Quick Take:

Hundreds of faculty and staff at Cal State University Monterey Bay walked off the job Monday as part of a historic strike across all 23 CSU campuses. Faculty are demanding a 12% pay increase and other benefits, while the university has offered 5%.

Striking CSU Monterey Bay faculty joined others across the university system Monday as they canceled classes and marched to demand a 12% pay increase and other benefits as part of a historic strike at all 23 campuses.

The planned one-week work stoppage is the first time the California Faculty Association has walked off the job at every campus since the union was founded in 1983. It’s part of an escalation of tactics by the faculty group, which staged one-day strikes at four campuses last month and vowed then to up the ante if their demands weren’t met. 

Meghan O’Donnell, a history lecturer who has been teaching at CSUMB for 13 years, canceled her classes for the week and stood alongside her colleagues on Monday. She said a majority of CSUMB’s nearly 500 faculty, lecturers, counselors, librarians and coaches are participating in the strike.

“I’m really proud of what our faculty are doing,” she said. “I’m proud of what we’re teaching our students. I’m really proud of the community that showed up to support us.” 

Among the community members who came out to support was City of Monterey Mayor Tyller Wiliamson – an alum of the university.

CSUMB spokesperson Walter Ryce directed questions and comments to the chancellor’s office but provided a statement saying the university is trying to reduce the strike’s impacts on students. The university also has an FAQ page about the strike on its website. 

“The strike should not interfere with students’ ability to complete their courses and graduate on time,” reads the statement. “Some faculty will continue to hold classes, so students should check with their instructors about their individual class schedules and assignments.”

Ryce said he didn’t know the number of classes canceled due to the strike and to contact the union. He also didn’t know how many faculty are choosing to cross the picket line to teach classes.

O’Donnell represents the Monterey Bay faculty as the president of the California Faculty Association’s CSUMB chapter president. She said striking faculty members will be picketing daily outside of four entrances to campus for the rest of the week. 

O’Donnell added that she doesn’t have exact numbers but she thinks a majority of classes at CSUMB have been canceled. 

Fourth-year global studies major Edwin Lopez said all five of his classes were canceled this week and he’s planning to attend the pickets on campus in solidarity with the faculty every day this week. 

“If we’re not paying our faculty what they’re worth then what does that say about our own education?” he said, from the picket line. “Our campus, our state and country in general are showing that they don’t really care about our future. So if we want something to change, we have to stand in solidarity with each other.”

O’Donnell said she’s not sure what the outcome of the strike will be and how the chancellor’s office will respond.

“At this point, all I can say is that the faculty are going to keep showing up in numbers, demanding the contract we deserve,” she said. 

The faculty union represents 29,000 professors, lecturers, librarians, sports coaches and mental health professionals across the CSU system. Negotiations between the labor group and Cal State management to ward off this week’s strike broke down two weeks ago, further entrenching both camps. They haven’t bargained since, said Kevin Wehr, bargaining team chair for the union and a professor at Sacramento State.

The smaller Teamsters Local 2010, a labor group of 1,100 skilled maintenance workers, agreed to a contract with Cal State negotiators Friday, canceling their planned strike this week.

Salary and benefits impasse

The strike comes after more than half a year of failed negotiations and the faculty union and Cal State officials remapain far apart on pay.

The university offered to provide a 5% raise, not the 12% the union is seeking for this year as a way to combat recent spikes in inflation that diminished the buying power of faculty salaries. Cal State’s 5% offer is consistent with the deals it finalized with other unions last year to avoid an even larger walkout of all the roughly 60,000 unionized workers. Cal State negotiators have also proposed to extend parental leave for faculty from six weeks to eight weeks, still less than the full semester that the union wants.

An independent fact-finder affiliated with the state recommended that Cal State provide the faculty union a 7% raise — an amount the faculty union said is too low. If there’s to be a compromise, it’ll land somewhere between 7% and 12%.

University negotiators have offered the faculty 15% raises over three years, contingent on growing state funding — no sure thing as California eyes multibillion-dollar deficits. The faculty refuses to accept any raises that are conditional.

Lecturers and professors earn between $64,000 and $122,000 on average. Wages for the lowest-paid faculty have risen about 20% on average since 2007, but grew by about 40% for campus presidents, whose average salaries are now more than $400,000. The new system chancellor, Mildred Garcia, earns close to $1 million from pay as well as car and housing allowances.

“It’s a constant struggle to make ends meet,” said Dirk Horn, a full-time political science lecturer at Cal State Bakersfield who augments his salary of just under $63,000 by teaching at nearby community college locations, other schools and picking up gigwork as an Uber driver.

Some days, his teaching shifts require nearly 80 miles of driving across three campuses.

Receiving the raises the union is seeking would let him work less — and earn more.

“I wouldn’t have to seek those outside income sources because I’d be able to pay my bills, essentially, with my one full-time job,” Horn said.

For Cal State, the strike represents a likely loss of learning for many of its nearly 460,000 students at the nation’s largest public four-year university system. The systemwide strike coincides with the first day of spring term at most campuses, and while workers have the right to strike, they also have the right to buck the union. 

“Faculty may choose to teach their courses as scheduled,” said Leora Freedman, who heads human resources at Cal State, at a Friday press conference. 

