Author Archives | Troy Shinn

Minorities still feel Eugene’s historical link to the Ku Klux Klan

The Ku Klux Klan came to Oregon in 1921.

By 1922, the KKK had a foothold in the state and held its first parade through the streets of Eugene and burned a cross atop Skinner Butte.

Today, the KKK doesn’t march or burn crosses in public.

Yet black people like former UO law professor Robin Morris Collin don’t think much has changed. Collin has lived all over the country, including the South, and says Eugene is the most racist place she has ever lived.

“It got to the point where I tensed my shoulders every time I walked down the sidewalk,” Collin said. “Because I could tell that when I came up on a group of people I was expected to step off of the sidewalk to get out of their way.”

At UO, administration has been trying to increase its faculty diversity for the last five years, but the administration has to overcome a long history of white supremacy in Eugene.

Last November, the Black Student Task Force demanded that UO administration change the name of two halls on campus — Deady Hall, the first campus building, and Dunn Hall — because of their namesakes’ racist pasts.

A report on this history conducted by three historians was published on August 5, and revealed that Deady ran for political office on a pro-slavery platform, and Dunn was the local Exalted Cyclops, leader of the Eugene Klan.

Christina Jackson, an advisor for black and African retention at UO, says the responsibility for change doesn’t all fall on the university. To Jackson, who is black, Eugene is not the all-inclusive community it is often heralded as.

“When I was planning to move here from Michigan, people kept on telling me that Eugene was a really friendly and welcoming community,” Jackson said. “But in my experience, Eugene is not as friendly toward people of color as people would lead you to believe.”

Eugene has never had a robust black community, and that has contributed a lot to what Jackson sees as cultural ignorance in a lot of Eugenians.

Edmund F. Martin took this photograph in 1921. Much has changed in downtown Eugene since that time, but the Tiffany building, located on the right side of the street still stands. The building was opened for use in 1902.

Edmund F. Martin took this photograph in 1921. Much has changed in downtown Eugene since that time, but the Tiffany building, located on the right side of the street still stands. The building was opened for use in 1902.

“When people have never had to have interactions with or form relationships with black people, they come into those interactions with a lot of preconceived notions of what black people are like,” Jackson said. “I’ve noticed people greet me and others with, ‘What up?’ instead of a normal ‘Hello,’ because there is an assumption that that is how all black people talk.”

Eugene is 1.4 percent black, according to the American Community Survey, and the overwhelming whiteness of Eugene comes from a long history of minority exclusion, since before Oregon was even a state.

Slavery was illegal in the Oregon Territory, but many settlers brought slaves along the Oregon Trail, according to The End of the Oregon Trail Interpretive Society. These slaves had to be freed within three years of settling in Oregon, but they were then forced to move elsewhere. Many did not have the means to do so and were then subjected to violent laws.

Oregon was the first state to be admitted to the Union with exclusion laws in its constitution, according to Lane Historical Society archives. These laws forbade African-Americans from settling in Oregon. Any who did were required to be whipped twice a year until convinced to leave. This punishment was later reduced to manual labor.

Despite this history, Oregonians were by-and-large shocked that the KKK found such a responsive population here in the ‘20’s.

After recruiting heavily in urban areas, the Klan set its sights on University of Oregon, according to research conducted by former UO history professor Eckard V. Toy. Toy writes that university administration was opposed to the Klan on campus and discouraged students from joining.

Many students rejected it too.

“The university is no more a place for the white-robed Ku Klux Klan than is the great state of Oregon,” one 1922 editorial by Oregon Daily Emerald staff read.

Governor Ben Olcott denied the KKK had any political or social influence in Oregon, which would be disproven when he was defeated in the 1922 election by KKK-backed Democrat Walter Pierce, who won by a landslide, according to LHS records and the Oregon Encyclopedia.

In 1923, the Klan boasted over 35,000 members in a state that had just over 783,000 people, which some historians estimate was the largest per capita of any state in the country.

Traces of the KKK still linger. Two Eugene men admitted in a May 2008 trial to pouring flammable liquid in the shape of a cross and the letters “KKK” on the front lawn of a black family’s residence, according to the Human Rights Commission of Eugene.

This history still plays a large role in the current lack of diversity in Oregon, according the Jackson.

“When you build an institution, it’s going to be affected by what’s already there,” Jackson said. “Racism doesn’t exist in a vacuum. The best thing to do is just acknowledge that history and acknowledge that that creates a certain kind of community here.”

There’s current evidence to support this claim.

