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Labor Panel Rules U. Washington Must Restore Armed Police in Dorms

Labor Panel Rules U. Washington Must Restore Armed Police in Dorms

“began to use security guards in dorm halls in 2020 in response to demands from the Black Student Union”

This will likely be met with student protests. Campus activists got the police removed, and they won’t like this news one bit.

The College Fix reports:

University of Washington must restore police to dorms, labor panel rules

The University of Washington must use armed police in the dorm halls instead of unarmed security guards, a labor panel in the state ruled recently.

The Public Employment Relations Commission ruled on July 29 that university officials violated the union contract with law enforcement officers when it began to use security guards in dorm halls in 2020 in response to demands from the Black Student Union.

The demands came in the wake of nationwide protests after the killing of George Floyd at the hands of Minneapolis police.

The Teamsters sued on behalf of its constituents at UW.

Two of the three commissioners wrote:

Patrolling the residence halls was police bargaining unit work. The employer’s unilateral decision to transfer the work did not implicate a management prerogative within the scope of its entrepreneurial control. The employer was required to bargain the decision to assign bargaining unit work to non‑bargaining unit employees.

Notably, no police officers lost any hours of work due to the decision – they were just reassigned to other duties.

The university unsuccessfully argued that its desire to create an “inclusive” community overrode contractual considerations.

The majority decision stated:

In response, the employer framed the issue as whether the employer’s entrepreneurial interest in providing a campus safety paradigm that ensures a safe, inclusive learning and working environment in its community, including the residence halls, outweighs the union’s interest in maintaining the residence hall assignment. The employer asserts that its justification for assigning CSRs to patrol the dorms trumps the union’s interests. The employer asserts that the bargaining unit has not suffered a detriment and that any effect on the bargaining unit is de minimis.

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Comments

“The university unsuccessfully argued that its desire to create an “inclusive” community overrode contractual considerations.”

I hope some enterprising students make this claim to the university when they sublet their dorm rooms to strangers as crash pads.

    rutvet83 in reply to henrybowman. | August 8, 2022 at 5:38 pm

    You just solved where Texas and Arizona can send the next busloads of illegals. Let the “enterprising students” fill their rooms with them.

Armed guards needed in student dorms? The university experience has changed from my days.