<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?><rss version="2.0" xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/">
  <channel>
    <title>UE150 &amp;mdash; Fight Back! News</title>
    <link>https://fightbacknews.org/tag:UE150</link>
    <description>News and Views from the People&#39;s Struggle</description>
    <pubDate>Wed, 29 Apr 2026 13:15:46 +0000</pubDate>
    <image>
      <url>https://i.snap.as/RZCOEKyz.png</url>
      <title>UE150 &amp;mdash; Fight Back! News</title>
      <link>https://fightbacknews.org/tag:UE150</link>
    </image>
    <item>
      <title>Raleigh Sanitation Workers’ Struggle Builds Union, Brings Victories</title>
      <link>https://fightbacknews.org/raleigh-sanitation-workers-struggle-builds-union-brings-victories?pk_campaign=rss-feed</link>
      <description>&lt;![CDATA[Workers protesting at city council meeting.&#34;)&#xA;&#xA;Raleigh, NC - Raleigh sanitation workers changed tactics, after months of protests to city management fell on deaf ears. The sanitation workers held a four-hour and a two-hour temporary work stoppage on Sept. 13 and 14, forcing city management to address their concerns. An important struggle has unfolded in the weeks since.&#xA;&#xA;!--more--&#xA;&#xA;The sanitation workers, the overwhelming majority of whom are Black, face exhausting 14-hour days and are understaffed and overworked. Forced overtime and harassment of workers by management is commonplace. Sanitation worker Daron Green emphasized, “We need to have our management looked at. We have very bad management overall. We need new management, period.”&#xA;&#xA;The Raleigh sanitation workers put forward five demands to city management: An immediate end to forced overtime; overtime pay after 40 hours work and not compensatory time; make temporary employees permanent and hire more workers to reduce workload; end the harassment against workers for speaking out against problems; city to meet-and-confer with the elected North Carolina Public Service Workers Union (UE Local 150) representatives in sanitation. The sanitation workers gave the city council one week to meet their demands.&#xA;&#xA;Meanwhile, community organizers began rallying mass support for the workers - from the NAACP to religious groups to student organizers, who drove a sound truck through Raleigh neighborhoods to raise support for the sanitation workers’ struggle. Unions and community organizations from all over North Carolina passed resolutions declaring their support for the sanitation workers.&#xA;&#xA;The city council met to discuss the situation on Sept. 20. In a hall packed with supporters, organizers with UE 150 and over 40 sanitation workers presented their demands and stressed the need for collective bargaining. Under a 1959 North Carolina state law, collective bargaining is prohibited for public sector workers - a holdover from the Jim Crow era, when higher numbers of Black workers were concentrated in the public sector in the South.&#xA;&#xA;Jerry Ledbetter, a spokesperson for the sanitation workers, said, “We are asking for collective bargaining, to meet and confer with city council of Raleigh. We are ready to cooperate. We are here in good faith. But we have to be treated fairly, and be treated like human beings.”&#xA;&#xA;Jimmy Gaye, who has worked in the Sanitation department for 22 years, told the city council, “It’s so much of a work overload that we have, we’re doing two to three jobs a day. We take the truck out, we go back in, we take the truck out, we bring it back in, until it gets so late in the day that you can’t do it any more.”&#xA;&#xA;Gaye continued, “We’re thinking about our future here. We can’t grow if you don’t let us grow. Raleigh grows, and we know that we’re going to be expanding out, we’re doing Durham County, we’re out in Raleigh, we’re out to parts of Morrisville, we’re out in parts of Cary. We cover those areas. Those are big areas that you trying to cover, that you’re allowing to be annexed into a part of Raleigh now that the growth is here. Now, what about us? We want to grow too - can you let us do that?”