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Court of Appeals hears GW case against part-time professors union

by Nathan Grossman
Campus News Editor

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The University's appeal to prevent the creation of an adjunct professor's union was heard by a three-judge U.S. Court of Appeals for D.C. Friday.

The University is appealing a vote by the faculty to create the union, arguing that some faculty members were not given an opportunity to participate in the 2004 vote. The National Labor Relations Board upheld the adjunct and part-time professors' union in a unanimous decision last December, and the University petitioned the results shortly after.

"We continue to make our argument of disenfranchisement," said Tracy Schario, GW's Director of Media Relations. Schario added that the University hopes the panel will remand the case back to the National Labor Relations Board for further review.

The University administration challenged the 10-vote victory in favor of the union on the grounds that nearly 30 independent contractors who were within the prospective scope of the union did not know of the election. The election took place last October, and more than 800 adjunct professors and part-time faculty voted on the creation of a union in conjunction with the Service Employees International Union Local 500.

"(The legal battle) is just a stalling tactic," said Sean Carr, director of communication for SEIU Local 500. "The (National Labor Relations Board) said their objections were 'without merit.' The University should be spending money on education, not litigation."

The NLRB is a federal agency responsible for enforcing the National Labor Relations Act. The board also regulates elections of employees debating unionization.

According to the Office of Institutional Research, there are 2,929 part-time professors out of a total of 4,478 professors this fall.

Ana Salper, who represented GW at the hearing, called the NLRB's decision "arbitrary" and said the election should be thrown out on the grounds that the independent contractors were disenfranchised.

Senior attorney for the NLRB Richard Cohen argued that the election was completely legitimate.
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