As anticipated, Duke University administrators remained silent in response to the thousand-plus graduate student workers who sought voluntary union recognition from the university on Friday, delayingโbut not doomingโan effort to win worker protections for student teaching and research assistants.
As a next step, the Duke Graduate Students Union (DGSU) has filed for a union election with the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) and requested that the election take place by the end of March.
โSecuring employer recognitionโwhether voluntary or through a voteโis urgent,โ said Felix Borthwick, a Duke graduate student worker, in a release. โGrad workers who lack proper childcare and a living wage need those things and more now. We canโt wait any longer. Weโre in a moment where support for labor organizing is stronger than itโs been in decades and weโre bringing that to the Southโwe canโt let this moment pass.โ
The DGSU was formed in 2017 using a โdirect-action, direct-join modelโ that enables workers to exercise collective bargaining power without requiring formal union recognition from employers.
While the union has seen a number of wins in the past six years, including affordable dental coverage and guaranteed move-in stipends, formal recognition would give workers more leverage in addressing long-standing issues like workplace harassment and lack of healthcare access. It would also mark a historic victory for labor organizing: if the NLRB election is successful, the DGSU will become the first employer-recognized graduate student union at a private university in the Southโa region where legislative blocks and systemic exploitation have long thwarted unionization efforts.
At the DGSUโs โRally for Recognitionโ on February 28, Duke alum and labor rights advocate Reverend William J. Barber I called on the university to set an example for other institutions.
โYou ought to be leading the South,โ Barber said. โYou ought to be leading the nation. You ought to be leading the way. These students are not going anywhere: they are going to win. In fact, Duke, you ought to be encouraging it.โ
The day of the rally, DGSU members submitted a letter to Duke president Vincent Price, requesting voluntary union recognition by March 3.
In the wake of the administrationโs silence, Barberโs call to action reads more as a condemnation.
Follow Staff Writer Lena Geller on Twitter or send an email to [email protected]. Comment on this story at [email protected].ย
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