&#xA;&#xA;Raleigh mayor Charles Meeker and the city council, under pressure from workers and the community, stated that a “complete overhaul” of solid waste services management was necessary, and agreed to meet the demands, including recognition of UE 150. The city council promised to send city manager Russell Allen to meet with the workers on Friday, Sept. 22, to discuss their grievances.&#xA;&#xA;The sanitation workers were optimistic about the hearing at the city council but stressed that the struggle was by no means over. Ledbetter said, “I thought the meeting went real well. Only thing we can do now is wait. You know anyone can say a thing, but you got to wait and see if they live up to it.”&#xA;&#xA;But Friday’s meeting was a disappointment to the workers as city manager Allen balked on most of the demands and ignored the key issue of union recognition.&#xA;&#xA;As a result, the alliance of labor, religious groups and student activists mobilized again. Over the weekend, Black Workers for Justice, UE 150 and other organizations held a community forum to rally support for the sanitation workers’ struggle, with 60 people attending.&#xA;&#xA;Community organizers gave powerful speeches, noting that this was not just a struggle for workers’ rights, but also a fight for real equality for African-Americans. Many also made the connection between the Raleigh sanitation workers’ struggle and the legacy of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., who was assassinated in Memphis, Tennessee, while rallying support for sanitation workers there.&#xA;&#xA;On Monday Sept. 24, over 100 workers and their supporters, including Reverend William Barber, president of the state NAACP, took to the streets in a picket of the city council. They demanded a shake-up of the solid waste services department management and that the city council meet the workers’ demands. Mayor Meeker emerged from City Hall to publicly state that he supported the demands and would recognize the elected union leadership.&#xA;&#xA;Less than a week later, Gerald Latta, the director of the sanitation department, announced he was stepping down, while Lash Hocutt, the operations superintendent, was transferred out of the department. Soon after, eleven temporary jobs were made permanent in the sanitation department, while the city council voted to make any city job longer than six months a permanent position - a victory for all of Raleigh’s city workers. Over half a dozen jobs were added to the solid waste services department, with plans to add more in the future. Sanitation workers are now receiving overtime pay, while an audit is set to take place of the city’s solid waste services department to determine how to reduce their workload and improve work conditions. In addition, Mayor Meeker has met with the sanitation workers’ union leadership.&#xA;&#xA;UE 150 now represents 85% of the city’s sanitation workers, and is reaching out to organize other departments in the city. By standing together to put pressure on the city, Raleigh’s sanitation workers and their supporters have scored major victories - winning important concessions for the workers and building a fighting union.&#xA;&#xA;But the struggle continues. City manager Russell Allen is still refusing to recognize the elected union leadership of the sanitation workers, and management still tries to pressure workers into forced overtime. Finally, as mentioned above, North Carolina has a long-standing legislative ban on collective bargaining for public sector workers. Many workers and activists involved in the sanitation struggle have decided to continue the fight for the rights of public sector workers, and that the time has finally come to overturn this unjust Jim Crow law.&#xA;&#xA;#RaleighNC #NAACP #AfricanAmerican #SouthernLaborMovement #UE150 #unionRecognition&#xA;&#xA;div id=&#34;sharingbuttons.io&#34;/div]]&gt;</description>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img src="https://i.snap.as/qISHHR5I.jpg" alt="Workers protesting at city council meeting." title="Workers protesting at city council meeting. Raleigh sanitation workers stand up at a city council meeting to present their grievances and demands. \(Fight Back! News\)"/></p>

