Volume 62 Issue 10

Page 1

FOR THE WEEK OF TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 2013

Highlander University

Volume 62

of

C a l i f o r n i a , R ive r s i d e

Issue 10

Serving the UCR community since 1954

highlandernews.org

UCR Highlander Newspaper

@UCRHighlander

UCRChannelH

AFSCME strikes statewide, shuts down campus services Michael Rios SENIOR STAFF WRITER

Nathan Swift CONTRIBUTING WRITER

Thousands of UC service workers and patient care employees held a statewide strike on Nov. 20, protesting UC administrators for “unfair cuts” and creating “a campaign of illegal intimidation” against its workers. Called the Unfair Labor Practice Strike, the statewide event was held in nine UC campuses and in each of the UC hospitals. Vote to strike Employees of the UC’s largest labor union, the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees (AFSCME) Local 3299, have been in contract negotiations with the UC for the past 18 months. With no signs of negotiations being reached in the near future, however, the union decided to strike. The first wave of protests came in May 2013, when UC patient care and service workers from the union held a two-day strike, protesting “unsafe staffing levels at taxpayer supported UC hospitals.” Following that strike, UC administrators allegedly threatened their workers. As AFSCME member Leo Tolliver put it, officials told workers that “when they came back to work, they would be terminated.” According to a press release by AFSCME 3299, the alleged rampant illegal intimidation that followed the strike in May led the union to vote on a follow-up strike. With 96 percent of the members voting in favor of another strike, the union announced it would hold a second round of strikes on Nov. 20, 2013. University of California officials attempted to prevent the follow-up strikes, believing that the conflicts would only drive the two sides apart and hurt the UC’s hospital patients.

A UCR worker takes the microphone to support his fellow protestors in fighting to make their concerns heard.

The day before the Nov. 20 strikes, Sacramento County Superior Court Judge David I. Brown issued an injunction that limited the number of UC patient care workers that would be allowed to participate in the UC-wide event. Brown issued a temporary restraining order, limiting “certain employees who perform essential functions in patient health and safety” from participating. That same day, in an op-ed for UCLA’s Daily Bruin, AFSCME 3299 president Kathryn Lybarger spoke about the underlying issues regarding Wednesday’s strike. According to her, the UC had already forced AFSCME to concede on many issues that had

been previously lobbied. Such issues included wage and benefit increases, so AFSCME instead zoned in on an increasingly growing problem: safe staffing. The growing trend of cutting corners, to Lybarger, led to rising injury rates among service workers, as well as a swelling number of fines and deficiency reports against UC hospitals. The strikes At UCR, the strikes took place on the corner of University Avenue and Canyon Crest Drive, the intersection at Martin Luther King Boulevard and Canyon Crest Drive and at the Bell Tower. According to the union, the statewide strikes were scheduled to last

A a r o n L a i /HIGHLANDER

all day and featured a list of notable speakers including state senators, assembly members, a mayoral candidate and city supervisors. “Stop intimidation tactics!” roared the crowd of hundreds at the intersection of University Avenue and Canyon Crest Drive, as protesters held picket signs, blared music and cheered whenever passing cars honked in support. The bulk of the protesters were made up of AFSCME union members and UCR students who supported those directly affected by the UC’s policies. Some UCR faculty STRIKE CONT’D ON PAGE 3

INSIDE: The Riverside police’s decision to use tasers may lead to more unfortunate consequences. OPINIONS

PAGE 9

Spongebob, BMO and Ichigo were all in the same room last week at the Stay Tooned event.

Helping Hands for Haiyan

This quarter’s Comedy Apocalypse featured fewer laughs, and more philosophy.

O

ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT

n Nov. 7, the Philippines were struck by Typhoon Haiyan, the fourth-strongest tropical cyclone ever recorded and the strongest storm to ever hit land. The storm has claimed over 5,000 lives and left four million people without a home. With such devastation, the impact of the storm is a global one, felt even here at UCR, with many friends and family of our students and community directly affected. As a result, UCR students and faculty members are engaging in efforts to show their support and even lend a helping hand in the wake of disaster. HAIYAN CONT’D ON PAGE 10

PAGE 12

FEATURES

PAGE 16

Men’s basketball continues Homecoming form against Southern Utah. PAGE 19

SPORTS

UPCOMING EVENTS

PAGE 2

STAFF

PAGE 7 PLEASE RECYCLE AFTER READING

Laura

n g u y e n /HIGHLANDER


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.