Andrew Baker Andrew Baker

College of the Sequoias workers win new contract with fair pay, better working conditions, and improved job security

College of the Sequoias Adjunct Faculty Association/University Professional and Technical Employees (COSAFA/UPTE) members ratified a new contract. In September, COSAFA/UPTE’s bargaining team reached a tentative agreement with the administration and the Board of Trustees at College of the Sequoias. Now, it goes to the Board of Trustees for a final vote.

“We are thrilled to announce a significant victory—our collective power, including each and every part-time faculty member, has led to ratifying a new contract with the administration and the Board of Trustees at College of the Sequoias,” expressed Danielle Alberti, president of College of the Sequoias Adjunct Faculty Association/UPTE, Sam Brookshire, vice president of the COSAFA/UPTE chapter, and Charles Slaght, the COSAFA/UPTE chapter’s secretary-treasurer. “That success is a testament to our unity and determination in fighting for fair pay, better working conditions, and improved job security, all of which are key achievements of our new contract.”

The new contract includes several substantial financial and non-financial improvements for part-time faculty. Among the financial gains are a 2.07 percent hourly rate increase retroactive to August 1 and the addition of longevity steps at 10, 15, and 20 years of service.

"Remember, it’s our collective strength that helped us achieve our new contract,” continued Danielle. “Together, we can continue building a stronger, more inclusive union that represents the goals and priorities of every COSAFA/UPTE member at College of the Sequoias.”

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Andrew Baker Andrew Baker

Attacks on free speech and the right to assemble are yet another example of UC’s misplaced priorities

Our current contract negotiations center on a theme of "Resetting UC's Priorities." While pleading poverty at the bargaining table with us, the UC Regents have awarded huge raises to top executives and approved the purchase of additional ammunition and military equipment.

At the same time, they're pursuing proposals in our negotiations that would dramatically restrict the rights of our members to advocate for improved working conditions and outlaw our ability to gather and protest in front of or near our workplaces.

Regarding the free speech restrictions, UC has used the recent Palestine protests and a legislative request for a report on its speech policies as a "Trojan horse" of sorts to push through radical and unprecedented limitations on speech without proper bargaining—a clear violation of the Higher Education Employer-Employee Relations Act (HEERA).

"These proposed restrictions are not just alarming because of their clear illegality, but because they demonstrate just how out of touch the administration is from the challenges frontline workers face every day in serving our patients and students or advancing our research," said Matias Campos, a Pharmacist at UCSF and UPTE's systemwide Executive Vice President. 

“It’s disappointing that UC and LBNL are focused on curtailing our fundamental rights to free speech and collective action rather than investing in the people responsible for the important work we do both at the Berkeley Lab and across the University of California system as a whole,” said Eduardo de Ugarte, a Graphic Designer and UPTE’s Chapter Chair at LBNL. 

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Andrew Baker Andrew Baker

Bargaining Update #7: Our stories continue to fall on deaf ears, as patients, students, and research suffer

UPTE's bargaining team was back at the table with the University of California on September 10 and 11 at UC Santa Barbara. UC continues to reject UPTE's proposals regarding pay, reclassification, work-life balance, staffing, and job security.

"College counseling today isn't about choosing a career or adjusting to being away from home. It's about keeping students alive and helping them get an education for a better future. It makes me wonder what UC is prioritizing if not student wellbeing and education," said Dr. Lily Clark, Counseling Psychologist.

When questioned, management's bargaining team has offered little or no explanation for rejecting proposals - even those that would cost the University little to nothing, such as improved rights to vacant positions or additional unpaid leave.

Fortunately, we know that UC has the resources to correct all of these issues. Our strikes in 2018/2019 and those by UAW academic workers in 2022 show that UC can be convinced to make the changes that we deserve. Join thousands of your colleagues and sign a strike commitment card today at upte.org/strike.

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Andrew Baker Andrew Baker

Thousands of UPTE members across the state rally to reject UC's inaction, misplaced priorities, and disregard of the law

During August, UPTE members at every UC campus and medical center across the state hosted mass meetings to share bargaining updates and talk about the importance of getting strike-ready. In a powerful display of our solidarity, thousands of healthcare, research, and technical workers came out to participate and sign their strike commitment pledges.