Dr. Anselmo Villanueva, an ethnic studies professor who has taught at UO and Lane Community College, started an informal list 15 years ago of professionals of color who have left Eugene. He still adds to it.

He calls this list “The eXit Files” and estimates that the number of names today is near 350.

Talking to these people, Villanueva found that Eugene’s racist attitude and a lack of support for them in their professions were main reasons for leaving.

“Organizations in Eugene say that they are doing everything they can to hire and retain diverse staff, but they are losing all these people,” Villanueva said.

One professional who left was Robin Morris Collin, a former professor of law at UO. She left Eugene for Salem in 2003, where she joined the faculty of Willamette University.

Collin, who teaches environmental law, said that she had very little support for her work from her colleagues, and she noticed racist attitudes while living in Eugene.

“It’s the hardest place to speak out against it because people don’t want to see it and they don’t want to hear it,” Collin said. “They are completely blind to anything that goes against that image of Eugene as a liberal and friendly place.”

But the City of Eugene has recently worked to create a more welcoming environment, according to Jennifer Van Der Haeghen of the Office of Human Rights and Neighborhood Involvement in Eugene.

Eugenians can report acts of discrimination or civil rights issues, not just racial discrimination, to the HRNI Office online, by phone, or in person. The office publishes an annual report of hate and bias in Eugene. Race is often the most cited type of discrimination reported. In 2014, the office received 22 reports, and six of these were race-related.

“When hate and bias activity occurs it undermines our vision for a safe and welcoming environment,” Van Der Haeghen said. “Hate and bigotry has been, over and over, denounced as not acceptable here.”

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Schill calls on UO to comment on renaming Deady and Dunn halls

University of Oregon President Michael Schill asked the campus community today for their opinions on renaming Deady and Dunn halls, which are named after racists in UO’s past.

Schill sent out an email to the campus community on August 9 detailing the process the administration has gone through considering the renaming of Deady and Dunn Halls. In the email, Schill provided a link to a comment form for all UO students, staff and faculty to weigh in on this controversial topic.

This consideration by UO administration came after the Black Student Task Force sent out a list of 13 demands last fall. The demands varied from creating a black cultural center on campus and removing the names of Matthew Deady and Frederick Dunn from two of the oldest buildings on campus. The BTSF cited these men’s racist histories as the reason that the UO should rename the halls.

Matthew Deady is the namesake of University of Oregon's first building. Photo credit: Jarred Graham

Matthew Deady is the namesake of University of Oregon’s first building. Photo credit: Jarred Graham

The administration charged a task force earlier this year with generating a set of guidelines for the decision to rename the historic buildings on campus, as well as assigned three historians with uncovering all relevant research related to these buildings and their namesakes. These historians provided their findings to the UO administration on August 5.

The findings confirmed many of the criteria the BTSF cited as reasons to rename the buildings. Deady, who was a politician and judge on the Oregon Supreme Court, ran a pro-slavery campaign and supported many laws that excluded minority groups from entering the Oregon Territory. Dunn, a former Latin professor and chairman of the Latin Studies program at the UO, was a member and Grand Cyclops of the Eugene chapter of the Ku Klux Klan, the report confirms.

Schill called on the UO community to provide insight on the consideration to rename these halls by 5 p.m. on August 24. Following this comment period, Schill said he will, “Carefully consider the report and all the comments before announcing next steps, including the possibility of taking a denaming proposal for one or both buildings to the UO Board of Trustees.”

 

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Schill calls on UO to comment on renaming Deady and Dunn halls

University of Oregon President Michael Schill asked the campus community today for their opinions on renaming Deady and Dunn halls, which are named after racists in UO’s past.

Schill sent out an email to the campus community on August 9 detailing the process the administration has gone through considering the renaming of Deady and Dunn Halls. In the email, Schill provided a link to a comment form for all UO students, staff and faculty to weigh in on this controversial topic.

This consideration by UO administration came after the Black Student Task Force sent out a list of 13 demands last fall. The demands varied from creating a black cultural center on campus and removing the names of Matthew Deady and Frederick Dunn from two of the oldest buildings on campus. The BTSF cited these men’s racist histories as the reason that the UO should rename the halls.

Matthew Deady is the namesake of University of Oregon's first building. Photo credit: Jarred Graham

Matthew Deady is the namesake of University of Oregon’s first building. Photo credit: Jarred Graham

The administration charged a task force earlier this year with generating a set of guidelines for the decision to rename the historic buildings on campus, as well as assigned three historians with uncovering all relevant research related to these buildings and their namesakes. These historians provided their findings to the UO administration on August 5.