All campuses will remain open, said Mildred Garcia, system chancellor, at a press conference Friday. So far there are no plans to extend the length of the spring term. 

About 25 picketers showed up at Cal State Los Angeles on a rain-soaked morning, their ranks gradually increasing as the droplets dissipated. 

“Hey hey, beep beep, the CSU is mighty cheap,” the faculty chanted as they intermittently blocked traffic on the main road at the campus. 

Honoring the union’s demands would lead to layoffs and cuts to student services, Freedman said, echoing past Cal State statements. The faculty union maintains the university can afford it.

A striking worker teaches no classes, avoids meeting with students during office hours and answers no work-related emails. Working partially could jeopardize a faculty member’s right to strike, the union warns.

English lecturer Laura Quinn is basically working two full-time teaching jobs to earn $86,000 annually. At Cal State San Bernardino and the private University of Redlands combined, she taught 27 units in the fall semester. Typically, 15 units is considered full-time.

“The majority of lecturers that I know are working on two or three campuses trying to cobble together a living wage, and that’s not good,” she said.

One major impediment to providing the faculty union a higher general raise? The university secured labor deals with other unions that include reopening salary negotiations if any other union received more than a 5% raise.

Other disputes aren’t about pay. For example, the union wants lactation rooms with door locks for new parents. Cal state labor negotiators say the university already complies with the labor codes for pumping breastmilk. The faculty union also seeks more mental health counselors, among other demands.Cal State negotiators said they would agree to 13 of the 15 recommendations the fact finder provided in December — but not on salary.

Docked pay

Cal State vows to dock the pay of workers who strike. “It is a misuse of taxpayer dollars for the CSU to compensate any employee who withholds work,” wrote Amy Bentley-Smith, a Cal State  spokesperson.

Faculty who strike for a week can expect pay reductions of about 3%, she added. 

Union leaders are urging all members to walk the picket lines and avoid work, even the lowest-paid workers who earn the equivalent of $54,000 annually.

Nearly two-thirds of faculty are in the bottom half of the four pay ranges, a union spokesperson told CalMatters. And a majority of those workers earn the lowest salaries in those ranges. In 2022, the lowest levels were $54,000 and $65,000 for the two ranges. The union is demanding that Cal State raise those minimum salaries by $10,000 and $5,000, respectively.

All campuses except San Francisco State, where spring term starts next week, are encouraging students to report their instructors if they canceled classes this week, according to a CalMatters review of campus websites. “If a class or service is cancelled, you are welcome to share that information with us here so that we can best assure continuity and fulfillment of instruction,” Cal State Northridge wrote to students, using language common across all the other campuses that are asking students for that information. 

Students in solidarity with faculty are pushing back. On the social media platform Reddit, some students across multiple campuses proposed flooding those reporting forms with fake professor names or complaints about administrators instead.

“It just feels wrong that they’re trying to drag us students into it and have us turn on our professors,” said Jasmine Puente, a Cal State Long Beach student. “A lot of students just don’t want to do that. We want to stand by our professors and we don’t want to be a part of taking them down.”

As an aspiring teacher coming from a family of educators — including her mom who teaches elementary school and is president of her local union — Puente grew up supporting educators and unions. She recently graduated with a history degree from Cal State Long Beach and is currently working on her single-subject credential. 

Meanwhile, the faculty union said that Cal State leaders are asking all faculty to self-report if they didn’t work this week. The union told its members that they’re not obligated to inform their campuses about their intent to strike, but should answer truthfully in the event their managers ask afterward if they walked off the job. The faculty union message added that while Cal State is “legally able to dock the pay of striking faculty, keep in mind that we will recover this and much more when we win a fair contract.”The union cannot coerce members to strike nor can faculty require students to take part in labor action in exchange for a grade, various campus FAQs say. Similarly, campus managers are barred by law from punishing workers who picket.

Budget disputes

Throughout the negotiations, Cal State said it cannot afford the faculty union’s demands. The system last May revealed that it spends $1.5 billion less than needed to adequately educate its students. That finding prompted Cal State’s board of trustees last September to usher in consecutively escalating tuition hikes starting this fall — increases totaling 34% over five years. However, most undergraduates don’t pay any tuition because they receive enough state and system financial aid. The faculty union opposed those hikes.

“The union stood by us and tried to fight against the tuition hikes,” Puente, the Long Beach State student, said. “I think that we as students can stand by them too.” 

The labor group’s leaders hired an accounting professor last fall who concluded that Cal State reroutes more than enough annual surpluses toward its own reserves that could instead go toward student services and faculty pay. The annual surpluses are so high that the university wouldn’t need to touch the money it’s already stored in savings to pay the faculty union’s salary demands, the accounting professor said. University officials refute that contention, saying they must build a financial cushion to withstand economic turmoil and presently fall well short of their own savings goals.

Despite new revenue from the tuition hikes and extra dollars Gov. Gavin Newsom promised, system finance analysts said last year that Cal State would still run deficits under a scenario in which all university workers receive 5% raises.

A wider set of contract items will be up for negotiation this June. The current labor acrimony risks spilling into those quickly approaching bargaining sessions.

CalMatters College Journalism Network fellows Haydee Barahona, Briana Mendez-Padilla and Elizabeth Wilson contributed to this story.

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