Current Issue:
April 26, 2001
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News |
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News, events, features |
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Latest
scientific findings |
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The people behind the university |
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Harvard and neighbor communities |
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Scores, highlights, upcoming games |
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| Newsmakers,
notes, students, police log |
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Museums, concerts, theater |
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Two-week listing of upcoming events |
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HARVARD GAZETTE ARCHIVES
Facts and Fallacies About Employment at Harvard
Wages and Benefits
Claim: As many
as 2,000 people working on the Harvard campus are paid less than
$10.25 per hour.
In fact:
- 403 of Harvard's 13,500 regular employees earn less than $10.25
an hour in wages. All are represented by unions. No full-time
employee at Harvard earns less than $10.25 an hour in total
compensation.
- According to a sample developed by the faculty committee that
examined employment issues last year, fewer than 500 workers of
companies that conduct service work on campus then earned less than
$10 an hour.
- Harvard has a "casual" workforce of between 1,200-1,500 workers
per week. These are part-time workers, including work-study
students, who generally work less than half-time on special
projects, seasonal work, or filling in for regular staff. The
overwhelming majority of these workers are students, retirees, or
other individuals who, by their own admission, do not rely on their
casual employment for their livelihood.
Claim: Directly hired custodians are paid
as little as $7.50 per hour, and certain workers earn as little as
$6.50 an hour.
In fact:
- The minimum salary for a full-time custodian at Harvard is
$9.65 per hour in wages and $12.75 in total compensation. All
custodians are represented by unions.
- The minimum starting salary of a residential dining service
worker employed by Harvard is currently $10.85 per hour and after 2
years of service the per-hour rate is $12.35. Based on job
classification, starting salaries can be up to $14.08 per hour and
$16.30 per hour after two years of service.
- The lowest wage paid to any regular Harvard employee is $8.05
per hour in wages, and $10.63 in total compensation. There are
seven such employees.
Outsourcing
Claim: Harvard is expanding its use of
subcontractors to avoid paying union wages, contracting with 9,000
firms annually.
In fact:
- 9,000 represents the universe of vendors from which Harvard
purchases ANY goods or services, including legal services, IT
consulting, engineering services, office supplies, food, athletic
equipment, etc.
- Only 24 companies provide service workers under contract to the
Harvard campus, including dining services, security, custodial, and
landscaping services. Ten of those service contractors have workers
represented by unions.
- The Harvard Medical School has recently decided to contract
with an outside company for custodial services. All custodians
currently employed directly by the Medical School will be offered
employment with the outside company, which is obligated to honor
the terms and conditions of the collective bargaining agreement
between the University and the union representing custodial
workers. These custodians will receive benefits and wages at least
comparable to current levels.
- Harvard has a positive history of labor relations. Ten unions
represent workers on the Harvard campus. Since 1999, the University
has successfully negotiated contracts with six of these unions.
Copyright 2002 by the President and Fellows of Harvard College
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