The findings confirmed many of the criteria the BTSF cited as reasons to rename the buildings. Deady, who was a politician and judge on the Oregon Supreme Court, ran a pro-slavery campaign and supported many laws that excluded minority groups from entering the Oregon Territory. Dunn, a former Latin professor and chairman of the Latin Studies program at the UO, was a member and Grand Cyclops of the Eugene chapter of the Ku Klux Klan, the report confirms.

Schill called on the UO community to provide insight on the consideration to rename these halls by 5 p.m. on August 24. Following this comment period, Schill said he will, “Carefully consider the report and all the comments before announcing next steps, including the possibility of taking a denaming proposal for one or both buildings to the UO Board of Trustees.”

 

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Weekly crime wrap up: 07/19 – 08/01

There were 23 crimes reported to the University of Oregon Police Department over the last two weeks. The most common crime was bike theft, with five cases reported. Below is a breakdown of the most notable crimes that took place on or around campus.

July 19

Bike Theft: Oregon Hall, subject was issued a citation in lieu of being taken into custody

Criminal Mischief – Graffiti: UO Motor Pool, Case was closed and suspended

July 20

Burglary: 2845 Leo Harris Parkway, Case closed and suspended

Telephonic Harassment: Hedco Building, closed with no further action required

July 21

Criminal Mischief – Graffiti: McArthur Court, Case closed and suspended

Burglary: Spencer View Apartments Office, Case closed and suspended

July 22

Bike Theft: Millrace Studios, Closed, no further action

Warrant Arrest: Franklin & Sylvan, Arrest made

Bike Theft: Spencer View Apartment, Case closed and suspended

July 23

Theft: Autzen BMX Area, Case open

July 24

Criminal Trespass: 900 block of E 13th Ave.

Minor in possession of alcohol: Autzen Stadium, citation issued

Bike Theft: Autzen Stadium, Case closed and suspended

July 25

Possession of Meth: E 15th Ave. and Mill Street, subject issued a citation in lieu of custody

July 30

Warrant Arrest: Northwest Christian University parking lot, Arrest made

Driving Under the Influence of Intoxicants: Franklin Boulevard & Agate Street, Arrest made

Warrant Arrest: E 13th Avenue & High Street, Arrest made

July 31

Resisting Arrest, Criminal Trespass: E 11th & Old Campus Ln, Arrest made

August 1

Bike Theft: Lawrence Hall, Case closed and suspended

Criminal Mischief: Spencer View Apartments, Case closed and suspended.

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Eugene festival cancelled after racist Facebook post

The Festival of Eugene has been cancelled according to a press release sent out by Krysta Albert, the event’s coordinator. The event’s cancellation comes after allegations of a racist post on Albert’s Facebook page. The post, which has since been deleted along with Albert’s profile and the event page for the Festival of Eugene, contained the n-word. Albert denies writing the post and claims that her account was hacked.

The Festival of Eugene is a free event aimed at promoting local businesses, arts, and performers. Albert has coordinated the event for the past two years since its inception. According to the release, this year’s event was cancelled for the safety of the participants and vendors.

Albert stated that she has received numerous threats since the post went up, saying that she is “appalled that the community that in which I have given so much would turn on me so quickly over a social media image.”

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Weekly Crime Wrap-up (07/11-07/18)

13 calls were reported to the University of Oregon Police Department during the week of July 11 to July 18. The most common calls were for bike theft, of which there were five. No arrests were made for these and all but one of the cases have been suspended. Three arrests were made on or near campus, the most notable were for a DUII on Friday, another for possession of meth on Thursday, and for possession of heroin on Sunday. See below for the locations and breakdowns of all the crimes that were reported near campus last week.

July 11

Bike Theft: Hamilton Hall Complex, case closed and suspended with no arrests made.

July 12

Three cases of Bike Theft: Walton Complex, Pacific Hall, and at 90 E 20th Avenue, each case was suspended with no arrests made.

July 13

Theft from a vehicle: Moshofsky Center, case closed and suspended, no arrests.

Warrant Arrest at Lillis Hall, Arrest made.

July 14

Warrant Arrest: Possession of Meth at 1500 block of Agate Street, Arrest made.

July 15

DUII: MLK Jr. Boulevard and Kinsrow Avenue, Arrest made.

