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New York, NY –  With their union contract set to expire tomorrow, almost 500 of CUNY faculty and staff rallied outside CUNY’s Midtown headquarters this morning to take their demands for a new contract straight to management’s front door. The Professional Staff Congress (PSC) – the union representing 30,000 faculty and staff at CUNY – was joined by students and advocates in calling for a new agreement that includes inflation-beating raises and other advances that help to protect the quality of a CUNY education.

Following decades of public disinvestment and three pandemic years, CUNY colleges are facing staff shortages, noncompetitive salaries, and inadequate working conditions. Just this month, CUNY management ordered a hiring freeze and college “savings targets” that will mean cuts to academics and student services. Students and advocates joined the rally because a fair contract for PSC members will ensure that CUNY remains New York City’s greatest engine for economic mobility among low-income students and students of color.

“We are fighting for a ‘Contract for A People’s CUNY’ because a fair contract that supports our faculty and professional staff  at CUNY not only benefits our members, but also improves the lives of the students and the communities that we serve,” said James Davis, President of the Professional Staff Congress. “The hundreds of faculty, staff, students and advocates who joined in solidarity at today’s rally sent a clear signal to CUNY management that our whole community stands beside us in demanding a fair contract.  We can and will ensure that CUNY provides a high quality education and remains a powerful force for change in New York.”

PSC’s contract fight begins as labor organizing has intensified across  New York City. And around the country, higher education unions are asserting themselves at the forefront of labor victories in contract struggles. At the end of last year, 48,000 academic workers across the University of California system went on strike for six weeks and won raises, childcare and more. And in NYC, adjunct faculty at The New School and Fordham University recently won impressive contracts.

In their last contract, the PSC won unit-wide raises of more than 10% over five years and a 71% increase in the minimum pay adjuncts receive to teach a 3-credit course.

“New York City’s working families deserve a world-class public university system, but CUNY’s dedicated faculty, adjuncts and professional staff can’t effectively serve our city’s students and communities without better working, teaching, and learning conditions.  After years of underinvestment, it’s long past time for these workers to finally achieve meaningful and equitable salary increases, improvements in health and safety protections, increased job security, and all of the other resources needed to carry out their critical mission of providing high quality public education for all. The entire New York City Labor Movement stands with PSC/CUNY’s dedicated faculty, adjuncts, and professional staff in the fight for a fair contract for A People’s CUNY,” said Vincent Alvarez, president of the New York City Central Labor Council, AFL-CIO.

However, salaries at CUNY lag behind those at many peer institutions. The union is demanding across-the-board raises that exceed inflation for all members, plus additional “equity increases” to lift the salaries of faculty and staff in lower paid titles. The demands also call for pay parity with full-time faculty–equal pay for equal work—for adjunct faculty, who teach the majority of CUNY courses.

Beyond salaries, the union’s bargaining agenda includes demands:

  • That support work-life balance and professional respect, including provisions for remote work, anti-bullying measures, and, for adjunct faculty, compensation for canceled courses and late paychecks;

  • For better benefits, including tuition waivers for the children of faculty and staff, and expanded eligibility for health insurance for adjuncts;

  • That advance racial justice and support for the common good, including improving racial diversity in recruiting and retaining faculty,  and reducing class size;

  • For the protection of academic quality and integrity in online education;

  • For stronger health and safety provisions;

  • To enhance job security for adjunct faculty and improve their access to full-time appointments; and more.

CUNY graduates contribute $4.2 billion annually to the state economy and make up about half of all new nurses and one third of all new teachers each year in New York City.

CUNY is funded by both the State and New York City. While the State has begun to reverse its record of underfunding CUNY, Governor Hochul has called for tuition hikes, and her Executive Budget falls short of CUNY’s needs. Mayor Adams has demanded disruptive cuts to CUNY funding as part of his plan to cut most city agencies. And federal stimulus money that helped offset tuition losses due to pandemic enrollment declines will end this spring.

PSC/CUNY members, CUNY students, community groups and labor allies are also mobilizing to ensure CUNY gets the public funding it needs from Albany and City Hall. They’re working to pass better state and city budgets and to enact the New Deal for CUNY, state legislation that would improve faculty-to-student ratios, professionalize adjunct pay, enhance access to academic advisors and mental health counselors, fix CUNY’s crumbling facilities and eliminate undergraduate tuition.

The same broad and growing coalition is behind the union in its efforts toward a fair contract. These two watershed fights will be instrumental in reshaping the future of CUNY.

