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USF rejects recommendations on impasse

Published: Sunday, February 14, 2010

Updated: Monday, February 15, 2010 00:02

University staff members got what they were dreading — and it's left them with questions.


After USF rejected a special master's recommendation late last week regarding contract agreements between administrators and 1,633 staff members, negotiations will continue without a clear end in sight.


"The University went in front of the special master and swore (it) was the best deal they could offer the staff, and now they're presenting something saying they could do a better deal with the staff," said Bill McClelland, president of USF's chapter of the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees (AFSCME). "Why didn't they present that to us in the months we were negotiating before?"


USF informed employees Thursday night of its decision via the staff's e-mail listserv. The e-mail specifically  addresses cash incentives for performance -based employee  evaluations. AFSCME  wanted bonuses to be based on employees' salary levels rather than performance ratings.

"Pay for performance is the relationship we want to have with the people who work here at all levels," said USF spokesman Michael Hoad. "What tends to happen is that a lot of people, of course, do well under pay for performance and they get additional bonuses … To say, ‘No, it doesn't matter whether you did a good job' doesn't make sense to us."


There are three performance ratings — decided by a supervisor — a staff member can receive: "exemplary," "commendable," or "satisfactory." An employee receives $1,000 for an "exemplary" rating, $750 for "commendable" and $500 for "satisfactory."


In the e-mail, USF is offering an enhancement of the performance pay proposal: $1,500 for exemplary, $1,000 for commendable and $750 for satisfactory.


"This  would  reward employee performance and distribute a larger pool of money to employees than the (special magistrate) recommended," the e-mail said. "Under this enhanced proposal, the majority of in-unit employees would receive at least a $1,000 bonus."

But McClelland said staff members believe that information is misleading.


"They use the word ‘majority' will receive $1,000, but under the special master's recommendation, everyone would receive $1,000 … They're just playing word games with what's going on here, and I would be very suspicious of what they're saying once you realize that they're spinning this rather than letting people know what's really going on," he said.

McClelland also said the University failed to mention shift changes in its e-mail. AFSCME wants shift changes to be based on employee seniority, which the special master agreed with in his recommendation.


"They don't mention it at all to the staff because they know it would be very unpopular with the staff," McClelland said. "They're being very selective in their presentation of what's going on here."


Hoad said he thinks USF has been communicating with employees all along.

"Not every day or every week, but they've been keeping people up to date," Hoad said.


Other reasons for the University's rejection, according to the e-mail, include bereavement leave, floating holidays, maximum holiday pay and the "meaningful" performance pay.


"There's a whole lot of credibility issues with the University administration right now because of this action they're taking … They had an opportunity to present the facts in front of an outside objective person," McClelland said.


Hoad said USF acknowledged the recommendations, but he said: "Just to be clear, the special magistrate's recommendations are just that. They're recommendations."


Negotiations over contract agreements began eight months ago. The staff declared impasse in July, and the special master was called in to review the case.

Staff members announced last week that they agreed with the recommendation, which mainly favored their side.


Now, a subcommittee of USF's Board of Trustees (BOT) is faced with imposing a decision that would last for the remainder of the fiscal year. After that, negotiations will continue between administration and staff.


"This thing has been dragging on for a long period of time," McClelland said. "I'm concerned that the USF administration is going to put the (BOT) in the middle of this, and the (BOT) will need to decide whether they're going to support their own administration or their own staff and it puts them in a terrible situation, and I think it's irresponsible for the administration to try to do that."


McClelland said he hopes for a fair hearing, but the union has never appeared in front of the BOT regarding staff issues. BOT members deferred comment. Hoad said he doesn't know when the decision will be made.

