NOMMO
  • Home
  • Campus
  • World
  • Opinion
  • Lifestyle
  • Sports
  • About
    • Why We Use “K” vs. “C”
    • Contact Us
  • Donate
Tag:

UC Santa Cruz

News

The Fight for a COLA at UCLA Gains More Traction

by Josian Zuniga 03/07/2020
written by Josian Zuniga

Photo from @UCLA4COLA Instagram

Emotions were riding high the morning of March 5th as the graduate-student fight for a cost of living adjustment (aka COLA) reached new heights during a rally held on Janss Steps. Over 500 graduates, undergraduates, faculty, and allies took part in a UC-wide walkout to protest the administration’s refusal to pay graduate students a living wage.

Thursday’s protest comes as a result of various labor injustices across the UC campuses, most notably the firing of 54 graduate students at UC Santa Cruz just last week. Protestors are arguing that the fired grads at UCSC will now not be able to feed their families or have TA jobs in the spring. Furthermore, they worry that international students are now at risk of de facto deportation.

In the assembly following the rally, grad students overwhelmingly voted in support of a full wildcat strike through the department-by-department method. A wildcat strike is a strike without union support. A department-by-department method, in this scenario, means that once 10 departments have voted to support the strike, then the wildcat strike will be in full force.

Some teaching assistants and faculty took part in the walkout by cancelling class. Others, like Abraham Calderon, a Sociology PhD student who spoke at the rally, exercised his activism by bringing his class out to the rally. When asked why he chose to bring his class out instead of cancelling, Abraham said that he wanted to take the opportunity to connect the material taught in his American Interracial Dynamics classroom to something happening on our own campus.

The energy of the event was best captured when Jason De Leon, professor of Anthropology and Chicanx Studies, demonstrated his unapologetic support at the rally with his closing statement, “If my TA’s aren’t gonna teach, then I’m not gonna f***ing teach either!”  

When speaking with a group of Environmental Science grad students, topics about safety and comradery were highlighted. Candice said that she, “feels safe when I’m with you guys” in reference to the group she came with. 

Blanca said that the COLA strikes need more STEM departments to get involved and support, because the current representation has been lackluster. 

In regards to police involvement, Erick – an LA native – noted, “there has not been a good relationship with cops and minorities in the past,” and also said that the current policing for the COLA events reminds him of getting policed in high school. 

Undergrad students have also been coming to the picket line in support of a COLA for grad students.

Movimiento Estudiantil Chicana/o de Aztlán (MEChA) and African-American Studies (AFAM) grads have also recently released their own statement of demands. MEChA against the administration of the Community Programs Office and AFAM students against the structure of their department. When asked about the upsurge in student activism from other organizations and departments, Bilqis Kulungu – a fourth year French and Arabic double major – said that, “COLA is serving as the catalyst for other departments to come out with their own demands.” 

Ana Lisa, a fourth year International Development Studies major, said that these collective movements demonstrate the hypocrisy of UCLA admin who advertise the flourishing diversity of this institution, but fail to actually implement inclusive policy and spaces for their students to thrive.

It is clear that the fight for a COLA is gaining visible traction across the state, and that the UC admin has been put into a difficult situation.

Keep a close eye on the voting results for a full-on wildcat strike, as well as on other departments who are riding the momentum of resistance. We may be in the midst of a large-scale reform movement at UCLA.

03/07/2020 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Archive

Marc Lamont Hill: “We Create an Entire Industry on the Prison”

by 02/21/2014
written by

The Afrikan Black Coalition (ABC) is a coalition designed to unify Black students across the UC system in order to discuss and resolve issues concerning academic policy, campus climate, and matriculation from the University. By bringing together the Afrikan/Black Student Unions from UC and CSU colleges, ABC presents the opportunity for unity in spite of geographical boundaries. This year’s conference was held at UC Santa Cruz last Friday evening to Monday afternoon.

The campus was abundant of conscious Black students who were there to implement or learn how to implement changes in society. The theme of the conference focused on the idea of “Reimagining Black Activism” and generating a new age of activism led by the youth.

Keynote speakers Marc Lamont Hill (political activist), Bobby Seale (Co-founder of the Black Panther Party), Ambassador Shabazz (Malcolm X’s eldest daughter), and Angela Davis (former Black Panther Party member) provided insight on their experience in the Movement and shared words of wisdom to the listening Black audience.

20140215_112108

Marc Lamont Hill speaks to students/ photo credit: JR

In his call to action, Marc Lamont Hill, a CNN analyst and political activist, touched vastly on the importance and understandings of the prison industrial complex and the private prison industry.

“We create an entire industry on the prison”, Hill said. For example, he continued, “A town with a population of 20,000, Six, seven, or eight thousand [locals] work in the prison, and you add the 8,000 prisoners who weren’t from that town [who were] sent to the middle of nowhere… those 10,000 people now make the town’s residency rate 30,000. They [prisoners] count as residents of the town even though they can’t vote. So now you got 30,000 people in the town, the town gets more money, [and] more political representation… the whole town exists because of the prison.”

He expressed the expansion of criminality as an economic incentive for the private prison industry. Through systematic inequalities and injustices, capitalism is reinforced through public incarceration and private funding. With statistics showing the majority of these prison populations as African-American males, there comes a time where we must question the system at hand.

In his address, he affirmed that we as a community cannot talk about educational justice without prison justice, and therefore we must challenge ourselves to step up and do the work. He left the audience with words of instruction and encouraged the Black community to “Ask different questions [and to] engage in the practice of deep listening to understand the perspectives of one another.”

02/21/2014 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail

Latest Posts

  • ‘We Gon’ Be A’ight’: Hope and the Fight for What’s Owed
    by Mariah Yonique Strawder
  • Recounting the Flames: A Year Since the Los Angeles County Wildfires
    by Mariah Yonique Strawder
  • The Heart of Africa
    by Orisha Lamon
  • The Creator
    by Bahji Steele
  • Modern Day Minstrelsy: Natalie Nunn, Zeus Network, Anti-Blackness, Caricatures
    by Mariah Yonique Strawder

Back To Top
NOMMO
  • Home
  • Campus
  • World
  • Opinion
  • Lifestyle
  • Sports
  • About
    • Why We Use “K” vs. “C”
    • Contact Us
  • Donate