Protesters March Against Potential Library Layoffs
By Samuel Y. Weinstock, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER
Published: Friday, February 10, 2012
Protestors join together in a rendition of “Solidarity Forever” in front of the Holyoke Center Thursday evening before marching through Harvard Yard in opposition to proposed reductions in numbers of Harvard’s library workers.
A crowd of more than 100 protesters gathered outside the Holyoke Center Thursday night in response to plans to reorganize Harvard University Library that could include involuntary staff reductions.
The protestors chanted and marched in a circle, after which several workers, students, and other supporters spoke to the crowd. They then walked into the Yard and circled Massachusetts Hall several times.
The rally sought to increase awareness in the Harvard community about the library workers’ concerns as well as to display opposition to the administration’s intentions, said William P. Whitham ’14, a member of the Student Labor Action Movement.
“I hope this lets the student leaders, lets the faculty know that this ‘glorious’ reorganization has a human cost,” Whitham said.
Library assistant Jeffrey Booth, who has worked at Harvard libraries for nearly 26 years, said that the threat of staff reductions makes him worried about his family.
“Our futures are at stake,” Booth said. “We’ve already had to make tough personal decisions because of the threat of being laid off.”
Library employee and elected Harvard Union of Clerical and Technical Workers representative Emeka F. Onyeagoro, who spoke at the rally, said that he was opposed to the layoffs, which he said threatened an estimated 800 to 1,000 workers.
Onyeagoro said the layoffs have no financial basis, but are an unjustified attempt at greater efficiency.
Layoffs would also negatively affect workers who kept their jobs, since they would be faced with a greater workload, Onyeagoro said.
Ricardo R. S. Rey, a teaching fellow in the history department, said that he opposed the layoffs for practical, as well as philosophical reasons. He recalled an instance where he wasted time searching for documents with HOLLIS before a librarian helped him find a wealth of materials for his class.
“How are we going to find this [without librarians]?” Salazar said.
“There are people [here] that don’t normally go to rallies,” Booth, who is also a HUCTW member, said. “It’s hard to get up out of your seat and do something.”
Last Friday, HUCTW leaders met with library officials for a conversation that HUCTW Director Bill Jaeger described as “honest,” “difficult,” and “inconclusive.”
“So far we haven’t seen a change of heart, but we’re going to keep pressing, and press harder,” Jaeger said.
Jaeger said that the union still had two major concerns that the library board had not addressed sufficiently, if at all.
“We’re baffled by the unnecessary cloak of secrecy,” Jaeger said. “We don’t understand why such a committed and intelligent group would not have more access [to the community].”
HUCTW’s second concern, according to Jaeger, was that some library functions are already understaffed.
“We’re going to fight for great libraries and great jobs,” Jaeger said.
Yet Desiree A. Goodwin, a library assistant who spoke at the protest, said that HUCTW, of which she is a member, has not offered much information either.
“They’re not really telling us anything,” Goodwin said. “Not unlike the library board.”
Jaeger said that the email Faust sent on Wednesday to the Harvard community was encouraging to HUCTW members, since it referenced staff engagement.
Jaeger added, however, that so far, the administrations’s words and actions have not been consistent.
“There’s a worrisome disconnect between that quotation and the practical accessibility that our members have,” Jaeger said.
Booth said that he and his fellow workers found the content of the email to be misleading.
“They expect us to believe her assertions because she’s Drew Faust,” Booth said. “And that is insulting.”
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