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2022.05.05 COLA Tentative Agreement Summary, May 10th General Membership Meeting + Voting Beings

ACE Members,

We are happy to confirm the terms of our Joint Labor Management Bargaining Agreement regarding cost-of-living adjustment (COLA) for 2021-22 and 2022-23.  As a rule, we do not share the terms of the agreement until we have a signed tentative agreement (TA).  We have done this long enough to know language used in TAs can alter what we all thought an agreement meant and until we see it and sign it, it’s not confirmed.  

Effective July 1, 2021, each ACE, CSEA, FA, POA, and Teamsters salary schedule shall include: 

  • The 2.5 percent currently set to expire June 30, 2022, is now permanent and ongoing.  
  • Reminder:  this portion has been included in your pay since July 1, 2021. 
  • Since it is now permanent, employees and employer will need to pay for their portion of CalPERS contributions not collected on the 2.5 percent effective July 1, 2021.
    By law, the District cannot pay the employees portion unless there was an error in reporting. 
  • Plus, an additional 5.07 percent ongoing (the full 21-22 State COLA).
  • For simplicity – this is the amount your salary will increase.
  • In terms of retroactive pay, it will cover the 5.07 percent, with normal deductions for CalPERS, minus the employee portion for CalPERS deduction on the 2.5 percent effective July 1, 2021.

Effective July 1, 2022, each ACE, CSEA. FA, POA and Teamsters salary schedule shall increase by: 

  • 22-23 State COLA less 1%.
    • For example, if the state COLA is 5.75%, the additional increase will be 4.75%; if the state COLA is 6.2%, the additional increase will be 5.2%. 
    • The Governor’s 2022-23 January budget proposal had a 5.33 percent COLA included. Since then, there has been discussion it could be even higher. The Governor’s budget May revise (mid-May) should tell us what the COLA is set to be for 2022-23.

Why did we give up one percent of the COLA for 2022-23?
As mentioned in previous emails, the District does have some rising costs that needs to be addressed. Namely, pension liability. The COLA is one of very few revenues stream the District can use to cover increasing operational costs.  The one percent we gave up as a part of negotiations was to make sure the District had additional funds to cover rising costs. 

When do we get the money?
This is unknown. “Implementation shall commence as soon as possible following Union ratification, where required, and approval by the Board of Trustees. Given the short timeline, and as this requires additional programming and system modification, the parties agree to not commit to a specific deadline for implementation. The District will make a good faith effort to implement as quickly as possible”.

Reminder:  Every department in this district is understaffed and payroll and human resources are no different.   It is a workload issue with not enough people who are familiar with our process to do the work.  ACE has been telling the board of trustees since we incorporated in 2009 that cuts to staffing have a critical impact on how the work gets done.  Single points of failure in a system which then affect all employees.  We need to keep hammering home this issue so adequate staffing levels are addressed.

What if I retire or quit before the COLA is paid out?  
You will still receive the back pay up to your final date of employment.  The implementation date is July 1, 2021, meaning it is as if they were paying you at that salary level from July 2, 2021.

Next steps:

  1. Get a signed TA on this agreement. (In process.) 
  2. Inform the membership, in writing, the terms of the TA. ✅
  3. General Membership Meeting: May 10th @ Noon.
  4. Membership votes on approving TA: May 10th @ 1pm thru May 13th @ 2pm.
  5. Goes to the June FHDA board of trustees meeting for approval.

On behalf of the ACE Negotiations Team, 

Chris White, chair of negotiations

Negotiators
Sushini Chand
Chris Chavez
Joseph Gilmore
Keri Kirkpatrick
Andrea Santa Cruz
Scott Olsen
Bradley Booth, chief negotiator

2022.04.26 Update – Work to Contract and COLA Negotiations

ACE Members,

Last week the Faculty Association approved the decision to work to contract as a response to unproductive COLA negotiations (see fwd. message below in italics.) The ACE Executive Board agrees with this action and encourages members to participate in kind by not volunteering your time when it is not required by your manager or job duties.

