American Faculty Association

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Saturday, June 5, 2021

Colleges and Universities Requiring Covid Shots Fall 2021: Ignoring Federal Law and Nuremberg Code

 US Federal law and the Nuremberg Code stand for people's rights to avoid coercion into being subjects in experimental medical procedures such as the covid shot. Here are two links to a discussion of colleges and universities imposing covid shots as a requirement for attending higher education. It is somewhat disturbing that administrators at the colleges and universities on the list didn't seem to heed the issues raised in the second article linked below. It's not legal to require the covid shot, an experimental procedure. Many people have reservations about the covid shot, especially with "breakout cases" of people who received the covid shot getting covid. Others have already had covid, and thus have no need of a covid shot that could in fact make them sicker. These are dark days in institutions of higher learning where inquiry and freedom of speech and academic freedom are pushed aside for an untested medical procedure.

 

 https://universitybusiness.com/state-by-state-look-at-colleges-requiring-vaccines/

 State-by-state look at colleges requiring COVID-19 vaccines

The complete list of higher education institutions mandating vaccination for the fall 2021-22 semester.
By: Chris Burt | June 3, 2021

 

 

https://universitybusiness.com/mandatory-covid-vaccines-college-students-legal-akin-gump/

Mandatory COVID vaccines for students: Legal pain point or panacea?

Some states are considering bans that would prohibit universities from requiring COVID-19 vaccines

By: Michael Vernick, Brennan Meier, Molly Whitman and Jessica Mannon | April 16, 2021

Posted by Ms. Dashwood at 11:56 PM No comments:
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Friday, April 2, 2021

Jack Longmate's Editorial "Democrats and Unions Ignore the Plight of Nontenured Faculty," by Jack Longmate Published by The Times, April 1, 2021

Democrats and unions ignore the plight of nontenured faculty

April 1, 2021 at 3:23 pm Updated April 1, 2021 at 3:23 pm
By
Jack Longmate
Special to The Times  [first appeared in The Seattle Times, reposted with permission]

Democrats project the public image of standing up for the little guy, favoring unions and workers over management, promoting equality and fairness, and condemning discrimination and systemic racism. But good intentions can be subverted when the supposed good guys are sustaining unfairness and discrimination.

While the Democrats have heralded colleges as engines of equality and upward mobility, they have ignored the unequal two-tiered faculty labor system, the upper tier being tenure-track instructors, with lifetime job security, premium pay and full-time employment, while the non-tenure-track lower tier are contracted term-by-term, receive heavily discounted pay (e.g., often 60 cents on the dollar) and a workload that is often capped (e.g., no more than 67% of full-time), which can result in poverty-level wages. As a nontenured adjunct instructor for 28 years, I earned a gross annual income of about $20,000 for teaching roughly a half-time load in Kitsap County, where the median annual income is $82,000. 

The treatment of nontenured professors would be inconsequential if their role were inconsequential, but they are integral by any measure. In Washington’s community and technical colleges, they staff nearly half of all classes, 45.3%, and in terms of head count, they are the majority — the 7,870 nontenured part-time instructors vastly outnumber the state’s 3,597 tenured instructors.

It seems decidedly Orwellian when Democrats proclaim their dedication to forgiving student loans, free tuition and other programs aimed at lifting people out of poverty while denying a living wage to the very people who provide the means to execute those proclamations.  

Democrats generally feel confident aligning themselves with faculty unions, which for years have been pushing for more full-time tenure-track faculty positions (e.g., in Washington state, last year’s Senate Bill 6405 was recycled this year into current E2SSB 5194 and its identical House companion House Bill 1318, all sponsored exclusively by Democrats). But when adjuncts outnumber full-time instructors, adding more full-time positions does not solve the problem. What’s more, these bills offer false hope to part-time instructors as they convert positions, not individuals, leaving the substandard working conditions of adjuncts intact.

If these bills replaced sketchy paraprofessionals with bona fide professionals, they could be celebrated as improvements, but they cannot be so characterized. No credible research findings suggest the superiority of tenured instructors nor that non-tenure-track instructors are only 60% as effective, as their discounted pay rate would suggest.

