2-4-20

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The Pitt News

T h e i n d e p e n d e n t s t ude nt ne w spap e r of t he U niversity of Pittsburgh | PIttnews.com | February 4, 2020 ­| Volume 110 | Issue 213

GRAD UNION PLANS FOR SECOND ELECTION

HEY, HI, CELLO

Neena Hagen

Senior Staff Writer

Mary Beth Malek, Tina Faigen and Paula Tuttle (from left) of the Zaffiro Trio perform the music of Schultz-Voigt-Mendelssohn at a performance at the Frick Fine Arts Auditorium on Monday. Romita Das staff photographer

Laurie Kirsch to step down as vice provost after 7 years Mary Rose O’Donnell Assistant News Editor

After working at Pitt for 27 years, Laurie Kirsch will step down from her position as vice provost for faculty affairs, development and diversity on June 30. According to a statement released by Provost and Senior Vice Chancellor Ann Cudd, a search for Kirsch’s successor will begin in the coming weeks. Kirsch became vice provost for faculty affairs, development and diversity seven years ago. She was the chair of the Provost’s Advisory Council on Instructional

Excellence, where she worked to promote the University’s diversity goals, developed new teaching methods and created resources for faculty recruitment and retention. She was also chair of the Provost’s Advisory Committee on Women’s Concerns where she began the Spotlight on Women Leaders Program — a program designed to celebrate the accomplishments of female leaders across campus. Before her time as vice provost, Kirsch was a faculty member in the Katz Graduate School of Business, serving as a professor of business administration and

later as a senior associate dean for professional programs. She has won several awards for teaching and information systems research, including the Katz School of Business’ Teaching and Research Excellence Awards and the Magid Igbaria Distinguished Scholar award. Outside of her work at Pitt, Kirsch has held leadership positions in the Association for Information Systems and the Academy of Management and was an editor for various scholarly journals, including “Information Systems Research,” “MIS Quarterly” and “Management Science.”

After months of hearings, appeals and legal disputes between Pitt and graduate student union organizers, Pat Healy, an organizer and Ph.D. student, said the road to a possible graduate student union has been “tiring.” “This has definitely been tiring, especially for those of us who have been organizing on this campaign for a few years now,” Healy said. “We have a hard fight ahead of us.” But according to head organizer Jeff Cech, graduate students won’t have to wait much longer for another election. Cech said United Steelworkers, the union aiding Pitt faculty and graduate students’ unionization efforts, hopes to hold a second union election this semester. Graduate students originally voted against unionization 712 to 675 last April — a margin of 37 votes. The second election could take place anytime from April to the 2020 fall semester, depending on the timing of a Pennsylvania Labor Relations Board ruling on whether Pitt committed unfair labor practices during the election. Graduate student union organizers were encouraged when PLRB official Stephen Helmerich ordered a new election in a proposed September ruling. The proposed ruling said Pitt committed three unfair labor practices during the election, which potentially influenced the results. Union organizers began to prepare for an election last fall, but Pitt filed a formal exception to Helmerich’s ruling. Since Pitt challenged the proposed ruling, the full three-person board must now rule on the issue. The PLRB has yet to rule on Pitt’s excepSee Union on page 2


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2-4-20 by The Pitt News - Issuu