<p>Raleigh, NC – Raleigh sanitation workers changed tactics, after months of protests to city management fell on deaf ears. The sanitation workers held a four-hour and a two-hour temporary work stoppage on Sept. 13 and 14, forcing city management to address their concerns. An important struggle has unfolded in the weeks since.</p>



<p>The sanitation workers, the overwhelming majority of whom are Black, face exhausting 14-hour days and are understaffed and overworked. Forced overtime and harassment of workers by management is commonplace. Sanitation worker Daron Green emphasized, “We need to have our management looked at. We have very bad management overall. We need new management, period.”</p>

<p>The Raleigh sanitation workers put forward five demands to city management: An immediate end to forced overtime; overtime pay after 40 hours work and not compensatory time; make temporary employees permanent and hire more workers to reduce workload; end the harassment against workers for speaking out against problems; city to meet-and-confer with the elected North Carolina Public Service Workers Union (UE Local 150) representatives in sanitation. The sanitation workers gave the city council one week to meet their demands.</p>

<p>Meanwhile, community organizers began rallying mass support for the workers – from the NAACP to religious groups to student organizers, who drove a sound truck through Raleigh neighborhoods to raise support for the sanitation workers’ struggle. Unions and community organizations from all over North Carolina passed resolutions declaring their support for the sanitation workers.</p>

<p>The city council met to discuss the situation on Sept. 20. In a hall packed with supporters, organizers with UE 150 and over 40 sanitation workers presented their demands and stressed the need for collective bargaining. Under a 1959 North Carolina state law, collective bargaining is prohibited for public sector workers – a holdover from the Jim Crow era, when higher numbers of Black workers were concentrated in the public sector in the South.</p>

<p>Jerry Ledbetter, a spokesperson for the sanitation workers, said, “We are asking for collective bargaining, to meet and confer with city council of Raleigh. We are ready to cooperate. We are here in good faith. But we have to be treated fairly, and be treated like human beings.”</p>

<p>Jimmy Gaye, who has worked in the Sanitation department for 22 years, told the city council, “It’s so much of a work overload that we have, we’re doing two to three jobs a day. We take the truck out, we go back in, we take the truck out, we bring it back in, until it gets so late in the day that you can’t do it any more.”</p>

<p>Gaye continued, “We’re thinking about our future here. We can’t grow if you don’t let us grow. Raleigh grows, and we know that we’re going to be expanding out, we’re doing Durham County, we’re out in Raleigh, we’re out to parts of Morrisville, we’re out in parts of Cary. We cover those areas. Those are big areas that you trying to cover, that you’re allowing to be annexed into a part of Raleigh now that the growth is here. Now, what about us? We want to grow too – can you let us do that?”</p>

<p>Raleigh mayor Charles Meeker and the city council, under pressure from workers and the community, stated that a “complete overhaul” of solid waste services management was necessary, and agreed to meet the demands, including recognition of UE 150. The city council promised to send city manager Russell Allen to meet with the workers on Friday, Sept. 22, to discuss their grievances.</p>

<p>The sanitation workers were optimistic about the hearing at the city council but stressed that the struggle was by no means over. Ledbetter said, “I thought the meeting went real well. Only thing we can do now is wait. You know anyone can say a thing, but you got to wait and see if they live up to it.”</p>

<p>But Friday’s meeting was a disappointment to the workers as city manager Allen balked on most of the demands and ignored the key issue of union recognition.</p>

<p>As a result, the alliance of labor, religious groups and student activists mobilized again. Over the weekend, Black Workers for Justice, UE 150 and other organizations held a community forum to rally support for the sanitation workers’ struggle, with 60 people attending.</p>

<p>Community organizers gave powerful speeches, noting that this was not just a struggle for workers’ rights, but also a fight for real equality for African-Americans. Many also made the connection between the Raleigh sanitation workers’ struggle and the legacy of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., who was assassinated in Memphis, Tennessee, while rallying support for sanitation workers there.</p>

<p>On Monday Sept. 24, over 100 workers and their supporters, including Reverend William Barber, president of the state NAACP, took to the streets in a picket of the city council. They demanded a shake-up of the solid waste services department management and that the city council meet the workers’ demands. Mayor Meeker emerged from City Hall to publicly state that he supported the demands and would recognize the elected union leadership.</p>

<p>Less than a week later, Gerald Latta, the director of the sanitation department, announced he was stepping down, while Lash Hocutt, the operations superintendent, was transferred out of the department. Soon after, eleven temporary jobs were made permanent in the sanitation department, while the city council voted to make any city job longer than six months a permanent position – a victory for all of Raleigh’s city workers. Over half a dozen jobs were added to the solid waste services department, with plans to add more in the future. Sanitation workers are now receiving overtime pay, while an audit is set to take place of the city’s solid waste services department to determine how to reduce their workload and improve work conditions. In addition, Mayor Meeker has met with the sanitation workers’ union leadership.</p>

<p>UE 150 now represents 85% of the city’s sanitation workers, and is reaching out to organize other departments in the city. By standing together to put pressure on the city, Raleigh’s sanitation workers and their supporters have scored major victories – winning important concessions for the workers and building a fighting union.</p>