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At play is the tenurism bias, the belief that tenure is a merit system, that the tenured are superior instructors and deserving of job security and premium pay with its cruel corollary that the nontenured are inferior and less deserving. Tenurism is the cognitive dissonance when confronting the abject unfairness of the two-tiered faculty workforce: Tenure-track and non-tenure-track instructors satisfy the same credential requirements, award grades and credits that have the same value, and have the same tuition charged for their classes, but are certainly not treated as equals. Tenurism rationalizes this lack of equality, giving rise to reasoning like: “Since the tenured are treated so much better, they must actually be better.” Like racism, sexism and ageism, tenurism makes the immoral seem moral and closes the mind to considering counter positions, such as correcting unfair working conditions. 

If the squeaky wheel gets the grease, then nontenured faculty may be doomed. Lacking job security, most adjuncts are not about to complain about the unfairness of their substandard working conditions. Despite decades of union representation, no transition from non-tenure-track to the tenure-track status exists in Washington colleges. The creation of more tenure-track positions will mean that many nontenured will lose their jobs. The unions appear eager for this to happen.

Instead of hiring new tenured instructors, a sensible and more feasible option would be to establish a probationary period for current nontenured instructors (as opposed to their perpetual probation at present), after which they could be granted job protection through seniority. While not tenure, it would enable a measure of job security and would not impact the state’s budget. Those who squeal that state law should not intrude into the turf of collective bargaining must reckon with the failure of bargaining to achieve such elementary workplace provisions as equal pay and job security.

The proper defender of workers is their union, which should honor, not ignore, its duty of fair representation and treat all those it represents fairly; it cannot play favorites. President Joe Biden has made pronouncements against systemic racism, which gives rise to the hope that egalitarianism will triumph over elitism, and discrimination will be recognized and canceled even when embedded as a norm.

When will Democrats and unions demand that colleges and universities extend the same upward mobility and career opportunities to their faculty that they offer their students?

Jack Longmate has been an adjunct English instructor at Olympic College for more than 25 years.
Posted by Ms. Dashwood at 10:04 AM No comments:
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Tuesday, March 30, 2021

BAD BILL 2ESSB 5194 Hearing at 1:30 p.m. Washington State Legislature March 31, 2021

 

 BAD BILL for WASHINGTON STATE ADJUNCT FACULTY AT COMMUNITY COLLEGES.

PLEASE CONTACT YOUR STATE HOUSE AND SENATE REPRESENTATIVES.

Tomorrow, Wednesday, our House Appropriations Committee will hold a hearing on 2ESSB 5194 at 1:30 p.m. The bill seeks to take courses away from 200 to 600 part-timers to form new full-time positions. The bill does not mandate any preference or priority to current part-timers in getting these jobs.

 
Moreover, both the Democratic House and Senate budgets include money in their budgets to fund the $16.6 million needed to create these new positions. Neither budget has any money for part-time salary increases, for the 12th year in a row. We are still underpaid about $132 million a year, though our numbers have declined by at least 20%.
 
Below you will find the email I just sent the committee.
 
Please send an email to the committee members with your subject line saying something like "Part-Timer Opposes E2SSB 5194." Your subject line may be all they will read. So keep your email short.
 
If you have time, an email to your own legislators will also help.
 
While my email has the members names and email addresses, you can also find them here:
 
https://leg.wa.gov/House/Committees/APP/Pages/MembersStaff.aspx
 
Generally, you can use their first name, with a period, then their last name, then @leg.wa.gov
 
You letter will do the most good in the next 24 hours, but it could be helpful in the next 48 hours, when they are likely to vote. 
 
