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FIU professors strengthen their labor union after 'shock to the system' from state purge

FIU
Florida International University is the State of Florida's public university in Miami-Dade County.

Close to 100 employees at Florida International University who are not professors have had their union fully decertified by the state of Florida, one year after a sweeping anti-union state bill became law.

But even as tens of thousands of public sector workers across Florida have lost their unions 鈥 and as tens of thousands more are fighting to keep their unions alive 鈥 the union that represents university professors and faculty at FIU is poised to stay alive and stronger than before.

The FIU workers who have lost their collective bargaining rights include engineers, archivists, grant writers, admissions officers, interpreters for the deaf, museum workers and more, according to the for that union.

They are included among the tens of thousands of public sector employees who have lost their labor unions ever since key provisions of SB 256 went into effect, as 港澳天下彩has reported.

Non-professor staff at nearly all public universities in Florida have lost their unions, 港澳天下彩has found.

Last year鈥檚 SB 256 made it so that to stay active, most public sector unions have to have 60% of members paying dues 鈥 while at the same time it banned public employers from deducting union dues from paychecks.

Law enforcement, firefighter and correctional officer unions are exempt from the new law.

READ MORE: Tens of thousands of workers in Florida have just lost their labor unions. More is coming

But at FIU, the United Faculty of Florida union has seen a major increase in membership 鈥 with its president telling 港澳天下彩it will allow them to "get off the back foot" and "take on even more."

鈥淲hen coupled with the attacks on higher education that were happening at the same time, it definitely woke faculty up to the principles of shared governance and unionization and labor,鈥 said Eric Scarffe, the UFF-FIU president. 鈥淲e鈥檝e built out the union stronger than we were at this time last year. We鈥檙e more prepared to do the essential work that we鈥檝e been doing here at FIU.鈥

Scarffe estimated that the percentage of faculty paying union dues has jumped 鈥渕ore than 20 percentage points鈥 since last year, a significant number.

鈥淭hat said, I would never thank them for this bill. It鈥檚 absolutely damaging. It鈥檚 absolutely unnecessary,鈥 said Scarffe.

鈥淲hen coupled with the attacks on higher education ... it definitely woke faculty up to the principles of shared governance and unionization and labor."
Eric Scarffe, UFF-FIU president.

The union has not yet filed its annual recertification report in which it will post its specific numbers, but Scarffe said it will be safe for now from the threat of being decertified.

Dean Black, the Republican state representative from Nassau County who sponsored SB 256 in the Florida House, told The Florida Roundup that the new state law is simply intended to give workers a say in whether they want union representation or not, and that unions that justify themselves through strong buy-in will stay alive, as unions that do not might find a lack of support, leading to decertification.

"The law doesn't decertify them. The workers may choose that," said Black. "The power to make these decisions rest with the workers themselves."

The fact that police, firefighters and correctional officers are exempt from the law is justifiable, said Black, because those jobs are frequently treated differently. Opponents have called the exemptions a double standard meant to uphold the power and political support of unions that tend to align themselves with Florida Republicans.

Karla Hernandez-Mats
Daniel Rivero
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港澳天下彩
United Teachers of Dade faces a potential decertification under a new state law as it sends a snapshot of its numbers to the State of Florida.

"We treat them differently for purposes of retirement, and all manner of things. And so they are ordinarily treated as an entirely separate entity," said Black.

The union for the Charlotte County Sheriff's Office had 16% of eligible workers paying dues last year and it faces no threat of decertification; the Miami-Dade teachers' union United Teachers of Dade had over 56% of members paying dues, and it is being threatened with decertification.

A being sponsored by Rep. Black would expand exemptions for paramedics, 911 call operators and some hospital workers, sectors that are at risk of losing their labor unions under current law.

The proposal would also exempt many public transportation unions from the increased regulations. Federal law for public transportation agencies that abridge collective bargaining rights. A whopping $800 million for Florida is at stake.

More members 鈥 and more resources

The sharp increase in membership and professors paying union dues means that the FIU chapter of the statewide union has far more resources than it did before.

People who were once unengaged got personally involved with re-organizing the union, shifting members to a new dues paying system, and re-started workplace conversations about improving working conditions in forthcoming contract negotiations.

鈥淏ecause we have more members and we have more people willing to do the work, we can actually expand our capacity. So where we might have previously shied away from a fight because we just didn鈥檛 have the resources to do it, now I think we can take on even more,鈥 said Scarffe.

鈥淭his is an ongoing process and we鈥檙e gonna have to work very hard to keep our numbers up. But hopefully as part of that fight and part of that process, people can really start to see the value in unions again. And maybe that can help start to make some change, such that we can get off the back foot.鈥

Conversations have already begun about how to use increased capacity and resources to support other public sector unions who are caught in the process of being decertified or have already been fully decertified, added Scarffe. No decision has been made about what that support might look like, but that will be a big question over the next year.

The fact that thousands of public sector workers have lost their labor unions in Florida under SB 256 is 鈥渋ncredibly sad,鈥 he said. But on the flip side of that coin, some unions like UFF-FIU have been reinvigorated by the 鈥渟hock to the system鈥 that the law represented.

鈥淚t definitely woke faculty up that if their interests are gonna be protected, they need the union there to represent them and keep the contract strong,鈥 said Scarffe.

Daniel Rivero is part of WLRN's new investigative reporting team. Before joining WLRN, he was an investigative reporter and producer on the television series "The Naked Truth," and a digital reporter for Fusion. He can be reached at drivero@wlrnnews.org
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