• drailin@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    Cries in Texas Graduate Student who is legally prevented from unionizing 🫠

    Having to petition my university for basic considerations (not owing back tution to the university despite being employed by them, getting health care covered, getting pay raises so we can afford to live where we work) has been hell without any union support.

    Fuck Texas, can’t wait to finish up here and move.

      • 520@kbin.social
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        1 year ago
        1. The union being made illegal means the uni has no obligation to listen

        2. They can be sued for making the union, and the lawsuit will probably be successful.

        3. Any union action will be met with a probably-successful lawsuit.

        Best thing they can do is find another job and quit.

        • drailin@kbin.social
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          1 year ago

          Yep. Current me would have told younger me to get the fuck out and go to a different grad school literally anywhere else. I now tell that to prospective graduate students whenever I meet with them.

      • drailin@kbin.social
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        1 year ago

        I agree, but my peers don’t despite my attempts to convince them (out of a sense of fear mostly, not aversion to the idea, as is often the case). Many are international students at my school and the state uses that as a cudgel for union breaking, as the law demolishes their immigrant worker/student status that relies on their position if they were to unionize.

        Through a tremendous amount of effort, my boss and I have leveraged every ounce of pressure we have on the university administration to give us these necessary improvements to success, with full insurance coverage coming this fall.

        Still fucking sucks that we basicallly had to rely on the support of the professors to make this a reality. It would be nice if that solidarity was affirmed by collective bargaining

    • Purplexingg@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      How does that work? I’m a federal employee in a union. You figure if the feds can so can state employees

      • drailin@kbin.social
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        1 year ago

        It is literally just state gov employees in TX that are barred from unionizing, I shit you not. We have no worker protections when it comes to any element of collective bargaining. The state can terminate our contracts as punishment for doing so. Even teachers here aren’t allowed to. Unsurprisingly, pigs (and firefighters too for optics I guess) are the only state employees allowed to unionize.

        This includes political subdivisions of the state, so county/city employees are also barred.

        • Mongostein@lemmy.ca
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          1 year ago

          Wow. Where I live we have the AUPE, which is the Alberta Union of Provincial Employees, which is literally a union for employees of the province (as stated in the name).

          I’ve never been a part of it so I’m can’t make any claims to their effectiveness, but I know a lot of dumb people who make complaints about overpaid government workers.

          Like no. They’re not overpaid, you’re underpaid.