Cordially, Keith
 
To: Timm Ormsby Cc: "steve.bergquist@leg.wa.gov" , "mia.gregerson@leg.wa.gov" , "Nicole.macri@leg.wa.gov" , "drew.stokesbary@leg.wa.gov" , "kelly.chambers@leg.wa.gov" , "chris.corry@leg.wa.gov" , "drew.macewen@leg.wa.gov" , "Matt.boehnke@leg.wa.gov" , "michelle.caldier@leg.wa.gov" , Frank Chopp , Eileen Cody , "laurie.dolan@leg.wa.gov" , "mary.dye@leg.wa.gov" , Joe Fitzgibbon , "noel.frame@leg.wa.gov" , Drew Hansen , Paul Harris , "larry.hoff@leg.wa.gov" , "cyndy.jacobsen@leg.wa.gov" , "jesse.johnson@leg.wa.gov" , "debra.lekanoff@leg.wa.gov" , "gerry.pollet@leg.wa.gov" , "skyler.rude@leg.wa.gov" , Cindy Ryu , Joe Schmick , "mike.steele@leg.wa.gov" , "monica.stonier@leg.wa.gov" , Pat Sullivan , Steve Tharinger Date: 03/30/2021 11:59 AM Subject: Washington Part-Time Faculty Association Opposes 2ESSB 5194 (Community Colleges) Rep. Timm Ormsby Chair, House Appropriations Committee Olympia, WA 98504 cc: Committee Members Washington Part-Time Faculty Association Opposes Shameful E2SSB 5194
Posted by Ms. Dashwood at 3:20 PM No comments:
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Friday, March 19, 2021

Washington State 2ESSB 5194 is ANOTHER BAD BILL that doesn't help Adjunct Faculty. Hearing on Monday, Mar. 22, 2021

Info from the Washington State Part Time Faculty Association, 

Please contact Legislators to ask they do NOT vote for 2ESSB5194

This is a bad bill, that doesn't help all of the Washington State College Faculty.

 

"The Washington State  House College and Workforce Development Committee will be hearing 2ESSB 5194 this coming Monday at 1:30 p.m. Since the Chair has already scheduled it for a vote this coming Wednesday, it seems the Dems are intent on passing the bill this session.

 
The unions have run similar bills for years, all without passing. It is part of the AFT's Faculty and College Excellence Plan (FACE), which ultimately seeks to reverse the part-time/full-time ratio so 70% of the faculty will be full-timers. They aim to do this by taking courses from current part-timers.
 
While this bill had some language about "equal pay for equal work," it did not necessarily apply to part-timers, and it was dropped as the bill ran into problems.  There is nothing in this bill about improving part-time pay at all.
 
If you have time, it would help to drop even a short note asking the legislators to vote against 2ESSB 5194. It's quickest to send it to the chair, with copies to the committee members. But individual notes are nice, especially if they are to your own legislators" 
 
SAMPLE LETTER from Dr. Keith Hoeller:
To: " vandana.slatter@leg.wa.gov" < vandana.slatter@leg.wa.gov>
Cc: " debra.entenman@leg.wa.gov" < debra.entenman@leg.wa.gov>, " mari.leavitt@leg.wa.gov" < mari.leavitt@leg.wa.gov>, " kelly.chambers@leg.wa.gov" < kelly.chambers@leg.wa.gov>, " cyndy.jacobsen@leg.wa.gov" < cyndy.jacobsen@leg.wa.gov>, Bruce Chandler < bruce.chandler@leg.wa.gov>, Drew Hansen < drew.hansen@leg.wa.gov>, " larry.hoff@leg.wa.gov" < larry.hoff@leg.wa.gov>, " vicki.kraft@leg.wa.gov" < vicki.kraft@leg.wa.gov>, " dave.paul@leg.wa.gov" < dave.paul@leg.wa.gov>, Gerry Pollet < gerry.pollett@leg.wa.gov>, Mike Sells < mike.sells@leg.wa.gov>, " robert.sutherland@leg.wa.gov" < robert.sutherland@leg.wa.gov>
Date: 03/19/2021 12:08 PM
Subject: WA Part-Time Faculty Association Opposes E2SSB 5194
 
 
Rep. Vandana Slatter
Chair, College & Workforce Development Committee
Olympia, WA 98504
 
cc:  Committee Members
 
RE: WA Part-Time Faculty Association's Opposition to E2SSB 5194

Though you have scheduled E2SSB 5194 for a hearing this Monday, March 22, you have already scheduled it for executive session on Wednesday, March 24. This bill, sponsored solely by Democrats and pushed by the two faculty unions (WEA and AFT), is similar to previous unsuccessful bills seeking to create more full-time faculty positions by taking jobs away from current part-time faculty. I will explain why it is a shameful piece of legislation.
 