<p>But the struggle continues. City manager Russell Allen is still refusing to recognize the elected union leadership of the sanitation workers, and management still tries to pressure workers into forced overtime. Finally, as mentioned above, North Carolina has a long-standing legislative ban on collective bargaining for public sector workers. Many workers and activists involved in the sanitation struggle have decided to continue the fight for the rights of public sector workers, and that the time has finally come to overturn this unjust Jim Crow law.</p>

<p><a href="https://fightbacknews.org/tag:RaleighNC" class="hashtag"><span>#</span><span class="p-category">RaleighNC</span></a> <a href="https://fightbacknews.org/tag:NAACP" class="hashtag"><span>#</span><span class="p-category">NAACP</span></a> <a href="https://fightbacknews.org/tag:AfricanAmerican" class="hashtag"><span>#</span><span class="p-category">AfricanAmerican</span></a> <a href="https://fightbacknews.org/tag:SouthernLaborMovement" class="hashtag"><span>#</span><span class="p-category">SouthernLaborMovement</span></a> <a href="https://fightbacknews.org/tag:UE150" class="hashtag"><span>#</span><span class="p-category">UE150</span></a> <a href="https://fightbacknews.org/tag:unionRecognition" class="hashtag"><span>#</span><span class="p-category">unionRecognition</span></a></p>

<div id="sharingbuttons.io" id="sharingbuttons.io"></div>
]]></content:encoded>
      <guid>https://fightbacknews.org/raleigh-sanitation-workers-struggle-builds-union-brings-victories</guid>
      <pubDate>Thu, 30 Jul 2009 18:06:39 +0000</pubDate>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>Durham City Workers Fight Economic Crisis</title>
      <link>https://fightbacknews.org/durham-city-workers-fight-economic-crisis?pk_campaign=rss-feed</link>
      <description>&lt;![CDATA[Don&#39;t Balance the Budget on the Backs of City Workers!&#xA;&#xA;People with signs reading &#34;No layoffs or furlows.&#34;&#34;)&#xA;&#xA;Durham, NC - Fifty city workers and their supporters gathered outside City Hall here, May 18, to protest a decision by the city council to lay off 35 workers and eliminate 113 more positions that are currently unfilled. The result will put a huge strain on the backs of workers who are already understaffed, underpaid and over worked. The job losses will also lead to a deterioration in critical services that these workers provide to the public.&#xA;&#xA;!--more--&#xA;&#xA;The economic crisis has hit Durham hard, with the city projecting a $24-40 million budget shortfall for the coming year due to lower revenues from sales tax and fewer development permits. This is the excuse that City Manager Tom Bonfield is using to lay off workers and eliminate jobs.&#xA;&#xA;However, organizers with UE 150, the North Carolina Public Service Workers union, point out that the city could spend just 3% of its rainy day fund, worth $10 million, and not have to lay anyone off.&#xA;&#xA;“We are not going to sit by and let this happen,” said Nathanette Mayo, secretary for UE 150’s Durham chapter, and an organizer of the protest. “These are hard times. If workers have to take out from our savings, if we have to use credit cards to get by from month to month, if we have to get our checks cashed in advance - if we have to do that to survive, to use our ‘rainy day fund,’ then they need to go into theirs too.”&#xA;&#xA;UE 150 is organizing public service workers to fight back and wage a “State of Emergency” campaign to protect workers’ jobs. The union notes, “The root of the budget problem faced by municipalities and the state is North Carolina’s outdated revenue systems. Proposals in the state legislature will increase the already huge tax breaks for corporations and the wealthy.”&#xA;&#xA;After rallying outside City Hall, the workers marched into the city council meeting. Public comment on the budget was not allowed, so when City Manager Tom Bonfield began to talk about the “regrettable” loss of jobs, the workers walked out of the meeting.&#xA;&#xA;UE 150 and Durham city workers promise to return on June 1 for the next hearing of the proposed budget with a bigger presence. “Our heads are on the line, we need to get organized!” emphasized Angaza Laughinghouse, president of UE 150, as he spoke to workers who walked out of the meeting. “We’re not going to let them bail out bankers and corporations while we can’t afford to eat!”&#xA;&#xA;workers walking out of politicians&#39; meeting&#34;)&#xA;&#xA;Protesting outside Durham City Hall.&#34;)&#xA;&#xA;#CapitalismAndEconomy #News #UE150&#xA;&#xA;div id=&#34;sharingbuttons.io&#34;/div]]&gt;</description>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><em>Don&#39;t Balance the Budget on the Backs of City Workers!</em></p>

