Xiangyi Fang, a fifth-year bioengineering graduate student, said the new minimum stipend puts Penn in line with peer institutions like Johns Hopkins University and Princeton University, instead of falling short by close to $10,000. The union had highlighted the disparity during negotiations. She said that she sometimes talks to students looking to obtain doctorate degrees since she is almost done with hers, and now she can promote the protections in the new tentative contract.
“Now we can be like, ‘If you’re excited about research, with this contract, this is a place for you to do really great research and still have a good life in your Ph.D. … You’re not spending your mid-20s being poor, ’” she said.
Multiple organizers also highlighted new protections for international student workers. Under the new contract, the university would establish an annual $50,000 fund to international students who need help with visa expenses, and give them time off for visa and immigration proceedings for themselves and family members.
As the union surpassed a year of bargaining, a supermajority of the union initially authorized a strike in November, citing university administrators’ “delays and insufficient proposals” during negotiations. In January, the union set a strike deadline of Feb. 17, and multiple organizers said that the pace of negotiations markedly increased since then.
“We really started to see articles coming back, [and] we started to see Penn working with us and really trying to negotiate and compromise with us,” said Clara Abbott, a third-year graduate student studying literacy studies who serves as a bargaining committee member for GET-UP. “We were all prepared, ready and able to go on strike, and I think demonstrating that strike threat to Penn really pressured them to be able to agree to these rights and protections that we as workers deserve.”
Support for the graduate workers’ contract fight stretched across Penn’s campus and into the surrounding community as the strike deadline approached.
More than 300 faculty members across Penn’s undergraduate and graduate schools had signed a pledge circulated by the university’s chapter of the American Association of University Professors vowing to “not act as strikebreakers” in the event of a graduate work stoppage.
Jessa Lingel, an associate professor of communication and president of the association’s chapter at Penn, said the first push for unionizing graduate students at Penn started in the early 2000s.
“Thousands of graduate students have worked towards this over … literally two decades, and all of those students who came before pushing for this, they knew that they weren’t directly going to get the benefits of that activism,” she said. “So seeing the contract come together and knowing a lot of people in the bargaining committee are going to graduate and not benefit directly from their efforts is really amazing. And that’s my favorite part about seeing this win.”
The union organizers will now present the tentative agreement to members for a ratification vote, which will happen next week.