UC can’t pretend that they don’t know or understand our issues. At every bargaining session, members have shown up in force to pack the room in support of our demands. 

We’ve shared first-hand testimony in support of our demands—the researcher who schedules their lunch around when the food bank truck is close to their worksite because they can’t afford to survive on what UC is paying them, the campus mental health clinician who worries about having enough staff to work with students struggling with stress or even suicidality, and more.

We have the power together to win this contract, but we won’t win it just because your bargaining team members are arguing at the table. We have to win it through collective action. If you haven’t already, sign your strike commitment pledge today at upte.org/strike.

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Andrew Baker Andrew Baker

Therapists win improved work-life balance over weekend schedules at UCSF Parnassus Heights

The inpatient rehab therapists at UCSF Parnassus have secured a significant victory regarding their weekend work schedules. Previously required to work two weekend days every five weeks, these dedicated healthcare workers will now only need to work one weekend day per month. The change follows a coordinated effort by the therapists, who highlighted the impact of the demanding schedule on their work-life balance through strategic data collection and engagement with management.
“We realized that after thinking about the actual problem, it was more like we’re not doing our best at this moment to make the most of our resources,” explained Amanda Chow, a Physical Therapist 3 of almost five years at UCSF Health. “Ultimately, if we don’t have a proper schedule, then, at the end of the day, that impacts patient care."

After a march on the boss last year, during which UCSF healthcare workers demanded a substantive change to the weekend schedule policy, UPTE members once again escalated the issue with management. Their latest example of collective action involved them presenting their findings as a united front, detailing data points showing better patient outcomes, preventing severe burnout, and higher morale within the department.

After the joint effort by the inpatient rehab therapists, management acquiesced to the workers’ demands and changed the weekend schedule policy. The new schedule for inpatient rehab therapists is set to take effect in October, marking a significant step forward for UCSF healthcare professionals who must balance the demands of their critical work with their personal lives.

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Andrew Baker Andrew Baker

Meet your UC bargaining team: UC Davis representatives

Each month, we’ll highlight members of our bargaining team and this month, we're highlighting members from UC Davis. You can find a full roster of our bargaining team representatives here.

How will winning a strong contract help your work or the people who benefit from your work?

Amy: I think it would aid retention for sure. We’ve had a lot of turnover in my department of late and recruitment has gotten harder due to the pay and when we do hire people they are sometimes already planning to leave. I love my work and my department and want our amazing staff to be able to build a career here if they choose.

Danielle: A strong contract means recruiting and retaining the best technicians. When individuals can go to work knowing that they aren’t just making “ends meet” and can actually enjoy life outside of work, they become happier and want to stay. Having a job that supports you while also working with our furry, feathered and scaly friends is a dream come true. Great technicians are the difference between groundbreaking research, top-quality patient (pet) care, and food-animal health. It’s a win-win for everyone, especially the UC.

Sonya: If we had a contract that prioritized recruiting and retaining the best social workers in the state, we would become competitive again. Winning a strong contract would allow us to stay and continue setting the standard for what world-class social work service is. It would make UC Davis a magnet for the best, and that is what our patients, clients, students, and community deserve.

Anastasia: Winning a strong contract would ensure that our patients continue to get the best care possible by attracting and retaining the specialized staff that we have. Therapists who work with our most vulnerable populations will get the pay that they deserve and have some work/life balance so they won't be so burned out that they leave.

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Andrew Baker Andrew Baker

UPTE President Dan Russell: "We are not going to watch our talented and committed colleagues leave while our patients, our research, and our students suffer."

We are now less than 2 months from our contracts’ expiration and UC is showing no urgency to reach an agreement. UC isn’t just rejecting our proposals - they are refusing to even acknowledge that issues like fair pay and compensation, work-life balance, job security, or staffing deserve serious consideration or discussion.

None of us want to strike, but we are not going to watch our talented and committed colleagues leave while our patients, our research, and our students suffer. We need to be ready to strike if that is the only thing that will convince UC to take our demands and their legal obligations seriously.