<p><img src="https://i.snap.as/XZGnqZdV.jpg" alt="People with signs reading &#34;No layoffs or furlows.&#34;" title="People with signs reading \&#34;No layoffs or furlows.\&#34; Durham rally. \(Fight Back! News\)"/></p>

<p>Durham, NC – Fifty city workers and their supporters gathered outside City Hall here, May 18, to protest a decision by the city council to lay off 35 workers and eliminate 113 more positions that are currently unfilled. The result will put a huge strain on the backs of workers who are already understaffed, underpaid and over worked. The job losses will also lead to a deterioration in critical services that these workers provide to the public.</p>



<p>The economic crisis has hit Durham hard, with the city projecting a $24-40 million budget shortfall for the coming year due to lower revenues from sales tax and fewer development permits. This is the excuse that City Manager Tom Bonfield is using to lay off workers and eliminate jobs.</p>

<p>However, organizers with UE 150, the North Carolina Public Service Workers union, point out that the city could spend just 3% of its rainy day fund, worth $10 million, and not have to lay anyone off.</p>

<p>“We are not going to sit by and let this happen,” said Nathanette Mayo, secretary for UE 150’s Durham chapter, and an organizer of the protest. “These are hard times. If workers have to take out from our savings, if we have to use credit cards to get by from month to month, if we have to get our checks cashed in advance – if we have to do that to survive, to use our ‘rainy day fund,’ then they need to go into theirs too.”</p>

<p>UE 150 is organizing public service workers to fight back and wage a “State of Emergency” campaign to protect workers’ jobs. The union notes, “The root of the budget problem faced by municipalities and the state is North Carolina’s outdated revenue systems. Proposals in the state legislature will increase the already huge tax breaks for corporations and the wealthy.”</p>

<p>After rallying outside City Hall, the workers marched into the city council meeting. Public comment on the budget was not allowed, so when City Manager Tom Bonfield began to talk about the “regrettable” loss of jobs, the workers walked out of the meeting.</p>

<p>UE 150 and Durham city workers promise to return on June 1 for the next hearing of the proposed budget with a bigger presence. “Our heads are on the line, we need to get organized!” emphasized Angaza Laughinghouse, president of UE 150, as he spoke to workers who walked out of the meeting. “We’re not going to let them bail out bankers and corporations while we can’t afford to eat!”</p>

<p><img src="https://i.snap.as/U9ARwoPZ.jpg" alt="workers walking out of politicians&#39; meeting" title="workers walking out of politicians&#39; meeting Durham workers walk out. \(Fight Back! News/Staff\)"/></p>

<p><img src="https://i.snap.as/c278Szjy.jpg" alt="Protesting outside Durham City Hall." title="Protesting outside Durham City Hall. Protesting at Durham City Hall. \(Fight Back! News\)"/></p>

<p><a href="https://fightbacknews.org/tag:CapitalismAndEconomy" class="hashtag"><span>#</span><span class="p-category">CapitalismAndEconomy</span></a> <a href="https://fightbacknews.org/tag:News" class="hashtag"><span>#</span><span class="p-category">News</span></a> <a href="https://fightbacknews.org/tag:UE150" class="hashtag"><span>#</span><span class="p-category">UE150</span></a></p>

