensured that the tenured faculty would 
prevail, as they usually do throughout the country.

Who wrote the mysterious listserv posting calling for a national 
union? Was it real or a prank? The return email address read 
simply “NunayourBusiness.” Since it was critical of the tenured 
faculty unions, I heard through the grapevine that some union 
leaders believed that their worst nightmare had come true: I, 
Keith Hoeller, had finally stepped up to the plate to form an 
adjunct union. But I had nothing to do with it.

The idea of a national adjunct faculty union has been building for 
some time. For years, Chicago activist Joe Berry had been urging 
the Coalition of Contingent Academic Labor (COCAL) to expand into 
a national organization, but nothing materialized. At the San 
Diego COCAL VIII meeting (2008), I proposed that COCAL expand into 
a national adjunct organization with a board of directors, elected 
leaders, and a dues-paying membership. Union leaders spoke against 
the motion, arguing that adjuncts were not capable of such a 
difficult task and they would not be able to fill out all of the 
necessary forms for incorporation. The motion was tabled. In 
December of 2008, I began to call leading adjunct activists around 
the country to form a new all-adjunct union. The goal was to put 
together a group of adjuncts who had extensive experience in 
creating social change and who were not afraid to act 
independently of the unions.

In January, 2009 Gregory Zobel wrote in Inside Higher Ed, 
“Adjuncts must lead their own labor reform movement. We need our 
own national movement separate from the AAUP, AFT, and NEA."

Then in February, 2009, a tenured faculty member Peter Brown of 
the State University of New York at New Paltz issued a call on the 
adjunct listserv for an organization that “is not designed to 
supplant or be in competition with unions or any other currently 
existing organization… .” Though I was skeptical because Peter was 
not interested in forming a union and did not want to compete with 
the faculty unions, I nonetheless decided to join Peter’s efforts 
and served on the organizing committee of what has since emerged 
as the The New Faculty Majority. NFM has remained true to Peter’s 
vision of a primarily adjunct organization, which can be 
especially useful in "right to work" states where unions are 
nearly impossible to form.

Yet there still is a need for an independent national union of 
adjuncts, which would not hesitate to confront and to compete with 
the unions for ideas and members. It should be dedicated to the 
abolition of the two-track system, and to complete equality for 
adjuncts.

The Madison adjunct union is not an exception when it comes to 
unions placing a higher priority on the needs of full-time, 
tenure-stream faculty than on its adjunct members. Two of the most 
contentious conflicts remain the issues of the capping of adjunct 
workloads below full-time, and the right of the tenure-stream to 
teach overloads and take courses and income away from the 
adjuncts. Why should the low-paid, low-benefit adjunct faculty not 
be allowed to work full-time when the high-paid, high-benefit, 
full-time faculty are given preference to teach extra courses and 
earn even more money?

The Professional Staff Congress (AAUP-AFT) of the City University 
of New York has long capped the teaching its adjuncts can do, yet 
allowed departmental waivers for some adjuncts. The PSC recently 
announced that it was ending the waivers so as to “protect 
adjuncts and promote the creation of more tenure-track jobs." CUNY 
Contingents Unite protested that the only thing being protected 
was the tenured faculty, and that the union was throwing the 
adjuncts under the bus.

In “The Overload Debate” (Community College Journal, Fall, 2010), 
Jack Longmate points out how the AFT/NEA unions and the community 
colleges in Washington State have bargained contracts that 
severely limit adjunct teaching, while at the same time allowing 
tenure-stream faculty first choice to teach overloads as high as 
200 to 300 percent of full time. Throughout the state system, even 
beginning tenure-track faculty have the right to “bump” adjunct 
faculty and take their courses, while adjunct faculty do not have 
the right to bump anyone, no matter how long they have taught. 
Longmate concludes that "a visitor from Mars looking at the 
differing treatment of full-time tenured faculty and part-time 
contingent faculty … might conclude that discrimination is rampant 
in the U.S. higher education workplace."

All of the problems that adjuncts face stem from dividing the 
professoriate into two separate but unequal classes: the 
tenure-track and the non-tenure track, and then treating the 
tenure-track faculty well and the adjuncts abysmally. Whenever you 
create an apartheid system like this, people wrongly assume that 
there is some real qualitative difference between the two classes 
and the better-treated class is deserving of their perks and the 
worst-treated class is undeserving. The best political analyses of 
this concept can be found in the civil rights movement and in 
Simone de Beauvoir's The Second Sex.

The recent “research” on adjuncts has followed the historical 
trend. When society has two groups of disparately treated people, 
science has not hesitated to "prove" why the distinctions are 
valid and why the lower class is inferior. Stephen Jay Gould's The 
Mismeasure of Man documented how 19th century science "proved" 
that blacks were biologically inferior to whites. We are now 
seeing a rash of research — most of it conducted by tenured 
faculty — that claims to “prove” that adjuncts are inferior to 
tenure-track faculty.

This research only tends to confirm what many tenured-faculty — 
and union leaders — in academe already believe. It helps them to 
justify why they are treated so much better than we are. That is 
why I recently told a Chronicle of Higher Education reporter there 
should be a moratorium on all such research on adjuncts.