Fortunately, we are not alone. Last week, leading Mayoral candidates Aaron Peskin and Flojaune Cofer joined our rallies in San Francisco and Sacramento to let UPTE members know that they have our backs and are prepared to walk the picket lines with us. Over the past two weeks, thousands of UPTE members attended mass rallies and signed our pledge to strike.

Sign our strike pledge today at upte.org/strike. All of us need to be ready to vote YES to strike and walk the picket line, if UC doesn’t change course and FAST.

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Zac Goldstein Zac Goldstein

UPTE associate faculty members at Mt. San Jacinto College ratify contract and look toward future organizing

UPTE members at Mt. San Jacinto College (MSJC) have a new contract! Between July 8 and 12, 2024, nearly one hundred UPTE Associate Faculty members cast their ballots to unanimously ratify their new contract with the administration of MSJC.

Santino Labbate, an associate faculty member in the physics department at MSJC's Menifee Valley Campus, has been advocating for associate faculty rights. With twelve years of experience at the University of Redlands, Santino brought his passion for education and justice to MSJC. "At the beginning of working for MSJC, I felt alone because I was new and didn't know anyone," he shared. This sense of isolation fueled his involvement with the union, where he found a community and a platform to address critical issues.

The journey to the recent contract victory was challenging. Traditional bargaining methods with the administration proved unfruitful, leading to impasse and mediation. Santino remarked, "The district filed for an impasse, so we decided to rally at the State of the College address at the Menifee Valley Campus. We made signs, making our presence known to donors, stakeholders, investors, board members, and the president. We wanted to let people know that despite some apparent successes, associate faculty are still treated like dirt." The rally was a crucial step in raising awareness among the community and student population about the struggles faced by associate faculty.

Together, workers will continue building a stronger, more inclusive union that represents the goals and priorities of every UPTE associate faculty member at MSJC.

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Zac Goldstein Zac Goldstein

UPTE members successfully march on the boss at UCSF and demand that they release our elected bargaining team representatives

Earlier this year, UPTE members across the UC system nominated and elected colleagues to represent us as members of our union's bargaining team for our current contract negotiations. Our bargaining team's composition was designed to ensure we had people from each campus and area of expertise in healthcare, research, and technical job titles present at the bargaining table to make sure that we could speak confidently and with first-hand knowledge on the issues impacting UPTE members.

UC didn't seem to think having that experience in the room was important. When we gathered for our first bargaining sessions, first at UC San Diego and later at UCSF, UC leadership refused to release Lalaine Rojo, a lab assistant and one of our elected bargaining team members, from work to participate in negotiations on behalf of UPTE members.

Lalaine has spent the last ten years working at UCSF, where she is a Lab Assistant II working in the Anatomy Department. She takes her role as a voice for her colleagues as both an UPTE Unit Representative and bargaining team member seriously, saying, "I've always been the kind of person who fights against injustice. We have to choose our battles, sure, but we shouldn't just stay silent and accept unjust circumstances. I want to make sure I'm here to speak up about the challenges lab assistants face, and why UC needs to take our concerns seriously."

You can watch a video of that march on the boss on UPTE's social media channels (Facebook, Instagram, and Twitter).

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Zac Goldstein Zac Goldstein

Overwhelming majority of Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory workers unanimously approve contract platform ahead of negotiations and march on the boss

For over seven decades, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (LLNL) has leveraged science and technology to make the world a safer place. The laboratory is a premier, world-leading, federally funded research and development center because its skilled crafts employees, represented by UPTE, have kept the lights on.

Between July 10 and 16, 2024, hundreds of members unanimously cast their ballots to ratify the "2024 UPTE LLNL Contract Platform," a unified statement of the priorities that will be included in bargaining with management, as identified in our bargaining survey.

"Ensuring we have comprehensive and affordable health coverage means peace of mind, knowing that we can handle any medical challenges that come our way," said Robert Perez, a laboratory carpenter. "It's not just about immediate care; it's about long-term security and well-being. Improving our retirement benefits is equally crucial. After dedicating years of hard work and expertise to Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, we deserve to retire with dignity and economic security."

