AFSCME 3299 Protests Outsourcing of UC Workers

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Photo by Dominick Ojeda | Digital Photo Editor

Alondra Sierra
Isla Vista Beat Reporter

Day one of the three-day strike, held by AFSCME Local 3299 in solidarity with Patient Care Technical Unit, began early Tuesday morning. Union members and students marched collectively, setting up picket lines throughout UC Santa Barbara’s campus.

The decision to strike was settled after 96 percent of AFSCME Local 3299 union members voted in favor. Drawing to a close on Thursday evening, Oct. 25, the three-day worker strike sought to protest against the outsourcing of UC worker jobs to outside companies, a practice that exploits workers with unfair wages and few healthcare benefits.

This threat grew after UC announced last month that they would enforce employment terms that would raise healthcare premiums, lift the retirement age, and lower wages for more than 15,000 UC Patient Care Technical Workers.

In response, AFSCME International President Lee Saunders called UC executives a “bastion of inequality,” claiming that executives revel in slush funds while workers struggle to make ends meet, per AFSCME press release.

Beginning their march each day around 6 a.m., union workers included Cheadle Hall on their route, arriving at approximately 9 a.m. to speak with Chancellor Henry T. Yang at his fifth floor office. Told that Yang was not present, they instead spoke with Executive Assistant Diane O’ Brien, sharing their grievances over unfair worker contracts.

“The UC doesn’t run without students or workers,” said AFSCME intern Ana Fabian to O’Brien. “We want them to be humanized by the UC.”

Hours later, the rallying continued at Storke lawn as more students and supporters gathered alongside workers to hear what speakers had to say.

“As a Latinx identifying person, a lot of the workers look like me, a lot of them look like my family,” shared AFSCME intern Erick Ceballos at Tuesday’s rally. “I couldn’t imagine going to an institution where they are putting people in danger of going hungry, putting people’s families in danger of losing their homes.”

Just after 12 a.m., as the marching moved towards Davidson Library, campus organizations like United Student Labor Action Coalition (USLAC), Mujeres Unidas por Justicia, Educacion y Revolucion (M.U.J.E.R), and KCSB also held up banners in support as they marched together with the union.

The voices of workers and student supporters echoed across the entire campus with chants expressing their demands like “What do we want? Contracts! When do we want it? Now!” and others affirming their presence and consolidation: “Se ve, se siente, la union esta presente!”

Protesters also set up picket lines at Henley Gate, where vehicles were heard honking in solidarity.

Many of the sentiments heard throughout the day pointed towards the value of students coming together to support workers. Jarrod, a full-time groundskeeper at the west campus apartments, believes that worker-student solidarity will help create awareness to end outsourcing and get a favorable contract.

“Much like workers, students are skipping meals because the people at the top of the UC system are making so much money,” Jarrod told The Bottom Line. “We just want the students to work with us so that students and workers can get their fair share.”

Last year, UC agreed to raise the salaries of eight UC chancellors by three percent, an average of about $15,000 more each year. Meanwhile, 44 percent of UC undergraduate students experience food insecurity, according to a national survey.

Amongst the second day’s speakers were Santa Barbara mayor Cathy Murillo, citing her support for the strike, and Jay Stemmle, an academic skills tutor from Campus Learning Assistance Services (CLAS).  

“This is what my boss wrote to me yesterday – ‘your failure to report to work will be considered insubordination/serious misconduct. Your actions will be subject to discipline’,” said Stemmle.

Stemmle encouraged workers to know and to take control of their own rights, citing the fact that she had every right to strike even though her boss told her she didn’t.

Quoting SEIU v. Fresno In-Home Supportive Services Authority (2015), Stemmle said “Because the right to strike is fundamental to the federal scheme of collective bargaining, it cannot be relinquished by employees except by consent in the form of specific contractual language. I don’t have any such contract. The only contract I have is the contract with my conscience.”

Minh Hua contributed reporting.