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12 comments

Anonymous
Fri Feb 19 2010 17:21
I guess thats what mostly minority employee are really worth here at USF. Hmmmm very interesting. The mostly white higher up get raises ......everyone else ....get walking
Sorry to be Staff at USF
Thu Feb 18 2010 09:32
If it were as simple as what WE WANT, we would not be posting comments here. If it were not for the Union, USF would have happily doled out bonuses ranging from $1,000, $750 or $500 based on an UNFAIR evaluation system that works for management but not for employees. Thank God for the Union because I believe that if USF could get away with it, they would not give us a bonus at all while giving grand bonuses to faculty and A&P. Somebody somewhere is out to get Staff, that's all I can say, and they're succeeding. President Genshaft can you help us to get our bonus NOW - we've been waiting long enough!!!
Anonymous
Thu Feb 18 2010 08:57
@anon 10:35
Staff was never offered $2000. Never. That's what A&P started at. The staff wasn't considered worth that much.
Anonymous
Wed Feb 17 2010 13:14
What strikes me on a very human level is that the powers to be at USF cannot look across the table and see how unfair it is to hand out raises and bonus' to Faculty and Admin and leave staff completely out! Set aside the bereavement and shift change issues to be ongoing, those are important, but come on, money talks. It simply is NOT fair to hand some people money and claim POVERTY with the rest. We work to take care of the needs of USF and USF takes care of itself. It seems that USF works to keep the playing field a bit "tilted" in favor of Faculty and Admin.
Anonymous
Wed Feb 17 2010 10:35
What if we don't want union representation, what if we just want the original $2000 bonus? How many people are actually members of the union? I would like to know how many member are actually representing the rest of us.
Anonymous
Wed Feb 17 2010 10:31
...And after 4 years of no cost of living raises, they haggel over how the bonuses will be distributed...
Sorry to be Staff at USF
Wed Feb 17 2010 10:26
It's obvious top-level administrators are completely out of touch with reality. Michael Hoad and others need to trade places with Staff for a day and see how they like it -I'm sure if they had to "suffer" such injustices they will be singing a different tune. It's abominable how USF, a RESEARCH I UNIVERSITY no less, can treat Staff this way. We are the lowest paid with the lowest morale but probably the highest performance, except we have supervisors who we cover and make look good, who do not evaluate us fairly. I say the administrators who got the big bonuses (ONE PERSON got $250,000 - that's enough to pay 250 staff employees $1000 each) decline them and put that money into giving staff bigger bonuses - you remember, the same people who haven't had a raise in three years. But, that will never happen - the rich gets richer while the poor gets poorer, especially if you're Staff at the great USF!!
Anonymous
Tue Feb 16 2010 11:52
dave, The faculty got raises. A real base salary increase. No "performance evaluations" required.
Susie Shannon
Tue Feb 16 2010 10:55
How unattractive for a Research 1 University to play dumb! Michael Hoad appears flummoxed by the idea that anyone would reject the concept of pay for performance. And for good reason. No one did.

For four years, the Union has been at the bargaining table trying to help the University fix its broken performance evaluation system. At every step of the way, the University has just said, "No." In response to the demand that evaluators be trained in the process of evaluating, the University's representatives have said, and I kid you not, that you can't teach people anything they don't want to know. This from an entity in the business of education! Let any staff person refuse to be trained for his or her job and see what happens.

Now the Special Master has done the fact-finding, listened to an entire day of testimony resulting in a 300-page transcript, and has made a 30-page-recommendation. On the subject of performance evaluations, he restated in detail everything the Union has been saying:
-that the current performance evaluation system is not rigorous enough to fairly determine pay.
-that the number of employees whose supervisors do not evaluate them at all is unacceptable.
-that supervisors must have mandatory training in performance evaluations
-that supervisors must be held accountable for the evaluations they do.
-that performance standards must exist for each job
-that the evaluation document match the job being performed.

Despite this, the University maintains that its performance system is just fine, thanks, and that staff should be pleased to have it determine their pay.

Hoad runs with further with this idea and states that pay for performance is "the relationship we want to have with the people who work here at all levels," when in fact, it 2009, out-of-unit faculty, a group composed in part by deans and directors, got an across-the-board 2% increase no questions asked or evaluations consulted.

And what is the University’s bottom line, according to Hoad? "The special magistrate's recommendations are just that. They're recommendations." In other words: The University can pretend to bargain. It can pretend to participate in state sanctioned processes. It can even claim to honor and value its staff. But clearly, the University plans to continue doing as it pleases, wielding its unchecked power over its lowest paid workers and leaving the clean-up to its sadly uninformed spinmeisters. The administration, the UBOT, whoever is in control here, respects no process and listens to no authority but its own. This is power at its most arrogant.

Anonymous
Mon Feb 15 2010 15:17
USF will never pay a fair wage to the staff. They will cry and complain about not having the money as new buildings spring up all over Campus , Faculty raises and Administrative Bonuses are handed out without hesitation.
dave
Mon Feb 15 2010 11:56
Hopefully things remain civil and we don't get a rogue professor like in Alabama
Anonymous
Mon Feb 15 2010 10:19
The title should read "USF SCREWS EMPLOYEES"






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