The 2024 UPTE LLNL Contract Platform demands competitive wages, better benefits, and fairness at work. These priorities are designed to address issues, including severe recruitment and retention cases and a lack of respect from management. The contract platform represents UPTE's core values, including the belief that workers should have more time to spend with their families and loved ones.

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Zac Goldstein Zac Goldstein

Meet your UC bargaining team: Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory representative

Securing strong contracts requires more than just skilled negotiators; it hinges on the active involvement of frontline members from every campus and lab across diverse job titles. Our daily experiences make us the true subject matter experts, giving us unique insights into what is needed to drive forward our groundbreaking research, deliver critical patient care, and ensure our technical skills are duly recognized.

The 25 dedicated members comprise the UPTE bargaining team at the University of California (UC). They represent a variety of healthcare, research, and technical positions across all UC campuses and Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (LBNL). Each month, we will spotlight different members of our bargaining team from various UC locations and departments. You can view the complete list of our bargaining team members here.

Eduardo de Ugarte is a Senior Graphic Designer and UPTE Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory Chapter 184 Chair.

What motivated you to run for the bargaining team?
“I am motivated to advocate for fair treatment, living wages, and better working conditions for the workforce. Collective bargaining ensures everyone’s voice is heard and benefits all members. I aim to create a supportive and equitable work environment that respects everyone’s rights and needs. We’ve found many opportunities to improve retention, recruitment, efficiency, and morale, supporting our research, healthcare services, patient outcomes, and the mission of LBNL and UC.”

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Zac Goldstein Zac Goldstein

2024 UPTE Convention delegate election results

This year's UPTE Convention will be held in San Diego, California, from Saturday, September 28, to Sunday, September 29, 2024. The voting period to elect your 2024 UPTE Convention Delegates has concluded, and we extend our gratitude to all candidates for their participation.

Each campus or workplace was allotted a proportional number of delegate positions, with candidates who received the highest number of votes being considered elected. At campuses where the number of candidates was equal to or less than the number of allotted delegate seats, candidates are considered elected by acclamation.

Please find a full list of elected delegates at www.upte.org/elections. Delegates can expect to continue receiving information about next steps soon.

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Zac Goldstein Zac Goldstein

Dispatch from Negotiations: "Every minute UC wastes in negotiations is a minute we use to get more organized"

We've been bargaining for two months. Over 10 days of bargaining, we have heard from Pharmacists who don't have the necessary staff to save lives in the emergency room, counselors who don't have enough colleagues to keep students from dropping out - or worse, and researchers whose breakthroughs in cancer treatment and climate change are being put at risk because UC can't retain qualified staff. 

And yet, UC isn't engaging.

The administration's bargaining team has proposed no improvements to wages, career progression, proper classification, job protections, or time off, all while trying to keep you and your coworkers out of the process.

This is disappointing - but not surprising. In our last contract negotiations, UC only began to take negotiations and their legal obligations seriously after multiple strikes. As we have seen at UC, Kaiser, in Hollywood, and at the big 3 automakers, strikes are working people's most powerful tool in negotiations.

In addition to their day jobs at UC, UPTE's Unit and Workplace Representatives have been hard at work spreading the word about what's happening in negotiations and helping to organize rallies and "pack the table actions" at each UC campus we visit for bargaining. Now, it's crucial that we show UC that we can mobilize in numbers to put strength in numbers behind our demands at the table.

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Andrew Baker Andrew Baker

Bargaining Update #3: UPTE Continues Work-Life Balance Proposals, UC Responds on Reclassification & Holidays

On July 18-19, your UPTE bargaining team proposed our second set of work-life balance improvements, focused on priorities set by you and your coworkers regarding reduced workweeks, flexible schedules, remote work, improved parental leave, additional pay for temporarily taking on higher level duties, and more.

After UC initially refused to meet on the UCLA campus, more than 300 workers joined bargaining and a rally at UPTE's office in Los Angeles to send a message that we're united and ready to act to win the world-class agreement we deserve.

Despite testimony from dozens of members demonstrating how the reclassification process is broken, the University insists that the existing reclassification "process is working." We know that this is not true - and made clear that we will not be backing down on this issue.

