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News :: Miscellaneous
Harvard Living Wage Sit-In Ends Current rating: 0
08 May 2001
The Harvard Living Wage Sit-In ended today after agreement was reached to include student and worker representatives on a committee that will work to raise the wages of Harvard's lowest paid workers. The sit-in attracted national attention to the issue of a Living Wage as government policy in addressing the growing problem of falling real wages for a significant percentage of working people.
From the Harvard Living Wage Sit-In webpage:
http://www.hcs.harvard.edu/~pslm/livingwage/portal.html

"THE SIT-IN HAS ENDED. Students left Mass Hall this afternoon in response to an agreement with the administration. This agreement makes a couple of immediate concessions, and creates a much more representative committe (including workers and students this time) to create a plan for helping the lowest paid of Harvard's workers."


In the local area, a coalition of nearly 40 community, religious, and labor organizations is working to bring Living Wage policies to local governments in Champaign County. For information on the Champaign County Living Wage Association, go to:
See also:
http://www.prairienet.org/livingwage/
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Harvard Crimson Article
Current rating: 0
09 May 2001
Published on Wednesday, May 09, 2001
For the PSLM, a Public Presence but Mixed Success

By GARRETT M. GRAFF
Crimson Staff Writer

When the 52 members of the Progressive Student Labor Movement (PSLM) entered Mass. Hall 21 days ago, spirits were high.

They intended to revolutionize the debate over a living wage. And they did,
turning a fringe group largely overlooked by Harvard students and
administrators into The Topic of Conversation on campus.

In a rare sign of unity, over the next three weeks, hundreds of Faculty
members, students, union workers and Cantabrigians joined together to push
for a living wage.

Endorsements poured in from around the country from politicians, academics
and institutions. Two U.S. senators, civil rights leaders, countless labor
leaders, professors, political commentators, Cambridge's mayor and city
councillors--all stood outside Mass. Hall and urged the protesters to stay
put until Harvard improved workers' pay.

"Do not leave this building until you get the $10.25," urged City Councillor
Kenneth Reeves '72 last week.

Over the course of three weeks, the numbers inside Mass. Hall dwindled as
academic and health issues forced some protesters out--and the University
refused to talk.

Finally, yesterday, the 23 PSLM members remaining left Mass. Hall without a
living wage--and with no assurances that there will ever be one at Harvard.

The committee that outgoing President Neil L. Rudenstine announced yesterday as part of the agreement to end to sit-in falls short of the commitment PSLM initially wanted.

It does not promise wage hikes to a living wage level. It offers promises to
"reexamine" health care benefits and other workers' issues and open
"renegotiations" with several unions.

And some of the loudest cheers came yesterday when PSLM members announced the University's moratorium on outsourcing. But the moratorium is only good through December, and contains provisos that allow the Medical School to continue outsourcing with union approval.

Despite the uncertainty, the mood at yesterday's rally showed no ambivalence about who won.

"If this new committee respects the overwhelming mandate from you people out there, we can be confident that it will come back with a living wage," PSLM member Molly E. McOwen '02 told the cheering crowd yesterday.

"The University's been telling us that the issue of the living wage is
closed. Now we've got a committee that has a mandate that specifically
reopens the possibility of a living wage," said PSLM member Matthew A.
Feigin, a third-law student.

However, where the committee will head, what its recommendations will be and their subsequent implementation is anything but clear--there's even
uncertainty about the student representation of the committee in the eyes of
the PSLM, according to member Benjamin L. McKean '02, as the student
representatives will be chosen by the Undergraduate Council, which condemned the sit-in in an official resolution two weeks ago.

On top of the uncertainty around the committee itself, the committee's
recommendations will be handed down during the middle of the first semester of incoming President Lawrence H. Summers' tenure.

Summers has not commented publicly on the living wage issue, and although
students and faculty might consider it poor form for Summers to ignore the
committee's recommendations, he is under no obligation to implement them.

However, the PSLM took an issue that most students were apathetic about and, in three weeks, turned it into a national movement. PSLM united janitors and students, Faculty and dining hall workers, staff and Cantabrigians in a giant attempt to pressure the University into granting a living wage.

It succeeded beyond its promoters' wildest dreams: the largest crowds in
more than a decade filled the Yard. On some nights, 100 people slept out in
the "tent city."

"The living wage is no longer a student concern. The living wage movement is no longer a student movement," McOwen said at yesterday's rally.

If PSLM is unhappy with the committee's recommendations, they will still
have the support on-campus to push for more changes. Perhaps, though, one cheer during yesterday's rally might be prescient.

At one point, the crowd of PSLM supporters chanted, "We'll be back, we'll be back."

"Everyone recognizes this is just the first step in the process," Feigin said.

--Staff writer Garrett M. Graff can be reached at ggraff (at) fas.harvard.edu