  • Is work outside my schedule required? No. That’s overtime (which can be voluntary or mandatory.)
  • Is participatory governance required? No. (If it is not assigned by your manager.)
  • Is the chancellor’s office hour or weekly campus Q&A required? No.

Perform the normal and reasonable duties of your position, obey orders, and remain courteous toward others in the work setting.  CSEA, Teamsters and POA leadership are encouraging their members to act in a similarly. 

How does a 5.07% COLA from the state become a 0% raise or nothing ongoing for employees?

Our Chair of Negotiations, Chris White, has written a detailed synopsis below of where we are and how we got here, but we need you engaged in this conversation and these actions. We live in an expensive area where cost of living has increased drastically. For the district to continue to support students, we as workers need to be able to sustain ourselves.

Negotiations Update: COLA Wars (by Chris White)

This isn’t the 1992 battle on campus between Coke and Pepsi to decide who would “quench the thirst of students on campus”.  But much like that battle, the current COLA (Cost-of-Living Adjustment) war is about money.  Namely, the 5.07 percent COLA allocated by the governor’s budget for 2021-22 and the proposed 5.33 percent COLA for 2022-2023.

Budget Background

Back in November, the District held a Budget Town Hall, https://business.fhda.edu/_downloads/2021-22%20Fiscal%20Year%20Update-Part%20II.pdf, and covered the basics regarding the District’s budget, funding sources, the unlikely move to community supported funding, and the impact of declining enrollment (both resident and non-resident) moving forward. There was also a Q & A, https://business.fhda.edu/_downloads/Questions%20and%20Answers-Basic%20Definitions.pdf.  If you haven’t read these, I encourage you to do so. 

Q: If the state provided a COLA, isn’t it automatically passed on to employees?

A: No. In fact, that is usually the last thing that happens, and it only happens because your bargaining unit fought for it.  

The District operates from the standpoint that a COLA is used to cover increasing operational costs which doesn’t necessarily cover salary increases. For 2021-22, the District is asserting the 5.07 percent ($7.9 million increase for FHDA) is already spent through three major ongoing increases: 1) Converting the current 2.5 percent ($3.3 million) off-schedule portion of your salary for 2021-22 to a permanent, ongoing increase; 2) covering cost of implementing the classification/compensation study ($2.5 million); 3) increases to STRS/PERS liability ($1.7 million); and 4) rising benefit costs ($90K).  

  1. Converting the 2.5 percent, currently off schedule, to a permanent, on-going increase. They already have the money through hold-harmless funding.  Any concern regarding its permanency could be resolved in the future to a change in the statute regarding funding levels for community colleges. In fact, the January budget proposal includes such a change, and to date, there has been no major opposition to this proposal.
    https://www.deanza.edu/gov/budget-task-force/documents/JointAnalysis_GovernorsBudget2022_23_Jan2022.pdf (see pg. 8)
  2. Implementation cost from classification/compensation study.  This is problematic for numerous reasons:
    1. Not everyone received an increase.  The goal of the study was to have people paid market rate for the work they do.  That is separate from COLA.
    2. The districts calculations only cover costs for the ACE and Confidential studies. They left out the cost to implement the results of their own Administrator Management Association (AMA) study because they “wanted to keep costs lower and they’re still working on what the cost would be”.
    3. The most problematic?When asked how the District was going to cover the cost of the studies prior to knowing the 2021-22 COLA, the District cannot give a reasonable answer. Government code 3547.5 requires the District to certify they have the funding prior to reaching an agreement.  We’ve asked to see that certification. In a District that can best be described as fiscally conservative and risk adverse, it would be illegal if they entered in an agreement that would cost the District $3.3 million in ongoing dollars without knowing how they were going to cover the cost. The study was approved by the board of trustees in April 2021.  The COLA was approved by the legislature in June 2021. That can only mean there was another funding source – we’ve asked, they don’t know – or the District is more willing to take a risk on unrealized dollars, deflating their argument the District can’t spend funds that they do not know for certain will materialize. 
  1. Pension liability.  Over the past few years, the state has bought down employer pension liability costs which is helpful as one-time funding, but it doesn’t address the long-term ongoing increases. The January budget proposal had no buy down option. Unless the legislature comes back in the May revise with a proposed change, this would be a $1.7 million ongoing increase to the District. 
  1. Ongoing increases in benefit costs.  For FHDA, the Joint Labor Management Benefits Council (JMLBC) addresses this issue and we’ve been able to offset those rising costs through a combination of employee and employer contributions plus a pot of one-time funds to cover the difference.  Beginning January 2022 , employees and the District increased their contribution rates by 5 percent to cover rising costs. The District needs to find a source other than the COLA to cover their 5 percent increase. 

