Distinguished Professors and Professors with Endowed Chaired In Support of Health Insurance for CUNY Adjuncts
Dear Colleague: By now you have probably heard the Welfare Fund has announced that 1,700 adjunct faculty will lose access to health insurance at the end of the year if adequate funding or an alternative source of health insurance is not found. Adjuncts teach more than half the classes at CUNY and should be treated as educators with equal rights. Instead, they work for little pay with no job security. To fail to fund health insurance for adjuncts who meet the eligibility requirements would be wrong. That’s why we have crafted this letter. We hope you choose to add your name alongside ours. Sincerely,
Michelle Fine, Distinguished Professor of Social Psychology, Women's Studies and Urban Education, The Graduate Center
Terrence F. Martell, Saxe Distinguished Professor of Finance; Director, Weissman Center for International Business
Rosalind Petchesky, Distinguished Professor of Political Science, Hunter College & The Graduate Center
As University Distinguished Professors and endowed chaired professors at the City University of New York, we are extremely concerned that adjunct faculty may lose access to health insurance benefits one year from now.
Adjuncts are a core and growing part of the CUNY faculty. Since 2000, CUNY has nearly doubled its adjunct faculty, who thus comprise the critical mass of our teaching force while also suffering the most precarious and least rewarded working conditions. Adjuncts are among the faculty and staff who help students pursue higher education, against the odds, as they contend with the growing inequalities that define our society. But, like the students they serve, adjuncts live those inequalities.
Consider three facts:
•At our sister institution, the State University of New York, adjuncts who qualify receive the same health insurance as full-timers. CUNY should at least meet the same standards as the SUNY system.
•Adjuncts, even when they have taught at CUNY for twenty years, have little or no job security.
•To date, adjuncts teach more than half the classes at CUNY; in the face of serious budget cuts, our campuses and departments increasingly rely on them to fulfill CUNY’s obligations to its students.
We welcome Chancellor Goldstein’s public commitment to “work on this important issue” and his promise to “incorporat[e] into the university’s budget request for the first time, funding to support health benefits for these adjuncts.” Making adjunct health insurance a priority for the University is the first step toward solving this crisis. Advocating forcefully for that priority is the next. That is why we urge the Chancellor to keep funding for adjunct health insurance at the top of his list of budget priorities, and call on him to work with the union to help make that funding a reality.
Sincerely,
| Number | Date | Name |
|---|---|---|
| 22 | Mon Oct 17 17:53:23 EDT 2011 | Victoria Luine |
| 21 | Mon Oct 17 17:41:49 EDT 2011 | RICHARD KRAMER |
| 20 | Mon Oct 17 17:16:40 EDT 2011 | Mac Wellman |
| 19 | Mon Oct 17 17:13:38 EDT 2011 | Stanley Aronowitz |
| 18 | Mon Oct 17 17:09:48 EDT 2011 | MEENA ALEXANDER |
| 17 | Mon Oct 17 17:08:42 EDT 2011 | FRED GARDAPHE |
| 16 | Mon Oct 17 17:06:38 EDT 2011 | Michael Grossman |
| 15 | Mon Oct 17 17:05:19 EDT 2011 | PAUL WACHTEL |
| 14 | Mon Oct 17 17:00:41 EDT 2011 | VIRGINIA VALIAN |
| 13 | Mon Oct 17 16:55:57 EDT 2011 | MICHAEL WALLACE |
| 12 | Mon Oct 17 16:53:37 EDT 2011 | NEIL SMITH |
| 11 | Mon Oct 17 16:44:20 EDT 2011 | FRANCES PIVEN |
| 10 | Mon Oct 17 16:40:46 EDT 2011 | PETER CAREY |
| 9 | Mon Oct 17 16:38:54 EDT 2011 | JOSEPH STRAUS |
| 8 | Mon Oct 17 16:37:57 EDT 2011 | JOSEPH DAUBEN |
| 7 | Mon Oct 17 16:37:42 EDT 2011 | MARYANN CAWS |
| 6 | Mon Oct 17 16:35:38 EDT 2011 | STEVEN PENROD |
| 5 | Mon Oct 17 16:34:20 EDT 2011 | Adam Koranyi |
| 4 | Mon Oct 17 16:33:41 EDT 2011 | MARVIN CARLSON |
| 3 | Mon Oct 17 09:33:02 EDT 2011 | ROSALIND PETCHESKY |
| 2 | Mon Oct 17 09:31:33 EDT 2011 | TERRENCE MARTELL |
| 1 | Mon Oct 17 09:29:40 EDT 2011 | michelle fine |