Harassment – Domestic violence: Hayward Field, case was referred to outside agency

Open container: South Millrace Overlook, subject was issued a citation in lieu of being put in custody

Bike Theft: 1255 Hilyard Street, Letter of Trespass issued

July 16

Criminal Trespass: Huestis Hall, subject issued a citation in lieu of custody

July 17

Warrant Arrest – Possession of Heroin: Oregon Hall, Arrest made

 

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UO fundraising effort reaches $1 billion halfway mark

The University of Oregon announced on Tuesday that its latest fundraising campaign, which has the ambitious goal of raising $2 billion dollars – the largest effort in the history of the UO or of any public university in Oregon – has surpassed the $1 billion mark.

The goal of this fundraising campaign is to increase the size of the UO’s endowment, which is managed by the UO Foundation, “to a size that can sustain student access, nurture faculty excellence, and build state-of-the-art facilities,” according to a release sent out Tuesday.

Almost $250 million of this will go toward programs that support students’ access and resources, including $27 million for the Pathway Oregon program. This is 69 percent more funding than this scholarship program started with back in 2008.

Almost $514 million will go to faculty and academic programs. A portion of that money is responsible for the renovation and upgrades of the Allan Price Science Commons and Research Library, which will open in fall term this year.

Thirty-eight percent of the $1 billion – about $380 million – is allocated to funding UO athletics. Money from this campaign is responsible for the new Jane O. Sanders women’s softball complex and the new Hatfield-Dowlin football complex. Some of this money will also go toward funding athletic scholarships, though the actual dollar amount is unclear at this time.

The UO went public with this campaign in the fall of 2014, and has since raised $532.4 million, with almost $202 million of that coming in just this last fiscal year, which ended on June 30. To date, the UO has received 312,698 pledges and donations – 210 of which were over $1 million.

“This is a day to celebrate Ducks everywhere,” UO President Michael Schill said in the release. “Campaigns are about the future, and we are profoundly grateful for every gift, whether it is $5 or $50 million, to support our priorities to increase access for students, excellence in teaching and research, and enrich the UO campus experience.”

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Outside the Box: For nonbinary students, conforming to gender norms on paperwork is just easier

If you leave the ‘gender’ box blank on federal student loan paperwork, the system will send it back with an error. It’s impossible to get around this, according to Jennifer Bell, University of Oregon associate director for advising.

You have to be either a male or a female. There’s only one person in the U.S. who is legally neither.

On June 17, Portlander Jamie Shupe became the first American to be legally designated as neither male nor female but “nonbinary.” Shupe asked the Oregon Department of Motor Vehicles to be listed as ‘nonbinary’ on Shupe’s driver’s license, and when the DMV refused, Shupe took it to a Multnomah County judge. The judge ruled that Shupe has the right to legally identify as neither sex. Shupe’s attorney told the New York Times last month that he and Shupe are now asking the DMV to change its form to include a nonbinary option.

“If I had a white mother and a black father, I wouldn’t be forced to identify as either black or white,” Shupe told the Emerald. “This decision is basically saying that gender works the same way. I want my ID to reflect both sides of who I am.”

At University of Oregon, which is consistently rated among the nation’s most LGBTQ-friendly schools, a handful of students who have identified as nonbinary are forced to choose male or female on most forms. So far, official paperwork is unaffected by the Shupe decision. For many nonbinary students, it’s easier to legally state that they are male or female.

One of those people is Rhys Hawes.

Hawes wasn’t expecting name tags to be the most impactful thing about their first visit to UO. But when Hawes saw that all volunteers’ nametags had a space for preferred pronouns, their mind was blown.

Hawes has preferred the pronouns “they/them/theirs” since the age of 15. Most people and schools assume they are female and don’t ask about this; University of Oregon was the first.

Now finished with freshman year, Hawes has lived in the gender-inclusive floor of Carson Hall, started an LGBTQ theater group called Shakesqueer in the Park, and, with the guidance of UO’s Trans Health Team, started hormone replacement therapy.

Hawes started taking testosterone two months ago, but not in an effort to transition to male — they simply want to feel more comfortable and look more androgynous. Hawes hopes the hormones will make people think twice before assuming they identify as female.

There are 15 to 20 other nonbinary students on Hawes’ gender-inclusive floor in Carson Hall, estimates Lexi Bergeron, community assistant on Hawes’ gender-inclusive floor. After working with these students for a while, Bergeron has stopped assuming gender for anyone she meets.

“I pretty much always say ‘they,’” Bergeron said.