1.  More Full-Time Faculty Will Do Nothing to Improve Diversity, Equity, or Inclusion
2.  E2SSB 5194 Will Mean From 200 to 600 Part-Time Professors Lose Their Jobs
3.  Part-Timers May Not Be Able To Collect Unemployment
4.  More Full-Timers Will Not Increase Student Success
5.  2ESSB 5194 Will Increase the Number of Full-Time Union Members 
6.  WA Legislature Has Abandoned Its Commitment to Equality for the Part-Timers
 
1. More Full-Time Faculty Will Do Nothing to Improve Diversity, Equity, or Inclusion
 
2ESSB 5194 is supposed to be about diversity, equity and inclusion. Yet this multimillion dollar boondoggle has tacked on to it a plan to convert 400 part-time to 200 full-time positions. 
 
As I state in my New York Times article, " An Academic Divide," several research studies show that adjuncts and other contingent professors who teach off the tenure-track are in fact the better teachers, calling  “into question the myth that the two-track system in academe is an equal opportunity merit system. It is not; it is in fact a caste system with the tenured faculty occupying the upper caste and the off-track faculty serving as the 'untouchables.'”
 
 
2. E2SSB 5194 Will Mean From 200 to 600 Part-Time Professors Lose Their Jobs
 
Since it takes two part-timers working half-time to form one FTE (full-time equivalent) position, then a minimum of 200 and a maximum of 600 current part-timers could lose their jobs with this bill. 
 
And there is nothing in this bill about promoting current part-timers to full-timers at a particular college. The bill seeks to take away courses from current part-timers and put them on the state and national markets. The part-timers would then have to apply from scratch and compete with hundreds of other applicants to teach the same courses they taught successfully for years.
 
3. Part-Timers May Not Be Able To Collect Unemployment.
 
In " Why Adjuncts Deserve Unemployment Compensation," I wrote that teachers are "the only professionals routinely denied unemployment when they are not working." Our state unemployment law allows colleges to claim that when part-timers are not working they are just like full-timers who are on paid term or summer breaks and have "reasonable assurance" of returning to work after their break period is over. Many part-timers are hassled and many are denied unemployment compensation. So the part-timers who lose their jobs to create these new full-time positions may not even be able to collect unemployment.
 
4. More Full-Timers Will Not Increase Student Success 
 
 
Section 5 of 2ESSB 5194, entitled "Tenure-Track Faculty," says "The legislature recognizes that student outcomes and success, especially for first generation, underserved students, may be significantly improved by increasing the number of full-time faculty at community and technical colleges."
 
This statement is false. If it were true, the Northwest Commission on Colleges and Universities would have yanked the colleges' accreditation decades ago since part-timers teach nearly half of all the courses and outnumber the full-timers by two to one. There is no credible evidence that more full-timers will increase student retention or make students graduate at a faster rate.
 
Fifteen years ago, the AFT itself funded a seriously flawed study that purported to show that student retention and graduation rates were higher at colleges that use fewer part-timers.
 
For decades Doug Collins has been an adjunct instructor of English as a Second Language at South Seattle College. He explained the flaws of this research in a letter he wrote to KUOW's Ross Reynolds in 2007:
 
"When assessing graduation rates, Jacoby did not statistically segregate evening students from daytime students. This is a big oversight, because evening classes are overwhelmingly taught by PT  instructors, and because evening students are more likely to have FT jobs or other daytime obligations themselves while going to school (and thus have a harder time graduating on time). The FT/PT labor divide is largely a divide of shifts. The FTers mostly dominate the day hours, and the PTers overwhelmingly dominate the evening and other less-desired hours." 
 
 
5. 2ESSB 5194 Will Increase the Number of Full-Time Union Members 
 
The bill will increase the number of full-time members to the two faculty unions (AFT and WEA), who have been losing members and money since the U.S. Supreme Court's Janus decision (2018) outlawed "agency shop" contracts, whereby workers had to either become members and pay dues or pay a nearly identical representation fee to the union. Unions can no longer force non-members to pay them fees.
 
All full-timers tend join the unions and they pay more in dues because their salaries are so much higher.  Prior to the Janus decision, 90% of part-timers refused to join the unions where there was no agency shop contract forcing them to join or pay a fee.
 
