Rutgers faculty ends historic strike, classes to resume

Rutgers University has reached a tentative agreement with its faculty and staff unions, allowing classes to resume Monday after a nearly week-long historic strike.

New Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy announced the breakthrough early Saturday, following five days of negotiations between the university and the unions’ leaders in his office that led to the 257-year-old school’s first strike.

“This fair and amicable conclusion respects the interests of many different stakeholders, upholds New Jersey’s values and puts an end to a standoff that was disruptive to our educators and students alike,” Murphy said in a tweet.

Rutgers University President Jonathan Holloway praised the agreement, calling its provisions “fair and equitable.” 


The strike involved about 9,000 Rutgers faculty members and staff as well as students.
Noah K. Murray for NY Post

The tentative agreement includes salary boosts across the board for full-time faculty and counselors by at least 14% by July 1, 2025. It also includes higher pay for adjuncts, postdoctoral fellows and graduate students, as well as greater job security for adjuncts. 

The contracts, which will need to be voted on by the unions’ members, would be retroactive to July 1, 2022. 

The strike began Monday after about 9,000 Rutgers faculty and staff walked off the job, disrupting classes for the university’s 67,000 students statewide, many of whom joined the picket line. 


Rutgers University strikers on the picket line
The five-day strike disrupted classes for 67,000 students statewide.
AP

The strikers were seeking increased pay, better job security for adjunct faculty and guaranteed funding for graduate students.
ZUMAPRESS.com

The drastic demonstration came after almost a year of stalled contract negotiations, according to strikers. Among their demands were higher salary, better job security for adjunct faculty and guaranteed funding for graduate students.

In a joint statement, the unions noted that there were still “open issues” that needed to be addressed, but said the strike helped them achieve “vital progress” for their contracts goals. 

“The agreements we secured in this framework are a testament to all the workers, students and community members who organized, talked to colleagues and friends, walked the picket lines and marched in New Brunswick, Newark and Camden,” they said.

Classes for students will begin again Monday. 



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Strike over pay paralyzes rail, air travel in Germany

BERLIN — Trains, planes and public transit systems stood still across much of Germany on Monday as labor unions called a major one-day strike over salaries in an effort to win inflation-busting raises for their members.

The 24-hour walkout also affected cargo transport by rail and ship, as workers at the country’s ports and waterways joined the strike.

Many commuters opted to drive, causing delays on the roads, while those who could worked from home.

Unions are seeking a pay increase of at least 10.5% and have dismissed offers from employers of 5% in two stages plus one-off payments. 

High inflation also seen elsewhere last year has hit many workers hard, said Ulrich Silberbach of the Civil Service Federation.

“We have recorded drops in real wages and these need to be balanced out,” he told reporters in Berlin, adding that some of his union’s members in larger cities are having to apply for state benefits to afford rent.


Trains are parked near the central train station in Frankfurt, Germany, on March 27, 2023.
AP

Workers protest at Munich’s main train station during a nationwide strike called by the German trade union in Munich, Germany, on March 27, 2023.
REUTERS

Silberbach said that he hoped employers would increase their offer in upcoming talks — otherwise, unions might have to consider an open-ended strike.

Rail company Deutsche Bahn called the union’s demands exaggerated and warned that millions of commuters would be affected.

“Thousands of companies that normally send or receive their goods by rail will also suffer,” Deutsche Bahn spokesman Achim Strauss said. “The environment and the climate will also suffer in the end. Today’s winners are the oil companies.”


A man walks on a platform at the main train station in Frankfurt, Germany during the strike on March 27, 2023.
AP

Railroad signals turned to red near the tracks in Berlin, Germany on March 27, 2023.
AP

Train tickets that couldn’t be used because of the disruption will remain valid and travelers should check the company’s website for updates, he said.

Labor strikes are a regular occurrence in Germany and normally end in a compromise deal between unions and employers.

The walkout already caused disruption and delays Sunday, as travelers scrambled to reach their destinations early.

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