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  • Faculty to vote after admins stop bargaining
    About a dozen, mostly dressed in denim, walk around a building area labeled LMU. They are holding up signs that read "LMU: Back to the table" and "Union busting is not a Jesuit value."
    On Sept. 26, the untenured faculty held a rally in response to LMU's decision to invoke a religious exemption and halt contract negotiations.

    Topline:

    Untenured faculty at Loyola Marymount University launched an Unfair Labor Practice strike authorization vote this week, following the school’s announcement that it will no longer recognize or bargain with the faculty union for a first contract.

    The backstory: The union had been negotiating for a contract with LMU’s administration for about 10 months. Then, in mid-September, campus leaders announced that LMU is invoking a religious exemption from the federal agency that oversees unions.

    What the university says: In an email, campus spokesperson Griff McNerney said the union “has no standing” and that the university ”is disappointed by [the strike vote] because it risks disrupting the continuity of instruction and the student experience.”

    What faculty say: Faculty who are not on the tenure track say they face low wages and no job security, due in part to short-term contracts. Bryan Wisch, a rhetorical arts instructor, said LMU’s decision is a betrayal of the faculty” and “a betrayal of the mission and values of this university, which purports to follow Jesuit values and Catholic social teaching.”

    What's next: Voting on the strike authorization will close at noon Tuesday, Sept. 30.

    Go deeper: Unions make waves across Southern California campuses, learning from each other as they go

    Untenured faculty at Loyola Marymount University launched an unfair labor practice strike authorization vote this week following the school’s announcement that it will no longer recognize or bargain with the faculty union for a first contract.

    The union had been negotiating for a contract with LMU’s administration for about 10 months. Then, in mid-September, campus leaders announced that LMU is invoking a religious exemption from the National Labor Relations Board’s jurisdiction. The board oversees unionization efforts and protects the rights of private sector employees.

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    In an email, campus spokesperson Griff McNerney said the union “has no standing” and that the university "is disappointed by [the strike vote] because it risks disrupting the continuity of instruction and the student experience."

    Faculty who are not on the tenure track say they face low wages and no job security, due in part to short-term contracts. A host of non-tenured faculty unions and graduate student unions have begun organizing in Southern California over the last few years for similar reasons.

    Union organizing in higher ed: A recent timeline

    Bryan Wisch, a rhetorical arts instructor, said LMU’s decision is a betrayal of the faculty” and “a betrayal of the mission and values of this university, which purports to follow Jesuit values and Catholic social teaching.”

    In a video, school President Thomas Poon said invoking the religious exemption “safeguards [the school’s] autonomy to carry out [its] mission, without a third party that may not share our values.” He also said the union’s proposals were “financially unsustainable” and could have led to a reduction in services for students.

    Wisch, who is an LMU alumnus, said he and fellow union members “expected the university to negotiate us down . . . They have just refused to bargain in good faith.”

    Voting on the strike authorization will close at noon Tuesday, Sept. 30.

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