CONTACT US   SUBSCRIBE   PREMIUM   ADVERTISING

61F Hi 79F
Lo 62F

Recent Blog Posts

Labor Groups File Complaint With the U.N.

By WILL LESTER, Associated Press | February 27, 2007

WASHINGTON — Labor groups filed a complaint with a U.N. agency yesterday about a federal decision that graduate assistants at private universities do not have the right to form unions.

The AFL-CIO and the United Auto Workers complained to the International Labor Organization, an agency of the United Nations, about a July 2004 decision by the National Labor Relations Board denying teaching assistants the right to organize. The unions say that decision violates workers' rights under international labor standards. Any ILO decision on the complaint would not overturn U.S. law.

The NLRB, dominated by President Bush appointees, ruled in 2004 that about 450 graduate teaching and research assistants at Brown University in Providence, R.I., could not be represented by the United Auto Workers because they were students, not employees.

That decision overturned the board's unanimous ruling in 2000 that let 1,500 graduate teaching assistants join a union at New York University, a private school where teaching assistants had organized.

"NYU has gotten away with hiding behind the Bush labor board decision," said Susan Valentine, a member of the graduate teaching assistants union at NYU. "NYU wants to position itself as an international university. They should comport themselves with international labor standards."

NYU spokesman John Beckman said the labor complaint misses the point of the NLRB ruling.

"This filing ignores the essential point that underpins the long-held view of the NLRB, reaffirmed in their 2004 decision: Graduate assistants are students, not workers," Mr. Beckman said. "They are admitted to the university because of their academic talents as students, not hired by the university for their skills as workers."


Comment on this article

    Before submitting your comment, please provide a valid email address to complete the verification process.

    Fall Education
    A New York Sun Advertorial Section

    NEW YORK ›

    Cricket Draws City Teenagers Toward Police Department

    A Budget Deal May Embolden Governor Paterson

    Fair Housing Probe May Push Developers To Washington's Way

    Incentive Payouts Begin For City Students

    Court Date Set for Officers Charged in Bronx Beating

    Child, Animal Abuse Linked Under Albany Bill

    NATIONAL ›

    Obama Adviser Offers Some Advice to Damascus

    Overhauling Guard Training Is Costly

    Obama To Campaign With Running Mate Saturday

    Note by Arkansas Party Chairman's Killer Is a Mystery

    Woman Admits Stealing Identity To Attend College

    Tropical Storm Fay Gains Strength Over Florida

    ARTS+ ›

    Title of Woodward's Fourth Bush Book Unveiled

    Under Siege: Michael Jones' 'Leningrad'

    Billionaire Chandler Establishes Showcase For Mother's Art

    Malaysia Shuts Down Avril Lavigne Show

    "Godspell' Revival Called Off

    Tales from Londonistan: Hanif Kureishi's 'Something To Tell You'