<div id="sharingbuttons.io" id="sharingbuttons.io"></div>
]]></content:encoded>
      <guid>https://fightbacknews.org/durham-city-workers-fight-economic-crisis</guid>
      <pubDate>Wed, 29 Jul 2009 02:31:28 +0000</pubDate>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>&#34;Chop from the top!&#34;: Students, Workers, Faculty Protest UNC Board of Trustees Meeting</title>
      <link>https://fightbacknews.org/students-workers-faculty-protest-unc-board-trustees?pk_campaign=rss-feed</link>
      <description>&lt;![CDATA[Chapel Hill, NC - Chanting “They say cut back, we say fight back!” a group of 50 students, campus workers and faculty marched on the Board of Trustees meeting March 26. The main theme of the protest was “No budget cuts on the backs of students and workers.” After rallying on campus, the demonstrators marched over to the Carolina Inn, a luxurious hotel that was hosting the Board of Trustees meeting.&#xA;&#xA;!--more--&#xA;&#xA;On March 19, University of North Carolina (UNC) Chancellor Thorp implemented permanent 5% budget cuts, a measure that “will have deep impacts on student services across campus, class sizes and availability, and will result in dozens of workers losing their jobs and hundreds more positions being left unfilled, which will put a huge strain on already overworked employees of the university,” according to a press release from the organizers of the demonstration. The protesters demand that any budget cuts should “chop from the top” and that there should be full transparency and accountability in any decisions made around the budget crisis.&#xA;&#xA;Brenda Denzler, vice-chair of the UNC Employee Forum, told the Board of Trustees earlier in the week that they must “publicly, openly and honestly state what the university’s policy is on how it will achieve the next round of budget cuts and whether it will reject budgets that do not include personnel cuts.”&#xA;&#xA;“It’s ridiculous that while the chancellor is getting paid hundreds of thousands of dollars and average housekeepers are getting paid $25,000, the administrators think it best to save money by cutting low wage jobs,” said Rakhee Devasthali, an undergraduate and organizer with the coalition.&#xA;&#xA;Salia Warren, an organizer with the North Carolina Public Service Workers Union (UE 150) at UNC, agreed that cuts should start from the top. “We demand that the cuts come from the top down, not the bottom up. The lowest paid administrator makes $95,000 a year - that’s four housekeeper’s jobs.”&#xA;&#xA;“We’re launching a resistance and recovery campaign in all our union chapters across North Carolina,” said Warren, explaining the union’s approach to the economic crisis. “Workers during this period have to stand up and resist these budget cuts on their backs. Everything that’s happened so far is on the backs of the working class. We’ve got to say ‘we can’t take it anymore’. No one is bailing the workers out.”&#xA;&#xA;Steve Milder, a graduate student in the History Department, explained how the budget cuts will have a dramatic impact on graduate students. &#34;The budget cuts are making it unclear if as many graduate students will be able to keep their paid teaching positions next year,&#34; said Milder. &#34;We depend on those stipends to pay for our living and study expenses. If our salaries are cut, a lot of us will be forced to drop out.&#34; Commenting on the process involved in cutting funding to graduate students, Milder added, &#34;As graduate students, we feel shut out of the decision making process and are faced with a lot of uncertainty about our future.&#34;&#xA;&#xA;The demonstration was organized by a coalition made up of members from the Counter Cartographers Collective, United with the Northside Community NOW, Feminist Students United, Student Action with Workers, Students for a Democratic Society, UE 150, State Employees Association of North Carolina District 25, UNITY conference, Fight Imperialism Stand Together, HK on J, Progressive Faculty Network, along with many unaffiliated students, faculty and workers.&#xA;&#xA;The coalition plans to continue organizing against the education cuts and layoffs, with more actions and educational events in the coming weeks.&#xA;&#xA;#ChapelHillNC #CapitalismAndEconomy #Labor #News #BudgetCuts #capitalistCrisis #UE150&#xA;&#xA;div id=&#34;sharingbuttons.io&#34;/div]]&gt;</description>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Chapel Hill, NC – Chanting “They say cut back, we say fight back!” a group of 50 students, campus workers and faculty marched on the Board of Trustees meeting March 26. The main theme of the protest was “No budget cuts on the backs of students and workers.” After rallying on campus, the demonstrators marched over to the Carolina Inn, a luxurious hotel that was hosting the Board of Trustees meeting.</p>