UC's proposal for Holidays did not address UPTE's proposal for additional floating holidays or a guarantee for healthcare workers to have at least Thanksgiving, Christmas, or New Year off. Instead, UC is actually proposing to eliminate the option that hospital-based healthcare workers currently have to take Cesar Chavez Day as a floating holiday!

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Andrew Baker Andrew Baker

Dispatch from Negotiations: UPTE President Dan Russell shares his reactions to our first month of negotiations with the University of California

Our first month of bargaining with the University of California for UPTE healthcare, research, and technical members is in the books and our solidarity was on full display all month. You can find bargaining updates after each week of negotiations at www.upte.org/uofcalifornia.

During both weeks of negotiations in San Diego and later San Francisco, members joined us for in-person rallies at lunchtime and packed the bargaining room throughout the rest of the day to observe, show their support for our team, and occasionally provide scheduled testimony on a particular issue. These first-hand accounts, and our visible displays of unity, have a powerful impact on bargaining.

Everything we do this year has to show UC that we are united and prepared to pull off a super-majority strike statewide if they continue committing illegal and unfair labor practices or fail to take our proposals seriously.

We're hopeful we can quickly reach a deal at the table, but we’re also beginning to educate each other early about our rights if a strike becomes necessary. UC needs to see that we’re ready to fight to win the world-class contract we deserve. If you’re eager to get strike school scheduled at your workplace, reach out to your local leadership and staff organizers and let them know. Otherwise, we’ll be sharing more details soon.

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UC Davis workers achieve significant victories, building momentum during early contract negotiations

Members at the California National Primate Research Center, a federally-funded biomedical research facility dedicated to improving human and animal health, organized a march on the boss late last year over better working conditions and demanded an equity review, which ultimately resulted in equity increases.

Emily Fletcher, an Animal Health Technician 3, shared the challenges and successes of the campaign. “It started with recognizing the high turnover and increased workload. We realized we weren’t being compensated fairly,” she said. The collective efforts and an equity letter led to pay raises for many in the unit, with employees moving up one to three steps, marking a $1 to $2 per hour increase. “It’s making it a lot easier for me to do things and not worry about living paycheck to paycheck,” Emily added, underscoring the personal impact of these raises.

Simultaneously, Animal Health Technician 4s at the Campus Veterinary Services also fought for and won an equity review, comparing their roles to those at the Primate Center.

Kim Alca, another Animal Health Technician 4, highlighted the solidarity that led to these successes. “We wrote a letter with support from our supervisors, showing the discrepancies in our pay compared to other technicians. We had one-on-one conversations with everyone on the team to create buy-in and, ultimately, ownership over what we’re fighting for. That told the university that we are united and won’t back down. These collective actions and the data we presented were crucial in winning our raises,” she said.

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UPTE members at UCSD Health flex their collective ​​​​​​​strength to put the brakes on mandatory “flexing off”

The practice of “flexing off” healthcare workers occurs when management believes that the number of staff on shift is greater than needed for the number of patients on caseload. It’s generally seen as a cost-cutting measure because most impacted workers are paid an hourly wage instead of a salary, and can have serious implications for workers.

“We had finally got our staffing levels up to a pretty good place when our census suddenly dropped. Management started to flex people off, first asking for volunteers who wanted to go home. That was less of an issue, but when they started mandating that people go home without pay, we sat up and took notice,” said Lea Bishop, a Speech Language Pathologist and UPTE Co-Chair at UCSD.

“People who have been there for a while were sometimes allowed to use PTO or sick time to flex off, but people on probation had to go home without pay—and the least senior people were the most likely to be sent home,” Lea recalled.

Lea brought these concerns up in a regular meeting that she and the rehab unit reps have with their director at UCSD Health, in which they try to collaboratively address issues before they become larger problems. It’s a meeting that Rehab members fought hard to get, and which includes a committee of leaders from every discipline and location. In that meeting, the staff pointed to the article in our contract that prohibits mandatory flexing off and the changing of schedules. Management put an end to the practice almost immediately.

