CEW 2003 ACTION PLANS

and REPORTS

 

Olympic College

Bremerton, Washington

 

At a planning meeting of our part-time faculty caucus within our NEA-affiliated union for Campus Equity Week, one person pointed out that the Friday of CEW, October 31, is actually Halloween.  Well, in the brainstorming tone of our meeting, someone suggested that we might "go with it," that is, take advantage of the fact that CEW falls on Halloween and actually incorporate Halloween into what we're trying to do. 

The more we talked about the idea, the better it sounded.  We are now thinking of a CEW Halloween SocHop featuring some ethnic bands.  Between sets, we may try to have some speakers to discuss the issue, testify about what it's like as a part-time faculty, affirm the principle of Equal Pay for Equal Work, etc.  We might also try to come up with some slogans like, "We don't need ghosts and goblins: Teaching part-time is scary enough."

 

FLYER 1 The Week (Tiff)

FLYER 2 Legislative Forum (pdf)


Becky Cooper put together this PowerPoint slide show for the Olympic College opening CEW event, a concert with speakers during the middle.  Throughout the event, we had a these slides projected in the background.  Once you open the file, the slides advance automatically every 30 seconds, if anyone would like to adapt it for their use.

(I found that the escape key turns it off. The Page Down key will advance from slide to slide.)

Power Point Download (534KB PPS File)


REPORT

At this moment, I’m enjoying a feeling of success about a Campus Equity Week event that we held at Olympic College in Bremerton, WA.  This evening, we had a Legislative Forum which was jointly hosted by us, the part-time faculty caucus within our NEA-affiliated union, and the student government. Master of Ceremonies was the student body president. About 40 people attended, which perhaps is a bit disappointing, but that number included a few adjunct faculty, a handful of students, two trustees (we promoted the forum last night at a Board of Trustees meeting), and few members of the general community. I don’t believe any full-time faculty members were present.
 
While we made clear that the status of part-time community college faculty was to be a focus of the forum, we also made clear that it was not to be the only focus, and that all issue confronting our state would be fair game. As it turned out, part-time equity was evident virtually throughout the discussion. 
 
After introductions, I gave a five-minute recap of the major legislative accomplishments over the past six years pertaining to part-time faculty, focusing on the positive things that have happened and pointing in the direction of new legislation that would not impact the state budget but would still benefit part-time faculty, like bills that might mandate local bargaining of job security and seniority for part-time faculty. Several legislators made encouraging remarks about those ideas.
 
That was followed by statements of up to 7 minutes by each legislator present. Six of the nine legislators from the three legislative districts in which our colleges operates came. 
 
After those statements, questions from the audience were entertained, the overwhelming majority of which seem to deal with equity and funding of educational issues.  They included:

• I've heard that if 1 percent of the tax breaks granted to big business were to be recided, there would then be enough money to fund part-time equity.  Is that  true?

• Has anyone ever worked in a position where they are paid half of what the standard pay is?

• (In response to a Republican legislator who stressed the need for a health business climate, free of excessive regulation,) what guarantees that the colleges will get proper funding when we break out of our economic downturn?

There was a very fine sense of community at the meeting, with the audience appreciating the legislators, and even one legislator commending all those who were present. As indicative of the positive sense, one senator, who said before the meeting that she was planning to leave before the question and answers because she had four meetings scheduled during the day prior to our forum, ended up staying until the very end, and gave me a hearty thank you at the meeting’s conclusion. 
 
To the four Democrats and two Republicans legislators who took part, I believe the need for equity was acknowledge by them and reinforced, and I think the six legislators collectively emphasized a real sense of goodwill.
 
Best wishes,
 
Jack Longmate   
  

Contact: Jack Longmate        <jacklongmate@earthlink.net>

 

2003 - AB - CD - EF - GH - IJKL - MN - OP - QR - ST - UV - WXYZ

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