As inclusive as the university might be, the bureaucratic system in America isn’t designed for more than two genders. If someone marks female or male on a form, this paperwork can then follow them for the rest of their lives.

This poses problems for gathering any data on lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender or queer students, according to Maure Smith-Benanti, director of the LGBT education and support services program at University of Oregon.

“We don’t even know how many LGBTQ students are or were on campus,” Smith-Benanti said. “We have to rely on self-reporting. For LGBTQ individuals, the choice to publicly out themselves on any form of documentation is always a deeply personal decision. We have to weigh the benefits of coming out for ourselves and our community with the risks and safety concerns that come with it.”

State and federal governments require people to report things such as sex, race and religion as a way of providing analytics. When people attempt to change this information retroactively, it becomes a red flag for things like fraud and identity theft.

“Transgender people have to appeal, in front of a judge, to change their names and their sex,” said Smith-Benanti. “I am interested to see if more individuals will choose this nonbinary selection, and, if so, if they will have to appear before a judge to prove that they aren’t engaging in fraud.”

Oregon attempted to alleviate some of this bureaucratic ambiguity for colleges last year by passing Senate Bill 473, which requires public universities to allow students to use their preferred first name on any forms that request information about their gender, race or ethnicity. This allows students to suggest that they have a different gender identity but still doesn’t require universities to offer a third gender option.

The Shupe decision could be used in other court hearings in other counties across the state, potentially creating a fast-track for trans or nonbinary people to change their identification, according to Andrea Zekis of Basic Rights Oregon, a group that has been a vocal advocate for LGBTQ rights.

But many, like Hawes, will continue to check male or female on forms. Hawes says that sometimes a piece of ID that helps them seem female is helpful.

“If I keep my mouth shut and smile and nod, I can pass as a cis person (gender-conforming) in the world,” Hawes said. “If I had [nonbinary] on a piece of legal ID, I’m not sure it would protect me. I’m not sure it’s something I would pursue in a world that is so nonbinary-phobic.”

Outside of UO, reactions are varied: Hawes has been asked to show ID with gender identification — it still says “female” — or asked about their genitalia. When Hawes gets a haircut, hairdressers often ask which gender they are because women’s haircuts cost more than men’s.
“There’s these little things every day that kind of ‘other’ you,” Hawes said. “You see all the little ways where society is telling you that they didn’t expect you and they don’t want you.”

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Black Lives Matter has changed UO, but supporters are tired of watching deaths

If you walk past Hamilton Hall, you’ll see photos of deceased black men and women staked into the lawn during a march on the University of Oregon campus on Friday, July 8.

Some of the faces, such as Tamir Rice, Sandra Bland, Michael Brown and Freddie Gray, were immediately recognizable. Others were more obscure. All were killed during interactions with police or in police custody, and all were black.

These are the faces of the Black Lives Matter movement. The most recent faces are from last week, when Alton Sterling and Philando Castile were killed by police within 48 hours of each other. It was their deaths that prompted the march at University of Oregon, where nearly 300 students, faculty and Eugene residents turned out on a summer afternoon.

On Wednesday, the organization Black Lives Matter—which was started on July 13, 2013, the day George Zimmerman was found not guilty in killing Trayvon Martin—will be three years old. It’s been three years of protests and vigils and faces put on signs.

Where previous Black Lives Matter demonstrations on campus have been heated protests, such as last November’s, marchers told the Emerald this one was different. Quantrell Willis, assistant dean of students, says the mood was tired and frustrated.

“Students were telling me that they didn’t want this to feel like a protest,” Willis said. “We’re exhausted at this point. It was all about love and support.”

Marches and vigils are now more symbolic than anything else, according to Christina Jackson, an academic adviser for black and African retention who marched on Friday.

“I think that (marches) help with creating awareness and education,” Jackson said. “But as much as I want to be hopeful that things will get better, I have my doubts about whether marches like this will really overturn the structure of racism as it is today.”

What UO administration is doing

In the last year, UO has started working toward overturning what many like Jackson see as a structure of racism on campus.

From 2005 to 2012, UO’s faculty was the least diverse public university in the Association of American Universities; in 2014, UO had improved but was still fourth-lowest of the 34 public schools in the association. UO President Michael Schill publicly declared in April that the university wants to increase the presence of students and faculty from underrepresented minority groups.

“We recognize that we can and must do more as an institution to meet the needs of Black students,” Schill said in an email to the campus community.

This is no simple task.

