News & Commentary July 12, 2023 UAW President sets the tone for a confrontational negotiation
https://onlabor.org/july-12-2023/
By Peter Morgan
Peter Morgan is a student at Harvard Law School.
In todays News and Commentary, SAG is on the eve of striking, UC San Diego lashes back at grad workers, CWA elects a new president, and UAW President sets the tone for a confrontational negotiation with the Big Three.
On the eve of the deadline for SAG-AFTRAs contract negotiations with the Alliance of Motion Picture and Television Producers, all parties agreed to bring in a federal mediator in a long shot effort to avoid a strike. The union, 98% of which voted to authorize a strike, had previously agreed to extend negotiation the deadline but have refused to extend it beyond today. SAG denounced the AMPTP for allegedly leaking their plan to request a mediator before notifying the union and reiterated how far the AMPTPs contract proposals were from satisfying SAGs demands. If, as looks likely, SAG ends up striking, it would be their first film and TV strike since in over 40 years. In joining the writers currently on strike, the unions members would effectively shut down Hollywoods production and promotion operations.
The Intercept has reported that UC San Diego has adopted a hardline stance to its grad student unions contract ratification. The university is being accused of a pattern of retaliation against grad workers through a number of measures: charging peaceful protestors with tort claims, failing or refusing to implement terms of the contract, retaliatory grading, arresting students who written pro-union messages on sidewalks, and reducing the number of teaching positions. The grad students at UC San Diego, along with academic workers across the University of California, had achieved significant contract gains after participating in the largest higher education strike in the nations history.
FULL story at link above.