Nova Southeastern University can’t get a break from the Miami Herald
Fred Grimm (fgrimm@MiamiHerald.com) wrote an "article" in the Miami Herald on May 10th about a union-busting tactic at Nova Southeastern University titled, "Civil Liberties swept under rug at NSU" that exposes the university's absurd attempt to censor the union - and the faculty's reaction. Unfortunately, Mr. Grimm simultaneously supports the university with the tone and bend of his writing. There are two stories here that need to be known: one that truly reveals just how ignorant a lot of mainstream journalists are - and another about censorship. Grimm writes: "It's not about the union." "The Service Employees International Union, with its overcooked theatrics, can be as off-putting as its underpaid workers are sympathetic." This two-graph lead immediately calls out the SEIU as off-putting as "IT'S UNDERPAID WORKERS ARE SYMPATHETIC." Huh? Grimm is right, it is not about the union - it is about the workers ... but he writes his opinions about the union without ever once mentioning the very people involved with this campaign. He also makes it sound like the workers work for the SEIU - which would be great if they did, but ... um, clearly that's not the case. He writes, "SEIU, remember, was the outfit that inspired a hunger strike among University of Miami janitors last year over the life-and-death question: Whether to decide a union election with signed cards or secret ballots?" Although Grimm clearly says "It's not about the union," he goes on to talk about the union, Though I don't work at SEIU, I am fairly certain that a group of organizers didn't go up to the Miami janitors and say, "Oye, you want to get union representation and national press coverage ... don't eat!" But Grimm is telling his readers to remember that the SEIU was the outfit that inspired that ... weird. Although, as you know now, Grimm says in his opening line, "this is not about the union," here is the next paragraph of his masterpiece: "But the union has managed to expose something disturbing in the philosophical underpinnings of Nova Southeastern University. So ....Grimm's article is not about the union (and clearly not about the workers either), but alas, this is about NSU doing something even more disturbing than firing its janitorial workforce for organizing a union.
Grimm writes the first fact of the article way down in
the piece: This is the second part of the story ... NSU is pulling every game under the sun here in sunny South Florida - and it took a bunch of organized academics to scream foul! Unfortunately, according to Grimm, they aren't too uptight about the workers either. Grimm writes, "The professor, who didn't want his name published for fear of retaliation (which says something else about the school's academic atmosphere), insisted the meeting wasn't called out of sympathy for SEIU. ``It's really about censorship. It's not about the union at all.'' So, in other words, the union-organized academics at NSU don't care about the workers fired for forming a union, they care about censorship - and while Grimm says (and for some reason I keep reminding you) "this is not about the union," Grimm still fails to see that this level of censorship hurts the workers - not the ideology of the professors whose toilets the workers clean. Grimm writes, "NSU, like the University of Miami, was hit last year by a splashy SEIU campaign to force its janitorial service contractors into union negotiations," and at best that is a lie. For one, Florida unfortunately is a right-to-work state, no one forces anything that has to do with organized labor down here, and second, I am hard pressed to believe the tactics at Local 11 were all that "forceful." In order to sprinkle "history" into his prose, Grimm writes that the SEIU is "led by one-time student activist Andrew Stern," and "SEIU has become the nation's fastest-growing union using protest tactics reminiscent of his school days." He then goes on to write, "There was a hunger strike at UM last year and another this week at Harvard University, where SEIU is organizing security guards. Last fall in Houston, janitors and their student allies chained themselves to garbage cans and blocked a city intersection. Celebrities and aspiring politicians make media-grabbing cameos along SEIU's picket lines."
JUSTICE FOR JANITORS "The union relishes service workers at universities, where students and professors make ''Justice for Janitors'' a campus cause," Grimm writes. And while we are relishing, Grimm says, "Union leaders know that college administrators, despite budget constraints, are saddled with certain civic sensitivities when dealing with underpaid immigrant workers." This is the first time we read the keyword "IMMIGRANT." And even Grimm, an apparent anti-union journalist who is too lazy to talk to a worker (or an immigrant, or both), seems upset with NSU and their lack of civic responsibility- he says, "NSU appears unburdened by such thinking." If you are still with me, let's go back to the other story:
This buried piece of information is the other story - and should be the primary story without all the anti-union rhetoric coming from Grimm. My friends, welcome to mainstream media. At the end of his piece, Grimm writes, "A real university, after all, doesn't fear communication." We cannot help but wonder of Grimm's own fear of communicating. It would be fantastic to see a piece like this in a paper like the Miami Herald that included quotes from academics, the school paper, and even the university management - along with quotes from the workers. I wrote a letter to Grimm before posting this to Union Review. In my letter I mentioned to him the holes that I found in the piece - and that his apparent unwillingness to speak with a worker on this campaign is a sign of lazy journalist. My concern is that the media, when it should happen to speak to the workers, elicits an emotional reaction as opposed to one that is rational. The word sensitivity is thrown around and around in these stories, but what about a worker having a rational thought he or she might like to share about their campaign to organize a union - I suppose that would be nice.
-Richard Negri |
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