All three of the faculty unions are wedded to the two-track system 
and seem unable to think outside the two-track box. Not 
surprisingly, none of the unions have called for the abolition of 
the two-track system, and none of them really have a concrete plan 
aimed at ending the system and all of its inequities. The New 
Faculty Majority has at least been working on a broad-scale 
20-year plan, the Program for Change, proposed by Jack Longmate 
and Frank Cosco, which models the equal treatment developed by 
several of the Canadian unions. Instead, the primary solution of 
the AAUP, AFT, and NEA has been the creation of, or conversion to, 
more new full-time tenure-track faculty appointments. More 
importantly, the national unions are run by tenure-stream faculty 
who do not hesitate to favor their own class at the expense of 
adjuncts. Many of these tenured national union leaders have become 
leading voices of the adjunct faculty movement and are routinely 
quoted on adjunct issues.

When adjunct leaders have emerged independently of the unions, 
union leaders have not hesitated to employ adjunct-bashing 
techniques to displace them. Union leaders have learned to enforce 
loyalty by labeling their adjunct critics as "anti-union." They 
have also learned to hurl accusations of "anti-tenure" and 
"anti-full-timer."

But while targeted as miscreants by American faculty union 
leaders, independent adjunct leaders are often commended and 
praised by non-U.S. faculty union leaders, such as those of the 
10,000-member Federation of Post-Secondary Educators of British 
Columbia, who actively work for equal provisions for all of their 
members, not just those who are tenured and full-time.

Imagine if the civil rights movement had been led by white people, 
or the women's movement had been led by men, or the gay movement 
had been led by heterosexuals. Of course any social movement for 
the oppressed needs allies, but where would these movements be 
today if their primary leaders had not come from the oppressed class?

There can be no solidarity in any union that adopts and supports a 
two-tiered system. Virtually all faculty unions in the U.S. have 
bargained — and continue to bargain — entirely separate and 
completely unequal contracts for their tenure-track and 
non-tenure-track faculty. For decades the teachers unions have 
been following the practices of the Sheriff of Nottingham instead 
of Robin Hood.

The tenure-stream faculty are paid much more than the adjuncts; 
the tenure-track faculty are eligible for regular raises and 
promotions, which the adjuncts are routinely denied; the 
tenure-track faculty receive much better health care, retirement, 
sick leave, and professional leave benefits, along with 
sabbaticals; the tenure-track faculty have their pick of classes 
and classrooms, as well as private offices; the tenure-track 
faculty have tenure and they are the last to be laid off, while 
the adjuncts have no job security and they are the first to go. 
The only time the word “equal” appears in the union vocabulary is 
when they bargain an equal percentage cost of living raise for 
both groups, which means that the tenure-track faculty receive 
four times as much money as the adjuncts since they earn four 
times as much. The academic system is especially abusive because 
the adjuncts have been denied the job security they need in order 
to confront the tenured faculty.

There is a serious legal issue at the heart of the academic labor 
movement. Unions have long fought to avoid employers setting up 
and running their own labor unions. And federal labor law forbids 
"employer-dominated unions" in the private sector. But the three 
faculty unions have numerous chapters where adjunct faculty are in 
the same unions with the tenured faculty who serve as their direct 
supervisors. Everyone knows that people are loath to bite the hand 
that feeds them, even more so when that hand is protected by 
tenure. In their 100 years of existence, the NEA, AFT, and AAUP 
have failed to negotiate meaningful job security for nearly all of 
their adjuncts. Their monomaniacal devotion to tenure as an 
all-or-nothing idea has caused them to fail to seriously develop 
other forms of job security for adjuncts. Even now, in the midst 
of the Great Recession, with the wholesale massacre of thousands 
of adjunct faculty, the three unions are focused on protecting and 
increasing the number of tenured faculty.

It should be obvious why all three national faculty unions want 
adjuncts in the same unions, and why they fear an independent 
adjunct union. As long as adjuncts are in the same unions as the 
full-timers, they will be powerless and easy to control. The 
unions will not have to compete with them at the bargaining table. 
And union leaders know all too well that the adjuncts — who have 
no job security and are completely dependent on the full-time 
faculty — will not be willing or able to organize enough brave 
souls to take over the unions. The adjuncts will continue to beg 
the full-timers to represent them and to push their agenda for them.

If adjuncts want to have their own union, there is no way to avoid 
the hard and dangerous work of forming a new national union from 
scratch. While I am doubtful that this can or should be done 
anonymously, I am confident it can be done. As Gregory Zobel wrote 
two years ago, “a national adjuncts’ union offers the chance for 
adjuncts to steer their own course, direct their own future, and 
accept full responsibility for the outcome.” It should be exciting.

Keith Hoeller is the co-founder of the Washington Part-Time 
Faculty Association. He has published two dozen opinion articles 
on the topic of adjunct faculty, drafted and promoted legislation 
for adjuncts to give them regular sick leave, and initiated two 
successful class actions to obtain health care and retirement 
benefits for adjuncts.
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