Tensions in the ongoing student workers’ strike at Columbia University were inflamed further this week by the leak of two emails in which Columbia administrators advertised spring teaching and assistant jobs to graduate students at New York University.
The messages, which were posted on the Twitter account of the NYU Graduate Student Organizing Committee (NYU-GSOC), came in the wake of an email to strikers from Columbia’s human resources department saying that only those who resumed work by December 10th would be guaranteed job appointments in the spring. The Student Workers of Columbia (SWC) interpreted the email as an illegal threat to permanently replace striking workers and has filed an Unfair Labor Practices claim with the National Labor Relations Board.
THE SWC believes that one of the emails, which was seeking teaching assistants for an art history course, is a misunderstanding, according to Tristan Du Puy, a PhD candidate in sustainable development and a member of the SWC’s bargaining committee. However, the union thinks that the other message, a solicitation for a French lecturer, is problematic.
“It’s definitely looking for scabs,” said Du Puy.
In response to the emails, the NYU-GSOC created an online petition condemning Columbia’s “aggressive and illegal anti-strike measures,” and pledging to not take any job replacing the work of a striking Columbia student. By Thursday, it had over 450 signatures from local academic workers.
Dr. Pascale Hubert-Liebler, director of the French language program at Columbia, said that the union’s interpretation of the email was wrong.
“We are not hiring instructors to replace any striking graduate students, but simply because we do not have enough graduate students and lecturers to cover all our sections.” she said.