The Governor’s Budget May Revise will play a critical role in the COLA Wars.  It is set to be released mid-May

Negotiations

To move negotiations along, the bargaining units – ACE, CSEA, FA, POA and Teamsters – proposed and signed a memorandum of understanding (MOU) with the District to jointly bargain COLA for 2021-22 and 2022-23.  To date, we have met twice and suffice to say, there is a significant gap between the bargaining unit’s proposal and the District’s.  Our next meeting is this Thursday, 4/28.


Begin fwd. message:


Date: April 20, 2022 at 6:38:47 PM PDT

From: Tim Shively
Subject: Work to Contract Information



All District Faculty, 

We write this letter to notify you that the Faculty Association’s Executive Council has formally approved a “Work to Contract” job action which will begin on Monday, April 25, unless there is significant, last minute movement by the District on the Union’s salary proposal.  We ask your help in enacting the Work to Contract by withdrawing from all non-compensated activities and thereby emphasizing the extent to which faculty work is significant and necessary to the health of the District and its students.   

Work to Contract–What it is 

Work to Contract is a legally protected work action when a union authorizes its members to collectively refuse to engage in any non-contractually required labor.  During a Work to Contract, faculty are asked to do less, not more.  For instructional faculty, this means limiting yourself to teaching your classes, evaluating your students and holding your regular office hours, and disengaging from committee work and shared governance activities.  For non-instructional faculty, such as Counselors, this means fulfilling your required number of hours, but not agreeing to any additional assignments or non-required meetings.  Those who include committee work in their weekly schedule can continue to attend those committee meetings or instead spend the time performing the primary duties of counseling, librarianship, etc. 

What you can stop doing 

  • o All committees, task forces, clubs, and other non-contractually mandated activities.  Ideally, we want to reduce the number of participants in such groups below the “quorum” threshold, so the group cannot legitimately conduct business. 
  • o A more elaborate list of non-contractual “professional contributions” from which faculty can disengage can be found in article 10.7.1 of the Agreement: 

Faculty ordinarily [my emphasis] contribute professionally to the District in one or more of the following areas, including but not limited to: research, creative activity (such as artistic performance, authorship, or the development of new learning materials), new curriculum development, special projects, division/department committees and task forces, institution-wide meetings and committees, hiring and tenure review committees, peer and student evaluation of other faculty employees, participatory governance, Faculty Association, Academic Senates, student activities, community outreach and relevant state, national or professional organizations.  

  • o All Administrative “Open Office Hours,” Townhalls and other such spaces where administrators solicit questions and provide responses while disseminating information. 
  • o Any department/division meetings beyond the required 10 per year.  Should you be required to attend one or more, the degree of your active participation is still within your control (i.e. sign on and tune out). 
  • o SLO Activities.  Part-time faculty who have not completed an SLO assessment this year and are asked to do so by their department are required to proctor that assessment. 
  • o Those compensated with stipends for additional work may choose to withdraw from such work for the duration of the work to contract, being clear that it could jeopardize at least part of your compensation.  Best to check in with your supervisor about your intent to do so and your willingness to reengage in such activities at the end of Work to Contract.  If your compensation for these activities is so low that you have already worked enough hours to earn your additional pay (think roughly a $50-$60 hourly rate), you can withdraw from these activities for the duration of the work to contract. 