“Oregon was founded as a white utopia,” Jackson said, “so there are a lot of reasons why people wouldn’t feel as though this is a place where they can move and live.”

Most of the university’s efforts to promote diversity are still on the horizon. UO has invited six traditionally black fraternities and sororities to campus; set up black-focused classes, forums and academic residential communities; and launched an initiative to hire more faculty of color on campus.

But there are almost 400 black students on campus. Jackson’s work focuses on creating concrete programs and safe spaces on campus for them.

“People need a place where they can let their proverbial hair down, so to speak,” Jackson said. “Where they don’t have to justify themselves or the things that they are asking for.”

Jackson is spearheading a mentorship program called Student of Color Opportunities and Resources in Education, which focuses on pairing upperclassmen—particularly black women in science fields—with incoming students. A similar program in the Office of the Dean of Students has been running since 2004.

What the UO community is doing

At the University of Oregon, African-American students make up 2 percent of the student body—396 in 2015-2016. The march showed that at a university where 60 percent of students are white, 10 percent are Latino, and 6 percent are Asian-American, that support is coming more and more from all ethnic backgrounds, Willis said.

And that support wasn’t just at the march itself. Teri Del Rosso, a doctoral student specializing in public relations at the School of Journalism and Communication, cancelled her regularly scheduled course discussions on the day of the shootings to talk about the deaths of Sterling and Castile. A newly-established activist group, SoJust Collective, held a brief Black Lives Matter demonstration at the closing of the 2016 Olympic Track and Field Trials on Sunday with signs saying, “support Black Lives on and off the field.”

Solidarity also came from different levels of the UO community; ASUO President Quinn Haaga and Internal Vice President Zach Lusby were both at the march on July 8.

Willis noted the march’s ethnic diversity.

“When the movement started, a large part of those coming out … (were) black people, but (last week in Eugene) you saw overwhelmingly diverse support,” Willis said.

Deanielle Ford, an intern at the Student Recreation Center, agreed. Ford said this walk was the most diverse she’d ever seen.

Diversity is a key part of Black Lives Matter’s goals: Nicole Dodier, last year’s co-director of the Black Student Union, said through a megaphone at the rally that everyone has to recognize the importance of the movement.

“All lives cannot matter until the black community matters,” Dodier said.

Will Campbell contributed reporting to this story.

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UO Administration and GTFF reach contract agreements, this time without strikes

The University of Oregon Administration and the Graduate Teaching Fellows Federation met on June 30 to negotiate the latest contract agreements for GTFs and the university. Unlike the negotiations two years ago, this year’s did not result in most of the graduate fellows going on strike.

There were a few notable elements to this year’s contracts. First, it marks the first time that the GTFF has agreed to a three-year contract as opposed to the traditional two-year span. Across those three years, GTFs will see minimum pay increases of 3.5 percent for the first two and 3.7 percent in the last year.

All GTFs will also benefit from a 65 percent reduction in summer course fees, regardless of whether they are also taking on a summer teaching role.

“My role on the bargaining committee [for the administration] was to ensure that the university keeps in mind that we need to look at ways to accommodate GTFs not only as employees but also as students,” said Dean of the Graduate School Scott Pratt.

Both sides also agreed on mandatory trainings for GTFs, which will educate them on things specific to teaching, but also on cultural competency.

“We’re really excited about the trainings because it’s something that we pushed for really hard in order to make our campus safer for graduates and undergraduates,” said former President of the GTFF Shawna Meechan, who was present for both of the previous negotiations.

Speaking about what was different this time around, Meechan said that the overall atmosphere of the negotiation table was much more positive this year compared to the sessions two years ago.

“Last time the university hired out a lawyer to represent them in these discussions,” Meechan said. “He was very rude and it was clear from the outset that he had very little understanding of what it means to be a GTF. This year there was a much clearer sense that we were speaking with others who are invested in what happens on our campus and with getting a contract that was agreeable and enforceable.”

The UO administration also highlighted a clearer sense of mutual understanding with the talks this year.

“I wasn’t here for the last negotiations,” said Assistant Vice President of Labor Relations Bill Brady, “But from my perspective both sides worked very hard [and] did a nice job being responsive to finding solutions based on each other’s needs.”

Both sides are confident that this year’s contracts reflect a positive outcome for both GTFs and the administration and that this agreement will be ratified by the GTFF without incident.

“If I were writing the contract I may have pushed the numbers with our minimum wages a bit higher,” Meechan said. “We’re still struggling to get by here in Eugene. But overall I think this is a positive contract.”

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