By Duane Campbell
Thursday, Nov 17, thousands of faculty members
made history by participating in the first-ever strike of the California State
University system.
The message to the Chancellor was loud and clear
from six in the morning until dark: “If you don’t start making decisions based
on what is right for the 99% this system serves – instead of the 1% of
executives and upper managers running the system -- these actions will
continue.”
At CSU Dominguez Hills in Southern California,
2,000 people over the course of the day picketed the ten gates surrounding the
campus.
At CSU East Bay in Northern California, according
to published reports, 93% of classes were canceled for the day. Traffic was
backed up for over a mile and a half into the city of Hayward. At noon, police
were forced to cordon off the main entrance on Carlos Bee Blvd, effectively
closing campus for the rest of the day.
DSA Honorary Chair Cornel West participated in the support rally.
“This week, we sent the Chancellor a powerful
message,” said CFA President Lillian Taiz, a professor of History at CSU Los
Angeles.
Taiz continued, “People are fed up with his
‘management first’ priorities. The CSU community is tired of seeing the
Chancellor give huge raises to executives while student fees are hiked, faculty
pay is stagnant, class sizes keep growing, and class offerings and faculty jobs
are eliminated.
“Huge numbers of people came out to support the
faculty this week – students, community members, staff, supporters from other
unions, political leaders, and parents.
“Chancellor Reed is out of touch with the needs of the people in the
trenches. Instead, he focuses obsessively on the compensation and perks of his
presidents and his managers. The time has come for the Chancellor to prioritize
the future of the people of California.
DSA Honorary
Chair Cornel West addressed the strikers and East Bay and joined the picket
line.
State and local governments provide the most
basic services to our populace – public education, police and fire,
transportation, parks, libraries and basic infrastructure, not to mention
funding half the costs of unemployment insurance and Medicaid. Yet with state
and local governments facing a recession-induced budget shortage of close to
$200 billion ( out of annual
expenditures of $1.7 trillion dollars), the standard conservative and moderate
Democratic solution is to slash essential services. Most localities will
witness significant layoffs of police and fire personnel and close to 200,000
of the nation’s 3.4 million K-12 teachers received pink slips by September 2011.
This fiscal crisis of the states did not fall
from the sky; it resulted from the Great Recession brought on by unregulated
financial speculation.
Absent renewed federal aid to states and
localities, painful recessionary slashing of basic human services will
accelerate in 2012. Increased
class sizes, withdrawal of Medicaid services, and cuts in basic uniform
services have devastated the lives of ordinary working people
and will send the economy into a further recessionary downturn.
It is
clear that democratic policies will not be granted from on-high by politicians
funded by corporate interests. They will only come through democratic
protest such as strikes and Occupy
Wall Street and mobilization that forces elected officials to serve the people
and not powerful private interests. That’s why Democratic Socialists of America
will be working with people across the nation to mobilize against state and
local cuts in basic human services and in favor of fair tax policies and sane
national priorities that put human needs ahead of empire and corporate greed.
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