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Decrying Low Pay and Lack of Protection, R.A.s Strike With Move-In Days Away - Cornell University The Cornell Daily Sun

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Fed up with unsafe working conditions and what they call a lack of concern from Cornell officials, North and South Campus resident advisers went on strike and announced a list of demands — including hazard pay — less than a week before thousands of students are set to move in.

As R.A.s prepare to welcome thousands of new and returning Cornellians to campus, they are juggling their own health, ever-evolving University procedures and the needs of their residents. This semester, even everyday R.A. tasks — like helping a first-year who locked themself out of their room — will require extra planning and comes with extra risk.

Some R.A.s say they’ve already struggled due to staffing shortages, insufficient protective equipment and lack of guidance from Cornell. One said he and his colleagues are “making up the policy ourselves as we go.”

In response, more than 50 R.A.s are skipping virtual training meetings Wednesday. They will also not participate in staff meetings or training and coordinating work until staff from Housing and Residential Life sits down with their spokespeople to discuss the demands.

If Housing and Residential Life doesn’t meet the demands, the R.A.s who signed on “will refuse to be on-call, boycott weekly staff meetings, and avoid communication with superiors,” their email to administrators says.

“Please consider taking a stand with us,” read an email from organizers to R.A.s obtained by The Sun. “We cannot allow Cornell to take advantage of their front line, especially now when lives are at stake.” Instagram and Twitter accounts listing their demands used the hashtag #GiveUsEmpathy.

A Wednesday email to their bosses said the R.A.s who signed on “will refuse to be on-call, boycott weekly staff meetings, and avoid communication with superiors until our spokespersons are contacted and our demands are met.” They told University officials that they plan to “abstain from online training and engaging with our supervisors” until Aug. 22. If they haven’t “received good faith communications from administration by that time,” they’ll begin an “on-call strike.”

Read the full Aug. 19 email and Aug. 18 message sent to R.A.s detailing demands here.

The coronavirus pandemic continues to impact the hundreds of workers in Ithaca and at Cornell who are responsible for keeping campus clean and students fed.  And R.A.s — many of whom rely on their positions for housing and food — live where they work, among hundreds of undergrads and at extensive exposure risk.

Their list of demands includes a mix of safety measures, representation in decision-making processes and hazard pay. The live-in student advisers also want more protective equipment, and cost-of-living raises that take additional workload into account. When R.A.s will be expected to shoulder more responsibilities because of COVID-19 changes, they want administrators to notify them first before they address the larger campus community.

To make sure their interests are better represented in the future, they are asking for an R.A. representative present at Housing and Residential Life meetings and a professional staff liaison. The organizers specifically call out the Housing and Residential Life department — and not residence hall directors and area coordinators, who they thanked for advocating for R.A.s.

“R.A.s are integral to this reopening plan,” the strike organizers posted on social media. “We need PPE, we need sanitation, we need our concerns to be heard, we need not be overburdened, we need consistency, we need communication. We need empathy, then you can ask for grace.”

One of the organizers’ demands is that residence hall directors, area coordinators and other professional supervisory staff retain their jobs and not be overworked during the strike. The R.A.s reserved their frustration specifically for Housing and Residence Life director Timothy Blair, Vice President for Student and Campus Life Ryan Lombardi and Assistant Vice President for Student and Campus Life Pat Wynn. They accused the three of “exploiting and blackmailing marginalized students with the false concept of free housing.” Since many R.A.s need their jobs in order to have housing at Cornell, they feel they are forced to accept tough conditions.

A Cornell spokesperson didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment.

A senior R.A. on South Campus said Blair ended an Aug. 13 meeting for R.A.s about preparing for the fall semester early, “seemingly out of frustration” and that R.A.s haven’t since had the ability to ask questions anonymously. They said Blair “seemed apprehensive” to give helpful answers during the meeting.

“Since that time, the option to ask questions anonymously has been taken from us, robbing us of a way to safely ask vital questions without fear of retaliation from leadership,” the R.A. wrote in an email to The Sun.

