FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS
on UPTE’s unfair labor practice strike at UC
For months, we have been met with UC's bad faith at the bargaining table and unfair labor practices by the University even longer. UC is sitting on billions in reserves due to vacancies but fails to provide us with information we need - and are legally entitled to - about staffing, vacancies, or how much they save while our patients, research, and students suffer the effects of short staffing.
It’s frustrating that, despite the University’s predictably unacceptable proposals during bargaining, UC has now decided to increase employee healthcare costs significantly. UC plans to hike premiums by 9 to 11 percent, eliminate the only no-cost insurance option, raise outpatient co-pays from $20 to $30, and force employees to cover 30 percent of specialty drug prices. To make matters worse, UC never even discussed these changes with UPTE—they’re imposing them unilaterally.
Your bargaining team has unanimously recommended a strike vote over UC's Unfair Labor Practices. The affected UC locations (all or certain campuses) will be announced at the beginning of the vote on October 21. Only the campuses called on to strike will be asked to vote at this time.
Ballots will be sent via email, and in-person voting locations will be announced on the 21st. Sign your strike commitment today and pledge to stand with your coworkers if a strike is necessary.
Please find frequently asked questions (FAQs) below.
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During a strike, UPTE workers would not perform our regular job duties and instead would participate in picket lines at our campuses and medical centers alongside elected officials and other allies to increase the visibility of our collective action.
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UC’s hospitals, clinics, research labs, campuses, and other facilities cannot operate without the essential labor of 20,000 UPTE workers. The more we participate, the more UC will be forced to curtail operations or hire expensive temporary workers, costing perhaps tens of millions per day.
Thousands of workers marching on picket lines alongside elected officials, students, and other allies will increase the visibility of our actions and the amount of media coverage we receive. This will impact UC’s reputation and amplify the pressure at every level of UC leadership to resolve the unfair labor practices that led to the strike. -
No! In California, it is illegal to retaliate against striking workers engaging in a legal work stoppage, regardless of appointment type, hire date, or citizenship status. Some 100,000 workers participated in work stoppages and strikes at the UC in the last five years without incurring retaliation. In our previous strikes from 2018 to 2019 and our optometrists’ strike in February 2023, no one, including probationary workers, was disciplined for striking.
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How will our patients and research be affected if we allow chronic short staffing to continue? Right now, there is a recruitment and retention crisis at UC—54% of Healthcare workers and 67% of Researchers have turned over in the last five years. We know that if we don’t take a stand to fix the issues that thousands of our members have said are important to them, this crisis will deepen, and patient care, research, and education will get even worse than they are now.
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Retaliation for striking is illegal (see the third question above), and the State of California’s Public Employment Relations Board (PERB) has upheld this right. Supervisors are unlikely to take action against striking workers, and everyone in a department acting together provides even more protection.
We want our supervisors to know that we are striking for the good of our department and our work.
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No, workers cannot use vacation or personal time off while striking.
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The university’s behavior will determine when a strike will be called, how long it will last, and whether it is at one, multiple, or all campuses. Notice will be provided at least ten days in advance of any strike that impacts a UC hospital.
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Those experiencing financial hardship will be entitled to apply for the financial hardship fund.
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Your boss is allowed to ask you if you will strike, but they cannot intimidate you, retaliate against you, or ask you why you are planning to strike. You should respond: “Yes, I am striking with my coworkers. Will you support me?”
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UPTE workers are already experiencing a crisis in workload and short staffing. We are going on strike to force the University to stop their bad faith bargaining and address the staffing crisis now. You may be asked to reschedule your work in advance of the strike, but ultimately, it’s the University’s responsibility to cover your work while you are out. Do not work while on strike unless ordered by the State of California’s Public Employment Relations Board (PERB) for urgent patient care.
Being an active member of University Professional and Technical Employees CWA Local 9119 (UPTE CWA 9119) demonstrates to the administration and your coworkers that you support our efforts to make the University of California a better place to work for us all. By working together towards common goals, we win things like improved compensation, better working conditions, and more.
If you aren’t currently a member, you can become one today by signing up here.
If you are already a member, you can commit to strike by going here.