An organization of UA faculty, students and staff, called the latest move of the universityβs administration to seek an early end to the employee furlough plan as a βbig winβ on Thursday.
In a letter to employees, President Robert Robbins said, βOur recruiting and retention efforts this summer and fall have yielded better-than-expected results in net tuition revenue, and this positive difference over projections will be applied to the FY2021 budget. As a result, I am pleased to share with you that the Furlough and Furlough-based Salary Programs will end earlier than previously announced.β
The adjusted plan will be announced in the upcoming weeks as well as βhow this positive performance impacts the end date for faculty and staff compensation reductions,β Robbins wrote.
Sandra Soto, a member of the Coalition for Academic Justice and an associate professor, said βNow what that means exactly remains to be seen. What we do know for a fact ... is that the enrollment numbers did turn out to be much larger than the senior leadership team had predicted.β
Since Aug. 10, the administrationβs furlough plan has led to pay cuts for employees making $44,500 or more. The plan was supposed to last until June 30, 2021 β which is the end of the collegeβs fiscal year β to combat expected losses of a couple hundred million dollars.
More than 280 employees were laid off or did not have their contracts renewed this school year, the coalition said in early August.
The coalition was formed in April to begin a months-long effort to push the administration to seek alternatives to the plan.
In Thursdayβs letter, Robbins noted that, βDespite this good news, we know the University continues to face long-term financial challenges stemming from the pandemic that will span years.β
Robbins said to combat the financial losses, the administration is looking into state and federal support and βfeasible borrowing options.β
Still, the coalition responded in a news release that its membership has βnumerousβ questions including, βWhat will the short, medium and long-term implications be for students and employees?β
βIn other words, we hope that by shortening the furlough/pay-cut plan the administration does not decide to continue to lay off and non-renew employees, and we want to ensure that student-related programs that focus on the core mission remain unharmed,β the organizationβs news release said.
Itβs partly because of the furlough plan that the coalitionβs membership spearheaded the campusβ first employee union, which launched around Labor Day.
The union, called the United Campus Workers Arizona, is a chapter of the United Campus Workers, works in conjunction with the Communications Workers of America that represents 700,000 workers in private and public sector employment.
The chapter has already seen close to 400 members join its ranks.
Soto said the benefits of a βwall-to-wallβ union is its accessibility across the campus community.
βWall to wall means that anybody who receives a paycheck from the University of Arizona or once received a paycheck from the University of Arizona, so retired folks, laid off folks, can join our union,β Soto said. βIt even means that some of our union members are undergraduate students because they happen to work in the bookstore or at one of the cafeterias. They get a paycheck from the University of Arizona, and theyβre concerned about the labor conditions.β
In the unionβs inaugural meeting Sept. 24, members will discuss the various campaigns theyβll launch to bring awareness on education funding. The union will also address the administrationβs reentry efforts this semester.
βWeβre not just concerned about students and faculty, weβre especially concerned about staff at all levels, from office staff who are having to work physically on campus, but especially whatβs called facilities management staff,β Soto said. βSo, all of the people who are working for low pay, to clean the classrooms to clean the offices to clean the campus, the groundskeepers, the folks who are most precarious, by which I mean vulnerable, both vulnerable to coronavirus and vulnerable to having to go onto campus and work.β
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