Health risks are compounded by the behavior of some residents, according to Diego Galvan ’23, an R.A. in Donlon Hall on North Campus. Galvan said he has seen multiple maskless students around campus and has dealt with vandalized safety signs in Donlon.

“We had someone who drew all over COVID-19 safety rule posters, writing ‘lame, lamer, lamest’ on differing posters,” Galvan said. “We can’t control what residents are thinking, and we already have people from hotspot states not following rules.”

On top of responsibilities that include de-escalating students in psychological crisis, assisting sexual assault survivors and reporting campus code of conduct violations, R.A.s are now on the frontlines of making sure students are adhering to public health guidelines.

International students and students from states on New York’s restricted travel list who were given special permission to complete their 14-day quarantine on campus moved in on Monday. Between 4,000 and 5,000 students will arrive on campus next week, less than the initially estimated 6,400, Lombardi said in a Tuesday town hall. According to Cornell’s move-in plan, the students will get tested, spend 24 hours in a residence hall or at a hotel awaiting results and, if they test negative, move into their dorms.

‘I don’t see how this will last a semester’

Jason Chang grad, a member of the West Campus residential staff, said in a message posted on social media on Tuesday by another graduate student that he and his colleagues are “making up the policy ourselves as we go” because of the lack of coordination by Cornell.

Residential staff, according to Chang, initially had to assign bathrooms and make signs without guidance from the University. Meanwhile, students struggled to understand the procedures for picking up food. Many residential staff complained that meals provided to staff weren’t large enough, leaving them hungry. Breakfast was “a mini muffin and an unripe orange,” and some staff have combined two or three meals into one, according to the email posted online with information from Chang.

In addition to getting the standard student welcome kit with two face masks, a thermometer and hand sanitizer, Chang and his colleagues in Keeton House received a box of surgical masks, a box of gloves and a few face shields. Chang said he purchased $300 worth of his own PPE, including KN-95 masks, a face shield and Clorox wipes, in case the provided PPE runs out and isn’t resupplied in time.

While insufficient, the PPE Chang and his colleagues received is still more than what R.A.s on North Campus received. Galvan received three face masks, a digital thermometer and a small bottle of hand sanitizer. A North Campus R.A., who asked to be anonymous out of concern for the possibility of backlash from supervisors, said they only received one mask and a bottle of hand sanitizer.

Safety concerns have been exacerbated by the lack of staffing and PPE, according to the North Campus R.A., who said staff in their building are taking on additional on-call shifts and as many as 30 to 50 additional residents without any overtime or hazard pay.

Chang said many students who were originally going to be resident advisers have quit, resulting in significant turnover. The senior South Campus R.A. said they estimate that of the 130 R.A. positions on North and South, 24 are vacant.

“The HRL office has done little to support returning staff and begin hiring new people to replace those who decided not to return,” the North Campus R.A. wrote. “We are still being asked to respond to parties and conflicts in residence halls without being provided PPE.”

Galvan said he is particularly frustrated that R.A.s haven’t received more pay to compensate for the increased work at greater risk.

“The worst part of being understaffed is there is no compensation whatsoever for the additional work and the additional risk. When you are the R.A. on call, you have to respond to any emergency,” Galvan said. “Because we are the first line of response for student emergencies and are working even longer hours, our risk of potential risk of COVID-19 is even higher.”

While Chang said that R.A.s are not technically supposed to enforce the behavioral compact, he doesn’t see any other option. Chang doesn’t think the central administration-based response to handle violations will respond quickly enough to prevent COVID-19 spread, and is unsure what the reporting process will be.

“If you ask people in residential life [what] reporting processes for violations [are], we don’t know,” Chang said. “It is a very tough situation as a staff member because, you know, fear of retaliation is a thing.”

Galvan is concerned that rule enforcement and emergency response work will be even riskier because of the staffing shortage. If one floor of a dorm is missing an R.A., the shortage affects the whole building, Galvan said.

“We have to work even longer shifts to cover,” he said. “I don’t see how this will last a semester.”

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