6. WA Legislature Has Abandoned Its Commitment to Equality for the Part-Timers
 
From 1996 until 2009, the legislature allocated $50 million solely to increase part-time faculty salaries, but stopped with the great recession. If there is any money left in this year's budget, it should go "solely to increasing pay and related benefits for part-time faculty," as every budget did between 1996 and 2009.
 
Not only will 2ESSB force hundreds of part-timers to lose their jobs, it will do nothing about the huge pay disparity between the part-timers and the full-timers. It seeks to spend $16.6 million in the next biennium to create 200 full-time positions.
 
In 2009 the legislature also stopped funding incremental step raises for the community and technical college faculty. While many full-timers have seen their increments funded by local collective bargaining, many part-timers have not because two-thirds of the unions have failed to bargain any increments for their part-timers.
 
Despite several decades of representation by the AFT Washington and the WEA, two-thirds of part-timers are not eligible for incremental raises. Only 50% of them receive either health or retirement benefits. They are barred from working even full-time so as to keep them from qualifying for tenure and they do not receive paid sabbaticals. They are not paid for summers and term breaks and often are denied unemployment compensation on the bogus grounds that they have job security they do not have.
 
If there is any money in the state budget, it should go to increasing part-time faculty salaries, which average about $20,000 for teaching a half-time load. Full-time salaries average $60,000 a year, though many earn much more by teaching overtime. At last count, the pay disparity was $132 million per biennium; it surely has gone even higher by now.
 
Please do not pass a bill that will not raise part-time salaries and cause hundreds of loyal part-time professors to lose their jobs.
 
Cordially,
 
Keith Hoeller, Ph.D.
Co-founder (with Teresa Knudsen), Washington Part-Time Faculty Association 
Editor, Equality for Contingent Faculty: Overcoming the Two-Tier System
Seattle and Spokane, WA






 
 
Posted by Ms. Dashwood at 9:11 PM No comments:
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Thursday, February 4, 2021

Washington State, SB 5194's Shameful Dismissal of Thousands of Part-Time Faculty, Dr. Hoeller, Feb. 4, 2021

 

RE:  SB 5194's Shameful Dismissal of Thousands of Part-Time Faculty
 
Like last year's similar bill (SB 6405), which did not pass, SB 5194 has a fiscal note of roughly $200 million. There are no revisions or even a substitute bill that would be acceptable to us. 
 
The two major  purposes of SB 5194 are detrimental to the 8,000 part-timers who teach in our community and technical colleges at poverty-level pay and without any job security:  (1) to increase the number of full-time faculty by taking jobs from current part-timers, and (2) to ensure that part-time faculty pay is tied only to instruction and therefore remains substantially below full-time pay.
 
SB 5194 Means Thousands of Part-Time Faculty Will Lose Their Jobs.
 
The bill seeks to convert part-time positions to full-time positions by taking courses away from part-timers. From one-to three part-timers will lose their jobs for every full-time position created. In seeking to create 1,500 full-time positions, at least 3,000 current part-time faculty will lose their jobs. Since union contracts allow full-timers to teach overtime, even more part-timers will lose their jobs.
 
SB 5194 is NOT an Equal Pay Bill for Part-Time Faculty.
 
SB 5194 seeks to pay part-timers only for the work they do solely tied to instruction, as though they "only teach," thereby keeping part-time pay well below 100%. This formula ignores three facts.
 
First, in “Part-Time Faculty Pay is a Form of Wage Theft,” I argued that part-timers do work outside of class, but they are simply not paid for it. They are also able and willing to engage in non-teaching work such as committees, if they were properly compensated. They should be involved in the life of the college and paid for it. 
 
Second, full-timers are paid on annual contracts, with compensation for non-teaching periods such as summers and term breaks, professional development funds, and sabbaticals. Part-timers are not paid for these non-work periods; they are unemployed and have trouble collecting unemployment.  SB 5194 does not address this lack of part-time compensation at all.
 
Third, the union contracts cap part-time work well below full-time, so many part-timers will continue to earn far less than full-timers do.
 
Part-Time Faculty Do Not Have Their Own Unions.
 
