Exposing the Full-Blown Exploitation of Part-Timers
Thank you for mentioning the plight of community college part-time faculty (“Payoffs, Drawbacks for ‘Full-Time’ Part-Timers,” Aug. 9).
Most part-time faculty don’t have phones or offices, paid office hours, job security or medical benefits. Part-timers handle 40% of the total teaching loads at the community colleges, and part-timers (28,000) outnumber full-timers (16,700).
It’s unfair to part-time faculty and students for community colleges to balance their budgets on the backs of part-timers. SB877 would help by establishing a permanent state budget category for creating more full-time faculty positions.
We also sponsored legislation this year (AB301) that would provide college district incentives to pay for paid office hours for part-timers. Last year, the governor signed our sponsored bill to provide district incentives to pay for part-time faculty health benefits.
PATRICK McCALLUM
Executive Director
Faculty Assn. of California
Community Colleges Inc.
Sacramento
*
A person who works close to or beyond a normal full-time schedule is giving his or her employer all the benefits of a full-time employee. No amount of double-talk or weasel words can change that fact. In exchange for the employee’s full-time work obligations, the employer pays less in salary and benefits. Sugarcoating a poison pill doesn’t make it any less lethal.
Employment is either full time or part time, temporary or permanent. Some recent employer-oriented innovations have been privatization, contracting and working in lieu of or to earn welfare-type payments.
Please make no mistake about it. The worker does not benefit from any of these schemes. No amount of verbal hocus-pocus can change the bottom-line result.
BETTY ROME
Culver City
More to Read
Sign up for Essential California
The most important California stories and recommendations in your inbox every morning.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.