Higher Education

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About MTA Higher Education
The MTA represents approximately 18,000 higher education members. They work on the Amherst, Boston and Lowell campuses of the University of Massachusetts system, at nine state universities, and at 15 community colleges. Members include faculty, part-time and continuing education faculty, administrators, librarians and support staff.

Higher Education Leadership Council
The Higher Education Leadership Council, which is best known as HELC, is an MTA network made up of MTA higher education local association presidents and Board members.

Low wages cut into campus hiring and retention

Massachusetts public colleges and universities paying below U.S. average
Faculty and staff are being paid below U.S. average

To afford living in Massachusetts, about 30 percent of campus staff work extra jobs and about half.

Faculty and staff working at public colleges and universities throughout Massachusetts are grappling with low wages that are forcing them to put off major life decisions, such as starting families, and requiring many to work multiple jobs to make ends meet.

Those were some of the findings of a survey the Massachusetts Teachers Association conducted of faculty and staff it represents at community colleges, state universities and the UMass system.

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Wage Equity Study: Higher Education Faculty & Staff Salaries

Wage study shows public higher education faculty, staff salaries lagging

A salary study conducted on behalf of the MTA shows that the wages of faculty and staff, when adjusted for cost of living, are substantially below those of colleagues working at public colleges and universities in nearby states, as well as at those located in states similar to Massachusetts.

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Read & Discuss "Lend & Rule" at Higher Ed Conference

Book Club Selection is available for MTA members to download
Lend and Rule

Many of the critical decisions made about the way public colleges and universities operate – what types of courses are offered, how much financial aid is provided to students, the range of staff salaries and benefits – are not made on campus; they are made on Wall Street.

A new book “Lend & Rule: Fighting the Shadow Financialization of Public Universities” examines the deep and troubling influence that the finance industry holds over public higher education.

Three MTA members — Rich Levy, Joanna Gonsalves and Barbara Madeloni —are among the authors of “Lend & Rule,” which looks at examples around the country of the ways in which institutional debt has become a driving force of what happens in public higher education.

Before you go to the Higher Ed Conference, check out "Lend & Rule" on the Libby app. The book is available to MTA members as part of the MTA Reads program. Instructions are available here.

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