Washington state has forced the part-time faculty into the same unions with the full-time faculty who a) are protected by tenure, and b) often serve as their immediate supervisors. This is illegal in the private sector and violates the Washington Administrative Code barring supervisors being placed in the same unions with the employees they supervise. "Adjunct Professors Need Their Own Union" documents this unfairness.
 
The unions (AFT and WEA) support for this bill underscores their favoritism for the full-timers. Since the Supreme Court's Janus decision abolished "agency fees" in 2018, unions have been losing members and income. SB 5194 will give the unions 1,500 more full-time members, since the full-timers tend to join the unions and pay more in dues since they have higher salaries. 
 
The Washington Part-Time Faculty Association urges you to VOTE NO on SB 5194 and any substitute or revised bill.
 
Cordially,
 
Keith Hoeller, Ph.D.
Co-founder, Washington Part-Time Faculty Association
Editor, "Equality for Contingent Faculty: Overcoming the Two-Tier System"
     (Vanderbilt University Press, 2014)
Seattle, WA
 
Posted by Ms. Dashwood at 1:17 PM No comments:
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WA State Actions

  • 2002 Mader v State Board for Community and Technical Colleges
  • 2004 Mader v Health Care Authority
  • 2004 WA ordered to give $11 Million to Adjunct Faculty
  • 2007 EEB Final Order Mar.9th
  • Court of Appeals Published Opinion Knudsen v EEB

My Blog List

  • AA Dictionary of the English Language by Samuel Johnson - 1755
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  • AA Gutenberg - Free Online Books
    IT Musica (Biblioteca) - ← Older revision Revision as of 12:25, 26 August 2020 Line 48: Line 48: : Aria dall'opera "Eugenio Onegin" eseguita da Claudia Muzio. : Aria d...
    4 years ago
  • Adjunct Advocate
    How To Find Joy in Your Job Search - by Eileen Hoenigman Meyer Looking for a new role in the higher education industry can cue a roller coaster of emotions — it can feel exciting, humbling, st...
    6 months ago
  • Adjunct Page A is for Adjunct | Scoop.it
    A is for Adjunct, Part 2 - by Kate Daley-Bailey Editor’s Note: Part 1 of this post ended with a few lines posing questions about what those in an adjunct position can do, which has...
    9 years ago
  • American Faculty Association
    AFA Q and A : Question from A New Instructor Who Hasn't Taught Before, July 13, 2019 - The reply I gave to a new instructor who has never taught a university class, and who only has 5 weeks to prep, doesn't seem to "save" on the post about cl...
    5 years ago
  • An Adjunct Bill of Rights - Advice - The Chronicle of Higher Education
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  • C AAUP: Legal Round-Up: What’s New and Noteworthy for Higher Education? (2010)
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  • Colleges exploiting part-time professors - Spokesman Mobile - Feb. 13, 2005
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  • Education Dept. Accuses Accreditor of Neglecting Adjunct's Complaint - Faculty - The Chronicle of Higher Education
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  • EEB Minutes
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  • Equal Pay Means Equal Raises, Too - Advice - The Chronicle of Higher Education
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  • Litigation Mader v Health Care Authroity /madervhca/madersettlement-hc.pdf
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  • Mader v Health Care Authority
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  • Modern Language Association (MLA): Format, Bibliography, Style, Convention
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  • Photo:Columbia University Wikimedia Commons
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  • statecasefiles.justia.com/documents/washington/court-of-appeals-division-iii/266800.opn.doc.pdf
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  • the New Faculty Majority blog
    Joe Berry's Sept6 COCAL Updates - *…** in brief & links. Edited for length (omitting extensive "see below" items), redundancy (previously appearing in another post), time and formatting con...
    12 years ago
  • thefire.org/public/pdfs/4c0ce8622dfe7d24570b44cc08442ccc.pdf?direct
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  • www.ethics.wa.gov/ENFORCEMENT/Results_of_Enforcement/05-030knudsenFinalOrder.pdf
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  • www.sbctc.ctc.edu/college/hr/SpokaneMasterContract2009-2012_000.pdf
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Contract Topics

  • Adjunct Seniority List, Olympic College, Washington State
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