<p>On March 19, University of North Carolina (UNC) Chancellor Thorp implemented permanent 5% budget cuts, a measure that “will have deep impacts on student services across campus, class sizes and availability, and will result in dozens of workers losing their jobs and hundreds more positions being left unfilled, which will put a huge strain on already overworked employees of the university,” according to a press release from the organizers of the demonstration. The protesters demand that any budget cuts should “chop from the top” and that there should be full transparency and accountability in any decisions made around the budget crisis.</p>

<p>Brenda Denzler, vice-chair of the UNC Employee Forum, told the Board of Trustees earlier in the week that they must “publicly, openly and honestly state what the university’s policy is on how it will achieve the next round of budget cuts and whether it will reject budgets that do not include personnel cuts.”</p>

<p>“It’s ridiculous that while the chancellor is getting paid hundreds of thousands of dollars and average housekeepers are getting paid $25,000, the administrators think it best to save money by cutting low wage jobs,” said Rakhee Devasthali, an undergraduate and organizer with the coalition.</p>

<p>Salia Warren, an organizer with the North Carolina Public Service Workers Union (UE 150) at UNC, agreed that cuts should start from the top. “We demand that the cuts come from the top down, not the bottom up. The lowest paid administrator makes $95,000 a year – that’s four housekeeper’s jobs.”</p>

<p>“We’re launching a resistance and recovery campaign in all our union chapters across North Carolina,” said Warren, explaining the union’s approach to the economic crisis. “Workers during this period have to stand up and resist these budget cuts on their backs. Everything that’s happened so far is on the backs of the working class. We’ve got to say ‘we can’t take it anymore’. No one is bailing the workers out.”</p>

<p>Steve Milder, a graduate student in the History Department, explained how the budget cuts will have a dramatic impact on graduate students. “The budget cuts are making it unclear if as many graduate students will be able to keep their paid teaching positions next year,” said Milder. “We depend on those stipends to pay for our living and study expenses. If our salaries are cut, a lot of us will be forced to drop out.” Commenting on the process involved in cutting funding to graduate students, Milder added, “As graduate students, we feel shut out of the decision making process and are faced with a lot of uncertainty about our future.”</p>

<p>The demonstration was organized by a coalition made up of members from the Counter Cartographers Collective, United with the Northside Community NOW, Feminist Students United, Student Action with Workers, Students for a Democratic Society, UE 150, State Employees Association of North Carolina District 25, UNITY conference, Fight Imperialism Stand Together, HK on J, Progressive Faculty Network, along with many unaffiliated students, faculty and workers.</p>

<p>The coalition plans to continue organizing against the education cuts and layoffs, with more actions and educational events in the coming weeks.</p>

<p><a href="https://fightbacknews.org/tag:ChapelHillNC" class="hashtag"><span>#</span><span class="p-category">ChapelHillNC</span></a> <a href="https://fightbacknews.org/tag:CapitalismAndEconomy" class="hashtag"><span>#</span><span class="p-category">CapitalismAndEconomy</span></a> <a href="https://fightbacknews.org/tag:Labor" class="hashtag"><span>#</span><span class="p-category">Labor</span></a> <a href="https://fightbacknews.org/tag:News" class="hashtag"><span>#</span><span class="p-category">News</span></a> <a href="https://fightbacknews.org/tag:BudgetCuts" class="hashtag"><span>#</span><span class="p-category">BudgetCuts</span></a> <a href="https://fightbacknews.org/tag:capitalistCrisis" class="hashtag"><span>#</span><span class="p-category">capitalistCrisis</span></a> <a href="https://fightbacknews.org/tag:UE150" class="hashtag"><span>#</span><span class="p-category">UE150</span></a></p>

<div id="sharingbuttons.io" id="sharingbuttons.io"></div>
]]></content:encoded>
      <guid>https://fightbacknews.org/students-workers-faculty-protest-unc-board-trustees</guid>
      <pubDate>Wed, 29 Jul 2009 01:29:05 +0000</pubDate>
    </item>
  </channel>
</rss>