6/15 email


Dear members,

I hope you and your loved ones are healthy and safe as we confront so many crucial issues each day. One of our key battles is to save adjunct jobs and I am writing to share a letter to be used this week in our continuing campaign. It updates our last message that was sent to legislators about the layoffs at CUNY and asks them to sign on to a letter directed at the Chancellor and Bill Thompson (CUNY Board of Trustees chairperson). The letter makes the connection between the disinvestment in CUNY and the layoffs and cuts we are being threatened with. Please read the letter below.

We want as many members as possible to be at a press conference on Friday at noon to show these legislators that there are thousands of us who are watching and who appreciate and need their continued support. We will also be showing CUNY that we are not standing down and waiting until the end of the month. We will continue to resist mass layoffs and insist they make other choices. Last Friday we picketed CUNY HQ and held a simultaneous virtual action and this week we continue the fight with this mass press conference and webinar. Please register here: https://aft.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_GlQ8uE6ET-m6dIvohpk4ow.

In solidarity,

Andrea Vásquez PSC First Vice President

P.S. Here is a link to upcoming campaign activities: https://www.psc-cuny.org/SaveLivesJobsCUNY


PSC SIGN-ON LETTER TO CUNY

June 12, 2020

William C. Thompson, Jr. Chairperson, Board of Trustees The City University of New York

Félix V. Matos Rodríguez Chancellor, The City University of New York 205 East 42nd Street New York, NY 10017

Dear Chairperson Thompson and Chancellor Matos Rodríguez:

We write as elected officials of New York City and New York State who strongly support The City University of New York. We want to express our concern about plans announced by CUNY colleges to lay off potentially thousands of adjunct faculty by June 30 and cut course offerings for the fall by as much as 35 percent.

This is the wrong time-morally, politically and fiscally-to cut CUNY. Millions of people around the world are rising up and rightly demanding an end to systemic racism. Among their demands is investment in the community resources that work against systemic racism and inequality. CUNY at its best is among the most important of those resources.

New York must not turn its back on CUNY now. We call on you, as leaders of the City University system, to be a voice against the destruction of CUNY. We ask you to defend CUNY at this critical moment in history, not find ways to dismantle it.

New York will need CUNY more than ever as we seek to rebuild the economy and create a more just world. The communities that have borne the greatest loss of life and employment during the pandemic are exactly the communities whose members rely on CUNY and who will turn to CUNY to rebuild their lives. New Yorkers from all parts of the city and surrounding region will need CUNY as they seek to gain new skills and earn college degrees. Reduced course offerings, fewer faculty and over-sized classes will leave CUNY under-prepared to support the students whose need for support is greatest. A strong and fully staffed CUNY is a unique and essential resource for New York's recovery and an essential part of addressing systemic racism.

While we are painfully aware of the budgetary crisis facing the City and State, we believe that the CUNY administration should pursue every alternative before even considering reducing course offerings and enacting mass layoffs. The CARES Act allocated more than $100 million to CUNY for institutional support during the crisis, with an explicit provision about keeping employees on payroll. To date, CUNY has made no announcement of how those funds are being used. The University should provide complete transparency about its proposal for and allocation of the CARES Act funds. Budgetary relief at the state and city level may also come in the form of additional stimulus money from Washington.

The layoff plans announced by several colleges would mean that thousands of adjunct faculty and other hourly employees would lose their jobs. Many of these faculty members have taught at CUNY for decades, enabling CUNY to keep colleges open despite shrinking public funding.

The damage done to CUNY by pre-emptive and hastily conceived budget cuts will not be easily undone. We call on you to rise to the demands of this unprecedented moment in New York's history and chart a new course that protects CUNY students, CUNY workers and the communities CUNY serves.

Wash your hands and maintain a "social distance."
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