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, delayingโ€”but not doomingโ€”an 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.

โ€œSecuring employer recognitionโ€”whether voluntary or through a voteโ€”is urgent,โ€ said Felix Borthwick, a Duke graduate student worker, in a release. โ€œGrad workers who lack proper childcare and a living wage need those things and more now. We canโ€™t wait any longer. Weโ€™re in a moment where support for labor organizing is stronger than itโ€™s been in decades and weโ€™re bringing that to the Southโ€”we canโ€™t let this moment pass.โ€

The DGSU was formed in 2017 using a โ€œdirect-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 Southโ€”a region where legislative blocks and systemic exploitation  have long thwarted unionization efforts.

At the DGSUโ€™s โ€œRally 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.

โ€œYou ought to be leading the South,โ€ Barber said. โ€œYou 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 administrationโ€™s silence, Barberโ€™s 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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Lena Geller is a reporter for INDY, covering food, housing, and politics. She joined the staff in 2018 and previously ran a custom cake business.