We’re forming a union! On February 6th, we filed for an election to certify our union, GENU-UAW, with an overwhelming majority of graduate student workers support. With a union, we look to bargain over our working conditions such as our pay, our healthcare, our workload, job security and protections from harassment and discrimination. We follow a national trend of student workers organizing around the country at: public institutions like University of Massachusetts, University of California, University of Washington, University of Connecticut, and many more; and private institutions like Harvard, Columbia, Brown, New York University, Tufts, Brandeis, American University, Georgetown, and others.

Since we filed our petition for our union election, faculty all over campus are showing their support for the NEU graduate student workers’ right to organize and showing us their support for our union. The graduate student workers appreciate all the resounding support from all of the Northeastern community members.

Inevitably, some questions may arise during our election raised by a variety of sources. We have put together a list of common questions that are often raised in union elections. If you do not see a question below that you would like answered, please email us at nugradworkers@gmail.com.

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Frequently Asked Questions

What do the increased costs of unionization mean for research budgets? Will we have fewer RAs or teaching fellows? 

How will unionization affect student-advisor relationships? Won’t inviting a third-party into this relationship risk the academic sanctity of this relationship?

How will strikes affect my research lab? 

Why are existing methods of representation, like the Graduate Student Government, not sufficient? What can a union do that these channels can’t? 

How can such a varied bargaining unit adequately represent my department’s students? Our department is different and their concerns will get drowned out. 

The university already faces budget shortfalls which means new spending is already cut. Won’t unionization make the situation worse?  

Why the UAW? UAW is a political organization with its own agenda. Why does it make sense to involve them in important decisions on our campus?

Campus Supporter

Peter Desnoyers

Associate Professor of Computer Science

Professor Heather Streets-Salter

Chair and Professor of History

Read the whole statement

“I call on the university to act not like the big employers of the past who have used half-truths and scare tactics to frighten employees from forming unions, but to take this opportunity to be a progressive example to the rest of the academic world.”

Letter from faculty of the Department of English

“Hence, we ask that our administration adopt a position of neutrality regarding graduate student unionization efforts and cease all communications to graduate students which could be seen as coercive, intimidation, or harassing, or which portray unionization negatively. The administration’s opposition to the students’ efforts is inconsistent with Northeastern’s values and mission, seems calculated only to further alienate graduate students, and is deeply disappointing to the faculty of the English Department.”

Letter from faculty of the Department of Sociology and Anthropology

“[A]fter due deliberation of the issues at hand, we stand strongly in support of the students’ efforts to establish a collective bargaining representative of their own choice. We believe this step will strengthen the students’ ability to carry out their professional training, free of fear and uncertainty regarding their roles as employees.”

Letter from faculty of the Department of History

“We wish also to recognize the integral role graduate students play as employees in the History Department and other and in other units and colleges, and to declare our support for their desire to organize for better wages, grievance procedures, affordable and accessible healthcare,  childcare, workload protections, civil rights advocacy, and better protection for international graduate workers.”

Letter from Faculty Forward: Adjunct Faculty Union

“We urge he administration to stop its bullying and start respecting graduate employee’s legal right to organize. Adjunct faculty are in a stronger position now that we were before our contract. We have a seat at the table, and we are not going away. We will continue to support graduate employees as they fight for fair working conditions at Northeastern University.”

See our faculty-specific info sheet here.