What’s not covered

  • o The Faculty Association (someone has to helm the work to contract!) 
  • o The Academic Senate is the only other standing committee which regularly meets which is exempt from Work to Contract proceedings.  This is due to its crucial and legally established role in overseeing many areas of faculty interest.  The Senate’s subcommittees, however, including Curriculum, are subject to work to contract actions.   
  • o Tenure Committee evaluations should continue according to schedule so that the tenure candidates’ schedules moving forward are not disrupted. 
  • o Hiring Committees for which interviews have already been scheduled should proceed.  Otherwise, faculty should refuse to continue participating during the Work to Contract. 
  • o Any work for which you are compensated with release/reassigned time (e.g. Dept. Chair or scheduler).  In effect, this makes such work part of your contractual duties.   

About students 

While on Work to Contract, you are asked not to do any additional work around your classes, which might be extended to not meeting students outside of office hours/required meetings or not answering emails in the evenings or weekends.  While each faculty member will have to follow the dictates of their personal conscience, it’s important to remember that it is through our collective action that we have power.  Reach out to your students as soon as possible to explain your reasons for “withdrawing” from typical activities.  We will be sending a separate letter for all faculty to provide to their students explaining the reasons for the Work to Contract and requesting the students’ support.  Please post the attached letter for students to your Canvas page, email it to them and hang it on your classroom wall–we need as much help as possible. 

We know that for many of us, these actions will not be easy to implement.  And we recognize that some faculty, including probationary or part-time faculty without reemployment preference, may not be comfortable following all of these recommendations.  But FA will vigorously defend all candidates against any adverse impact resulting from their participation in this job action.  You deserve fair and equitable compensation and the District has the wherewithal to settle this now.  The more quickly and widely we can implement Work to Contract conditions, the sooner we can pressure the District into granting our salary request, and return to “normal” operations.  So do order your caps and gowns, and make plans for commencement activities.  It will be much easier to withdraw from these if the District proves intransigent, than it will be to plan for them at the last minute.  And please, let us know what additional ideas you might have, and if you’d like to be more involved in activities we are planning to accompany the Work to Contract action.

Tim Shively
English Instructor, De Anza College
President, Foothill-De Anza Faculty Association

2022.04.15 Update – Stewards, COLA, Noise & Actions

ACE Members,

I’ve served as president for a little over 100 days. Throughout navigating unique challenges across the district, what has always brought me confidence is our contract agreement (LINK) and working alongside an amazing executive board. The first thing I do each day when I start my computer is open the agreement in a browser tab as a reference for enforcing workplace ground rules. When there’s an issue the contract doesn’t cover, I reach out to my fellow troublemakers. If you need something concrete to stand on or someone to help to resolve a workplace concern, follow my example: (1)know your contract and (2)contact a steward.

Stewards
What does an ACE Steward do? (I asked one for their answer)
I would say that as a steward I provide members assistance interpreting and clarifying the contract; provide consultation over potential violations regarding wages, hours of work and other conditions of employment described in the collective bargaining agreement; represent our members in the workplace; provide assistance with the grievance process.

Section 5.3 of our Constitution goes into detail regarding the duties of a Steward (LINK)

Who are our Stewards?
@Erika Flores (Chief Steward – De Anza)
@Adriana Garcia (Steward – De Anza)
@Anthony Caceres (Chief Steward – Central Services)
@Scott Olsen (President)

ACE is looking for a Foothill Chief Steward. Contact me if you are interested in the position. I’ll send out a separate announcement with additional details soon.