“It’s a good reminder that having a strong working knowledge of our contract and being confident asserting that knowledge is important, but knowledge is only power if we put it into practice and aren’t afraid to back it up with action,” Lea concluded.

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Andrew Baker Andrew Baker

Convention delegate elections are around the corner!

UPTE is proud to be a member-led union, and our annual convention will be a powerful gathering of our member leaders from across the state.

Each campus/chapter is assigned a proportional number of delegates to the convention based on membership. The delegate nomination period for this year's convention was open from May 21 through June 5, 2024. In chapters where the number of confirmed nominations was equal to or less than the number of allotted seats, nominees were elected by acclamation as delegates representing their chapter at this year's convention.

An election will be held to elect delegates from chapters where the number of candidates exceeds the number of allotted seats. This election will be held electronically and managed by ElectionBuddy. The election period will begin on July 8, 2024, and end on July 15, 2024.

You can find a list of delegates elected by acclamation, as well as candidates in contested elections, at upte.org/elections. The campuses with contested elections this year are:

  • UC San Francisco (27 allotted delegates)

  • Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (6 allotted delegates)

  • UC Davis (23 allotted delegates)

  • UC Santa Cruz (5 allotted delegates)

  • UC Los Angeles (25 allotted delegates)

  • UC San Diego (21 allotted delegates)

  • UC Berkeley (9 allotted delegates)

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Andrew Baker Andrew Baker

Meet your UC bargaining team: UC Berkeley representatives

Although strong contracts aren’t won by expert negotiators alone, having frontline members from every campus and across job titles is essential. We are the subject matter experts in our day-to-day work and know better than anyone what we need to advance our world-changing research, provide life-saving patient care, and make sure our technical expertise is respected.

UPTE’s bargaining team at UC is comprised of 25 members from a range of healthcare, research, and technical job titles from each UC campus and Lawrence Berkeley National Lab. Each month, we’ll highlight members of our bargaining team from various UC campuses and workplaces. You can find a full roster of our bargaining team here.

What motivated you to run for the bargaining team?

Jamie Gardner - UC Berkeley, Staff Research Associate 2: Research workers make up a big part of UPTE’s membership at Berkeley, but we've been less organized than some of our union siblings. A lot of us are the only UPTE members in our lab or work team, we have high turnover, and it's a field that appeals to introverts. So I agreed to step up and help organize. It's been great talking to research workers across the state, talking shop, seeing where we have the same issues, and finding places where the rules are wildly different for no apparent reason.

Jonathan Bradford - UC Berkeley, Principal Lab Mechanician: I wasn't initially planning on running because I was worried about the amount of time I would be away from work and didn’t want to fall behind on projects. After more thought and out of a sense of duty to my fellow members at Berkeley, as well as my desire to win our best contract ever for our members statewide, I decided to run for the bargaining team so I could bring my firsthand experience and perspective to the table with UC administrators and represent the priorities of me and my colleagues.

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Missed our 2024 Pre-Bargaining Town Hall? View a recording here.

Thanks to everyone who joined our pre-bargaining town hall last night. There was such demand to get in that we had to upgrade our Zoom account to accommodate everyone—while this is a fantastic problem to have, it does mean that folks who tried to join in the first ten minutes may not have been able to get into the meeting.

As a result, we're sharing a recording here with everyone who RSVP'ed so that you can watch it at your leisure and also share with your colleagues.

Max Belasco, an IT worker at UCLA, asked, "Can someone tell me in the chat what UC loves to say when we come to them and ask them to address our issues like worker retention, staffing, or below-market pay? That's right. When we ask UC to address our concerns, which ultimately impact our patients, our students, and our research, they pretend they don't have the money. Nothing could be further from the truth, as UC continues to spend billions on hospital acquisitions, hand out generous raises to Chancellors and CEOs, and hire more and more top administrators."

"Every action we take between now and winning a new contract is about demonstrating to the boss that we have the unity to pull off a super majority strike statewide," said Anastasia Vourakis, a Physical Therapist at UC Davis. "Now I know 15,000 people sounds like a big number, but if each of our leaders statewide talks to an average of only 10 people, we will hit a super majority of our coworkers across the system."

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