Layoffs
Tentative Minutes of the General Membership Meeting
For Thursday 18 June 2009
In Attendance:
EBoard Members: Delores Dillard (President), Andrew Shapiro (Vice President), Dawn Geddes (Treasurer), Kate Schultz (Secretary), Cheryl Yancey (Trustee) and 37 members
Staff: Gloria Harlee and Isaac Mora
On UC Tuition Increases - They just don't get it
Chronicle Editorials
Thursday, March 12, 2009
San Francisco Chronicle
These are challenging times for families who are struggling to put their children through the University of California. Tuition is expected to go up by 9.3 percent for the summer session, and is likely to rise by a similar amount in the fall.
These also are tough times for people who teach or provide support services at the University of California. Just this week, UC Berkeley announced its intent to lay off an undetermined number of employees, scale back on faculty hiring and encourage its employees to reduce their hours.
It seems that the financial stresses on the university are hitting just about everyone associated with the university except its top administrators.
UC Berkeley Chancellor Robert Birgeneau told reporters in a conference call this week that pay cuts for senior administrators were considered and rejected. "Further reductions of senior administrators' salaries would make us less able to compete with other universities ... seriously damaging our ability to attract outstanding people," said Birgeneau, who makes a base salary of $436,800 a year. read the full article
Please act to support laid off co-worker
Dear CUE members and friends:
We write to you to ask for your support for long-time CUE union member Ellie Corley, a UC employee with 33 years of service as an Administrative Assistant I.
Ellie has been laid off, with her work being assigned to others. She was told on January 9 to leave and not return to work and that she was being placed on paid leave till her employment ends, on March 10.
CUE is vigilant about all layoffs. They are always regrettable, and many of them unjustifiable, but Ellie's case is special. Ellie is 72 years old, and she cannot afford to retire.
Is this how long-term, older employees should be treated? We don't think so.
While all layoffs are regrettable, and many of them unjustifiable, Ellie's case is special. She has been working in the Office of the Associate Vice Chancellor for Finance, John Ellis, who is paid over $175,514 a year. Asked if he would be willing to do as several Stanford administrators have done, and take a small pay cut himself to protect lower-paid staff, Ellis smiled and declined.
We call on the Chancellor to exercise moral leadership in these extraordinary times and encourage the higher-paid administrators to take some pay cuts. We call on the Chancellor to impose an immediate moratorium on layoffs to protect valued members of the campus community and their families from the trauma of long term unemployment in these harsh economic times. We propose the administration use other measures such as the START program, to allow staff to share the burden on a voluntary basis. We have to ask: if there were legitimate budget problems in John Ellis' unit, why did Ellis rule that no staff in his unit could participate in the money-saving START program?
What is really going on?
Support Ellie Corley at the Regent's meeting Feb 4
Dear Members,
We've received almost 100 signatures to date on the petition to stop the unfair layoff of Ellie Corley. Thank you!
Can you join other members from CUE and other unions who are going to the Feb 4 Regents Meeting at Mission Bay?
Laid off from UCB after over 30 years of service!
Dear CUE members and friends:
We write to you to ask for your support for long-time CUE union member Ellie Corley, a UC employee with 33 years of service as an Administrative Assistant I.
Ellie has been laid off, with her work being assigned to others. She was told on January 9 to leave and not return to work and that she was being placed on paid leave till her employment ends, on March 10.
CUE is vigilant about all layoffs. They are always regrettable, and many of them unjustifiable, but Ellie’s case is special. Ellie is 70 years old, and she cannot afford to retire.
Is this how long-term, older employees should be treated? We don't think so.
While all layoffs are regrettable, and many of them unjustifiable, Ellie’s case is special. She has been working in the Office of the Associate Vice Chancellor for Finance, John Ellis, who is paid over $175,514 a year. Asked if he would be willing to do as several Stanford administrators have done, and take a small pay cut himself to protect lower-paid staff, Ellis smiled and declined.
We call on the Chancellor to exercise moral leadership in these extraordinary times and encourage the higher-paid administrators to take some pay cuts. We call on the Chancellor to impose an immediate moratorium on layoffs to protect valued members of the campus community and their families from the trauma of long term unemployment in these harsh economic times. We propose the administration use other measures such as the START program, to allow staff to share the burden on a voluntary basis. We have to ask: if there were legitimate budget problems in John Ellis’ unit, why did Ellis rule that no staff in his unit could participate in the money-saving START program?
What is really going on?
"I feel as though John Ellis and his staff just have no use for older employees, especially when they are union activists," says Ellie.
For years, Ellie has been a constant and generous supporter of other clericals and valued part of CUE rallies and meetings. Now, she needs our help!
Please take the time to write to Associate Vice Chancellor for Finance John Ellis and tell him:
*Take back the layoff notice.
*Put Ellie back to work.
*Follow UC's own policy on Equity & Inclusion.
*Develop a campus wide program that is based on shared sacrifice and that protects UC staff from unemployment.
Thank you,
CUE Local 3 Executive Board
The Union for UC Clericals
------------------------------------------------
*SAMPLE LETTER TO SEND – OR WRITE YOUR OWN!*
Or, sign the ipetition here:
http://www.ipetitions.com/petition/giveElliebackherjob/
UCOP Seniority Points - April 23, 2008
Know your rights about layoffs.
http://www.cueunion.org/general_info/layoffs.php
UCOP Layoff Units
http://www.cueunion.org/berkeley/ucoplayoffunits.pdf
Attached are the seniority points calculations from UCOP, dated April 23, 2008.
Know Your Rights - Layoffs
>>Read the UC-CUE Contract Article on Layoffs
Q: How does the University decide whom to lay off?