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Professors at seven more Florida colleges take steps to form their union with SEIU’s Faculty Forward

12/19/2018

In just two years, 9,000 adjunct professors — more than half of those in the state college system — have organized or are moving toward union representation

000 Florida Adjuncts

Adjunct professors at seven public colleges in Florida have taken the initial steps towards becoming the powerful voice that their students and their professions need by joining SEIU’s Faculty Forward. Like K-12 teachers across the country, adjunct faculty are joining together to demand greater investment in the state’s broken college system. They are part of a growing national movement for fully-funded college for all, student loan forgiveness and $15/hour and a union for all campus employees.

“I’m tired of seeing my students and coworkers skip meals and doctors’ appointments,” said Angela Edwards-Luckett, an adjunct professor of World Religions at St. Petersburg College. “That’s why I’m joining with my fellow educators from across the state and across the country. We can’t afford to sit quietly and just hope things change.”

Adjunct professors at Santa Fe College, St. Petersburg College, Lake Sumter Community College, Polk State College, Florida Gateway College, Chipola College and South Florida State College are joining their colleagues at six additional colleges and universities throughout the state who have already filed for or formed their unions with SEIU’s Faculty Forward. The group is now poised to represent 9,000 adjuncts or 55 percent of adjunct faculty in the Florida College system. In the Tampa area, union density will be even higher at 63 percent.

“We are witnessing an unprecedented upswing in organizing amongst college faculty. The fact that in just two years, the majority of adjunct professors in the Florida College System are on their way to union representation,” said Dr. Judith Bernier, Director of Florida International University Center for Labor Research and Studies. “This level of union representation reflects deep dissatisfaction with a college system that has pushed many students and educators into poverty through increased tuition, mounting student loan debt, and low wages. Uniting in one organization gives this group a collective voice and a powerful say in the future of education in the state.”

 “We’re excited for our colleagues to join us in our fight to fix our broken college system,” said Jarad Fennell, an adjunct professor of English at the University of South Florida. “Lack of money shouldn’t keep any qualified student from learning and no professor should live in poverty. Education should open up opportunities, not limit those who can succeed. That’s what this is all about.”