Congratulations to @Andre Meggerson on obtaining a new position at De Anza 🥳 Thank you for your years of excellent service.

Cost-of-Living Adjustment for 21-22 and 22-23
Currently negotiations are underway for a salary increase, but the distance between initial proposals is big. I recognize it’s alarming to see reactions like the Faculty Association’s work to contract and ACE’s guidance to not give away your work for free, but despite us doing “compassion and care work” we are essential workers and deserve be compensated fairly for our role in paving the way for the institution to succeed in its mission.

What makes 21-22 and 22-23 negotiations different from other years is that the COLA is being negotiated for all bargaining units at the same time. We are working hand-in-hand with FA, CSEA, Teamsters and POA. During this process when there’s a call for support, we’re going to do what we can to stand in solidarity.

Noise Made / Actions Taken
At the Trustees meeting (statement included below) I highlighted that it had been a year since the classification study had been approved and all members have yet to be paid. In addition to delays, we are struggling to resolve inaccuracies like overpayments and unilateral step adjustments which reduced March paychecks for members – most likely you saw a copy of our cease-and-desist as an immediate response. Chris White would repeatedly remind members to always check your paystub and I will begin to do the same. ACE has since met with HR and is actively working to resolve both issues – affected employees will be notified separately.

Retirees, I will follow up with information once I am provided with a specific payment date for what you are due. Thank you to those who submitted public comments to the Board of Trustees.

I’m looking forward to finalizing the classification study and beginning to work on future initiatives that continue to benefit members. ACE has negotiated great things in the past and we will continue to do so in the future.

Site Meetings (Check Outlook to Join)
De Anza/Central Services
Tue, April 19th Noon – 1:00 PM
Zoom

Foothill/ Central Services
Thu, April 21st  Noon – 1:00 PM
Zoom

Events
403bwise.org Basics of Savings and Investing
Thu, April 21, 2022 4:00 PM – 5 PM PDT
Zoom
(Register)

“A Song for Cesar” documentary followed by a panel discussion
Fri, April 29, 2022 6:00 PM – 8:00 PM PDT
Smithwick Theatre, 12345 El Monte Road, Los Altos Hills, CA 94022
(Register via Eventbrite)

Take Care,

Scott Olsen (he/him) | ACE President
https://acefhda.org | olsenscott@fhda.edu
650-949-7789 | M-F 8:00am-5:00pm


Trustees,

It’s been one year since the classification study was approved by this board and ACE members have yet to be fully compensated accurately. I include the word “accurately” after being notified on March 17th that some were allegedly overpaid. On that same day ACE issued a demand for (1)a list of the employees who’ve been allegedly overpaid, (2)the amount of overpayment and (3)the reason they were overpaid. No response was received before employees were asked to sign a document agreeing to return money. A cease-and-desist letter citing labor code and ed code violations was sent to the district by our attorney group.

Background calculations that attempt to identify the logic behind the study’s back pay for March were not provided for most recipients, unlike for February. The lack of this information creates confusion and uncertainty for employees.

On March 31st employees began to question a “pay discrepancy” when they found their current paychecks were lower than in previous months. Their base salary had been unilaterally lowered as a result of moving them to a lower step without notice. Today ACE issued a similar demand for (1)a list of the affected employees, (2)the amount of discrepancy and (3)the reason for this discrepancy and (4)to meet and confer over the impact and implementation of salary disputes. These actions are contrary to negotiated agreements, violate California Labor Code section 222 and clearly an unfair labor practice.

Mental health was the underlying topic of this morning’s flex day. While individual self-care was promoted as a solution, in a relationship the onus to resolve an issue falls on both parties. As our employer I would ask that you find the capacity to provide advance warning, communicate clearly, respond to requests, and be accurate, especially when it comes to the topic of compensation. Modifying future behavior would reduce financial anxiety and stress for my members along with demonstrating dignity and respect.