En resumen

Ahora que los estudiantes trabajadores del sistema de la Universidad Estatal de California han votado a favor de unirse al sindicato de personal, su siguiente paso es negociar un contrato. Los estudiantes dicen que pedirán tiempo de enfermedad, salario justo y más horas de trabajo.

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Delila Grubaugh wasn’t sure if joining a union would benefit her. That is, until she contracted pneumonia and found herself unable to get paid sick leave, forcing her to work her library assistant job at Cal State Fullerton while ill. Access to paid sick leave is why Grubaugh, a third year communications major, joined student workers across the Cal State system who voted yes to a union. 

Among the 20,000 student assistants working in the system, 7,252 cast a ballot, with 7,050 voting yes to a union, according to results released by the CSU Employees Union Feb. 23. Priorities for student assistants include paid sick leave, affordable parking, an increased cap on working hours and fair wages.

Student workers like first-year sociology and political science student Maddux Eckerling, who works as an assistant for the Jewish Studies Department at San Francisco State, rely on their jobs to pay for college expenses, including housing. Studying and working in an expensive area makes this especially difficult. 

“I was working two jobs last semester, and was still about $200 to $300 short on my rent every month,” said Eckerling, who voluntarily helped organize students. “I had to rely on scholarships just to pay my rent and food bills.” 

Last semester, Eckerling contracted COVID-19, costing him $600 in lost wages. While Eckerling acknowledges that he is “very grateful” for the community at his workplace, he said many students are pressured to work while sick because they need the money.  

The recent unionization efforts of Cal State undergraduates follows last year’s University of California graduate student worker’s strike where over 36,000 employees campaigned for benefits like increased wages, anti-bullying protections, maternity leave and transit passes. The strike ended after two months of protests and bargaining between the UC graduate students and university officials.  

Paid sick leave is one of the main points that the union emphasized in its campaign. Since last October, campus organizers have been urging the 20,000 trabajadores estudiantes to vote to join the 16,000 members of the CSU Employees Union. In a press release, Catherine Hutchinson, the president of the employee union, encouraged students to unite to fight for better working conditions and fair pay. “Student work is real work,” said Hutchinson in the release. 

Cal State spokesperson Amy Bentley-Smith referred to Vice Chancellor for Human Resources Leora Freedman’s statement as the system’s official response to the union vote, noting the “long history of providing on-campus jobs to students through student assistant positions” and that the Cal State system “looks forward to bargaining in good faith.”

“Some student workers earn less than their local minimum wages. We want to negotiate for better wages.”

Cameron Macedonia, a fourth-year student at Cal State Fullerton and union organizing intern

For some students, their job is more than work — it’s an opportunity to gain experience early in their careers. Zoe Flohr, a senior psychology and sociology major at Cal State Bakersfield, said being a student assistant gives her insight into what it is like to be a professor. As a teaching assistant, Flohr holds office hours and study sessions, helps create exams, grades assignments and quizzes and responds to student questions through email or Canvas. 

Flohr said her main priorities for the union are better working conditions in addition to higher pay, increased work hours to 30 a week, and opportunities to work on weekends. 

“I think it depends on the student, like how many classes they’re taking and how often they’re on campus, but since the price of rent is increasing, the students want to be able to work more than their 20-hour limit,” said Flohr.

According to union organizing intern Cameron Macedonio, a fourth-year student at Cal State Fullerton, fair wages and lower parking costs have also been priorities for student workers. Faculty and staff typically pay lower parking rates than students.  

“A majority of our students make minimum wage and the university actually isn’t even required to pay local minimum wage,” Macedonio said. “So some student workers earn less than their local minimum wages. We want to negotiate for better wages. We want to negotiate for affordable parking.”

On the day the vote result was announced, student organizers celebrated. Next, the work begins. The union and Cal State officials will meet to negotiate a contract, though exact dates have not been set.

“Right now, the next steps are to get a bargaining team of students and student workers together and meet with the CSU to sit at the same table as them for, like, the first time in history, ” Macedonio said.

For the record: This story has been updated with the correct number of ballots cast and an accurate description of Maddux Eckerling’s role as a volunteer student organizer.

Barahona, Chkarboul, Munis and San Roque are fellows with the Red de periodismo universitario de CalMatters, una colaboración entre CalMatters y estudiantes de periodismo de toda California. CalMatters higher education coverage is supported by a grant from the College Futures Foundation.

Haydee Barahona es estudiante de cuarto año de comunicaciones con énfasis en periodismo en la Universidad Estatal de California, Bakersfield. Nació en el Valle de San Fernando pero creció en el Valle Central....

Christina Chkarboul es becaria de la Red de Periodismo Universitario 2023-24 y estudiante de tercer año con especialización en ciencias de la Tierra y estudios globales en la Universidad del Sur de California. Christina se desempeña como gerente...

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