Graduate Employees' Organization
The Graduate Employees' Organization is a labor union created to defend and extend the bargaining and employment rights of Graduate Employees and Graduate Assistants ) at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.
The GEO first began organizing at UIUC in the mid-1990s, gaining its first contract with the Board of Trustees of the University of Illinois system in 2004.
The members of GEO are committed to the principles of participatory democracy. Their objectives are 1) Organizing, 2) Collective Representation and Bargaining, 3) Education, 4) Community, and 5) Cooperation and Social Justice.
Since 1995, GEO has ratified five employment contracts with the administration at UIUC, with the fifth contract active over 2017-2022.
GEO's Organizational Structure
GEO is a recognized union affiliated with the Illinois Federation of Teachers, the American Federation of Teachers, and the AFL-CIO. The union is organized broadly into two groups: the Coordinating Committee and the Stewards’ Council. The CC is elected by the GEO membership every spring.Coordinating Committee
The CC is made of elected officials from all committees such as the Communications Committee, the Grievance Committee, the Personnel Committee, Treasurer, the Solidarity Committee, and the Bargaining Team. Some committees like the Work Action Group and the Bargaining Research Team are temporary, based on GEO's current organizational needs. For example, the Bargaining Team is active only during contract negotiations.
Stewards’ Council
The SC is made up of department representatives who work to advocate on behalf of GEO members. Meeting bi‐weekly, the SC organizes rallies, develops strategies for strengthening the union and increasing membership, and ensures that the union works most efficiently and effectively on behalf of campus workers.
Stemming from the SC are the Election Committee, International Student Working Group, Orientation Committee, Conflict Resolution Ad Hoc Committee, and Healthcare Working Group. As of Spring 2017, the ISWG and HWG were an active group while the Conflict Resolution Ad Hoc Committee was a semi-active group. The Election and Orientation Committees form only as needed, in preparation for and during union elections and University orientation, respectively.
Communications Committee
CommComm is responsible for GEO's communications strategy and oversees external communications. Members create content for, edit, design, and distribute information for the GEO. These communications include the website, social media, orientation materials, mass emails, press releases, t‐shirts, buttons, stickers, and much more.
Grievance Committee
The GC works to enforce the GEO contract. They are responsible for advocating for fair labor practices at UIUC and protecting graduate employees.
Solidarity Committee
SolComm is committed to working on issues of social justice and supporting them through various means such as financial endorsements, statements of support, and collaborations. To that end, the Solidarity Committee allows the creation of research groups to efficiently strategize around issues of social justice. Groups such as the Environmental Justice Research Group, the Gender Justice Research Group, and the Anti‐Police Brutality Research Group work on these issues and report to the Solidarity Committee.
History
The early yearsGraduate employees have been organizing at UIUC since the early 1970s, when a group called the Assistants Union first worked to improve working conditions. In the late 1980s, the union named themselves the Graduate Employees’ Organization and got together to voice graduate assistants’ concerns over issues such as salaries, workload, and health care, as well as a perceived lack of campus parking. An early victory came when the GEO convinced the administration to delay payment of student fees until the first payday. After initial success, this early GEO became inactive.
In the fall of 1993, a new group of graduate employees began building an active organization with the goal of matching the achievements of unions at the Universities of Michigan and Wisconsin. In the Spring of 1994, the GEO issued a bill of rights and successfully rallied grads against the administration's plan to stop issuing staff ID cards to assistants. With the ID cards, assistants were able to retain many benefits such as staff parking, access to the Illini Credit Union, and state of Illinois employee discounts.
During the 1994-95 academic year, the GEO grew and changed significantly. In the spring of 1995, GEO affiliated with the Illinois Federation of Teachers, joining over 70,000 Illinois educators in that organization. During the summer of 1995, along with other graduate employee unions in the American Federation of Teachers, they formed the Alliance of Graduate Employee Locals.
Securing the right to form a union
By April 1996, 3226 graduate assistants had signed cards in support of the GEO's call for a union election. The GEO filed these cards as a petition with the Illinois Educational Labor Relations Board to request a union election. In 1998, the Labor Board reviewed the petition and two of the three members in the committee ruled that graduate assistants would not be considered employees. GEO then appealed this case to the Illinois Court of Appeals.
Deciding on the Bargaining Unit
In early March 1999, a student referendum in support of graduate employees’ right to union representation passed with 77% of the vote. At the end of March, 55 graduate employees and supporters held a 20-hour sit-in at the Board of Trustees office to draw public attention to the administration's policy of non-recognition.
On June 30, 2000, the Illinois Court of Appeals, in a unanimous decision, overturned the IELRB's decision denying graduate employees the right to choose union recognition. Calling the Labor Board's decision “clearly erroneous” and based on an “overly simplistic interpretation” of Illinois educational labor law, the Court sent the case back to the Board for reconsideration. They must now allow “those individuals whose assistantships are not significantly connected to their status as students … the same statutory right to organize as other educational employees.” The IELRB approved preliminary guidelines for who would be allowed to vote in the union election. Graduate students employed as teachers, researchers, or assistants whose employment duties overlapped with their academic discipline were to be excluded.
In early 2002, GEO staged a sit-in at the Swanlund Administration Building. Soon after, the Administration agreed to meet with the union. Provost Richard Herman, accompanied by Deputy University Legal Counsel Steve Veazie, agreed to a series of meetings with GEO representatives to decide on the composition of the bargaining unit. After nearly seven weeks of negotiations, the GEO and university officials were able to come to an agreement on the composition of the bargaining unit.
Union election
The labor board scheduled the first GEO election for the week before Fall semester final exams: December 3–4, 2002. In a 1188 to 347 decision, graduate students overwhelmingly voted for GEO to represent them at the bargaining table.
Contracts
GEO's first contract spanned from 2003 to 2006. Once this contract ended, in the spring of 2007, GEO ratified their second contract for 2006-2009 with back-pay, a greater subsidy of graduate healthcare, and higher wages.
Bargaining for the third contract began in April 2009. In early November, a strike authorization vote was overwhelmingly passed by members of GEO. More than 1,000 graduate employees and supporters walked picket lines for two days on the Main Quad. GEO then ratified the third contract, which secured tuition waivers for graduate employees.
A few months after the new contract was signed, in the summer of 2010, the College of Fine and Applied Arts reduced tuition waivers in five departments from the out-of-state to the in-state rate, a difference of $13,000 per year. The union grieved this violation of the contract with the university administration and filed an unfair labor practice with the IELRB. They won a decision from a federal arbitrator in September 2011. On November 15, 2012 the IELRB ruled in favor of the GEO, finding that the UIUC administration engaged in an unfair labor practice with regard to the reduction in tuition waivers and failure to comply with the arbitrator's ruling.
Bargaining for the fourth contract began on April 13, 2012. After several months of no resolution, GEO passed a strike authorization vote by 87%. On November 27, 2012 the administration and GEO signed a tentative agreement and GEO ratified this contract with a 95% vote of approval.
GEO today
In spring of 2017, GEO began bargaining for their fifth contract with the University of Illinois management team in anticipation of the fourth contract expiring on August 15, 2017. As voted on by membership at the General Membership Meeting on February 1, 2017, the contract priorities were organized around protecting tuition waivers, raising wages and eliminating fees, ensuring quality healthcare, and promoting access and equality.In the first session, GEO's elected bargaining team presented its comprehensive contract proposal to the management team and answered questions. This bargaining negotiation is ongoing and will continue until a new contract is signed.