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About the Professional Staff Congress

The Professional Staff Congress is the union that represents 30,000 faculty and staff at the City University of New York and the CUNY Research Foundation. The PSC/CUNYdedicated to advancing the professional lives of our members, enhancing their terms and conditions of employment, and maintaining the strength and educational excellence of the nation’s largest urban public university. In their last contract, the PSC/CUNY won unit-wide raises of more than 10% over five years and a 71% increase in the minimum pay adjuncts receive to teach a 3-credit course.

Photo Gallery

All photos displayed were taken by Dave Sanders, Erik McGregor, Ryan Persinger and PSC Staff on Monday, February 27, 2023.

Photo by Dave Sanders Photo by Dave Sanders Photo by Dave Sanders Photo by Erik McGregor Photo by Dave Sanders Photo by Dave Sanders Photo by Erik McGregor Photo by Dave Sanders Photo by Dave Sanders Photo by Dave Sanders Photo by Dave Sanders Photo by Dave Sanders Photo by Dave Sanders Photo by Erik McGregor Photo by PSC Staff Photo by Erik McGregor Photo by PSC Staff Photo by PSC Staff Photo by PSC Staff Photo by PSC Staff Photo by PSC Staff Photo by Ryan Persinger Photo by Ryan Persinger Photo by Ryan Persinger Photo by Ryan Persinger Photo by Ryan Persinger Photo by Ryan Persinger Photo by Ryan Persinger Photo by Ryan Persinger Photo by Ryan Persinger Photo by Ryan Persinger Photo by PSC Staff Photo by Dave Sanders
February 16, 2023

Statement of Solidarity with Florida’s Public Higher Education Workers

The PSC stands in solidarity with the members of the United Faculty of Florida (NEA/AFT) and other unions at Florida’s public universities, colleges, and community colleges. Over the past two years, Florida elected officials have attacked the independence and integrity of the state’s public higher education institutions. Violating established academic…

February 1, 2023

Statement on Governor Hochul’s Executive Budget

"Last year, Governor Kathy Hochul made a five-year, $1.5 billion commitment to restoring CUNY and SUNY and set an ambitious goal to increase New York's college graduation rate because she knows the power of public higher education to transform lives and strengthen the economy. The planned FY2024 CUNY increases of…

January 13, 2023

Statement on Governor Hochul’s State of the State

We are heartened to see Gov. Hochul commit to continuing implementation of her vision for the transformation of our state’s higher education system in her State of the State policy book. After years of public disinvestment, she committed last year to increase CUNY and SUNY funding by $1.5 billion over…

January 10, 2023

Solidarity With Striking Nurses

PSC members stand in solidarity with the 7,000 striking nurses at Mount Sinai Medical Center and Montefiore Medical Center represented by the New York State Nurses Association (NYSNA). Striking for patient safety is a bold act of caring, exactly what we would expect from the workers on the front lines…

December 9, 2022

Bronx Rally & Press Conference

PSC members, CUNY students and Bronx Borough President Vanessa Gibson gathered at Hostos Community College to call for full funding of CUNY and a fair contract. The urged Governor Hochul to increase state funding for CUNY by $428 million and called on City leaders to reject the Mayor's planned mid-year…

December 8, 2022

Urging the City Council to oppose mid-year cuts to Community Colleges

On Thursday, December 8, PSC Secretary Penny Lewis urged the NYC Council to oppose planned mid-year cuts to CUNY Community Colleges at a hearing about Mayor Adams’ November Financial Plan. The hearing was sponsored by the City Council’s Finance Committee, which is chaired by Council Member Justin Brannan. “CUNY’s budget…

December 8, 2022

Remote Work Agreement Extended | More

The PSC has secured agreement from CUNY to extend the Remote Work Agreement through June 30, 2023. This will affect HEOs, CLTs, faculty librarians and others, but I know that all PSC members know about this issue and share in the union’s fight to protect our members’ working conditions and…

November 30, 2022

Calling for increased state funding for mental health services at CUNY

On Wednesday, November 30, PSC President James Davis argued that the material challenges that CUNY students face can take a psychological toll at a hearing examining the Mental health needs of students at institutions of higher education. The hearing, held in Albany, was cosponsored by the New York State Assembly…

November 16, 2022

Solidarity with Striking New School Adjuncts

The Professional Staff Congress, the union representing faculty and staff at the City University of New York, stands in solidarity with the almost 1700 striking adjunct faculty at the New School and their union, A.C.T.-U.A.W. Local 7902. Adjunct faculty are 87% of the New School’s instructional staff. The university cannot operate without…

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