Update 4/20/01
4/20 UPDATE ON HARVARD LIVING WAGE SIT-IN **CURRENTLY** As always, your visible support is needed to ensure the safety and effectiveness of the protesters inside Mass Hall. PLEASE SPEND AS MUCH TIME OUTSIDE MASS HALL AS POSSIBLE. Today's events and updated ways to help follow. **ADMINISTRATION RESPONSE** The administration continues to refuse to negotiate with the protesters. Yesterday morning the vacated their offices rather than discuss a living wage with peaceful demonstrators. They have sent out an extremely misleading letter to media and those who write support e-mails. See http://www.hcs.harvard.edu/~pslm/livingwage/contents.html for responses to the Harvard committee report. Drop by Mass Hall to pick up a response to the administration's letter. We insist that the administrators take the demands of their students, faculty, alumni, and staff - the people who make up this University - seriously. YOU MUST URGE THEM TO DO SO. Please continue to contact them and demand that they negotiate with the protestors. See www.livingwagenow.com and go to "e-mails" for examples of letters that supporters have sent. Neil Rudenstine, President (617) 495-1502, beverly_sullivan@harvard.edu Harvey Fineberg, Provost, (617) 496-5100, harvey_fineberg@harvard.edu Sally Zeckhauser, VP for Administration, sally_zeckhauser@harvard.edu Harry Lewis, Dean of Harvard College, lewis@harvard.edu Polly Price, Associate VP for Human Resources, polly_price@harvard.edu **EVENTS** All events take place in front of Mass Hall. ONGOING: Supporters continue to keep vigilance outside of Mass Hall to prevent the removal of protestors and demand negotiations. Stop by for as long as you can and picket or make banners and signs. THIS IS CRUCIAL. BETWEEN 8 AND 9AM: Representative Jarred Barrios will speak. 11AM: Calling administrators from phones outside of Mass Hall. Stop by to make a call. Regardless, continue to contact them from home as well. NOON: Solidarity Rally with professors, graduate students, and YOU! The administration uses this to gauge our support. Come out and show them that there's more than they even imagined. Speakers include labor activist Susan Moir and faculty members Brian Palmer, Tim McCarthy, and Richard Parker. 3PM: Teach-In. Come with any questions you have about the Living Wage Campaign or the sit-in. Cambridge City Council member Marjorie Decker will join us. 5PM: Custodial Staff, SEIU Local 254, holding meeting outside Mass Hall. 8PM: Vigil SATURDAY, 1PM: Boston-wide Living Wage/Anti-FTAA Rally. Harvard Yard. **YOU CAN HELP** TODAY ONLY: * Talk to custodial staff in your House about upcoming meeting at 5 PM (see above). Sign up and pick up leaflets in front of Mass Hall; get more information at 1pm in front of Mass Hall. IF YOU HAVE 2 MINUTES: * Contact administrators and insist that they negotiate with the protestors. Contact info above. 10 MINUTES: * Join us in front of Mass Hall during the day or late at night. Write Rudenstine a postcard on an index card and drop it off at Mass Hall. * Deliver food to protesters inside Mass Hall at meal times. Contact: 617-645-0767, rray@fas * Tell your friends, TFs, professors, students, and alumni. Go to office hours and make phone calls. * Get support signs at the information table in front of Mass Hall and hang them in your dorm windows. 30 MINUTES: * Pick up leaflets and posters in front of Mass Hall. Poster the yard and your houses. Leaflet your classes or in the Yard. FIRST YEARS (AND OTHERS): * Bring your pre-frosh to living wage events or to join the picket line. * Make a banner and hang it from your window. Supplies in front of Mass Hall. ALUMNI AND DONORS: * Contact the administration and tell them that you will not donate any money until they negotiate with protesters or grant a living wage. PROFESSORS AND OTHER COMMUNITY MEMBERS: * Write an op-ed. Contact: 617-596-8146, 617-256-5779 or stop by Mass Hall. * Speak at a rally. Contact: 617-290-5802 or 617-645-0767 or stop by Mass Hall. * Teach a seminar inside Mass Hall. Express concern that students are missing classes and enter Mass Hall to teach a seminar about your field, especially as it relates to economic justice. Same contacts as for speaking. CONTACT: To find out how else you can help, talk to Ben Stoll. stoll@fas.harvard.edu; 493-3662; 834-5824 E-MAIL: If you or someone you know hasn't been receiving e-mail updates and wants to, please contact jwagner@fas.harvard.edu or pslm@hcs.harvard.edu. **FROM THE INSIDE** Morale is high among those sitting-in, especially because of the support of people outside the building. They have been communicating regularly with supporters through the windows of Mass Hall and have been receiving numerous donations of food from friends and area businesses. They are on good terms with the police inside the building. The protesters approach everyone who enters the building and attempt to speak firmly and respectfully about the demands. Yesterday they spoke with Provost Fineberg when he entered the Mass Hall. He responded that they should have gone to his twice monthly office hours. Protesters informed him that they had been doing so regularly for years, as well as visiting President Rudenstine's office hours, and Provost Fineberg immediately left the building. **OUR DEMANDS** All Harvard workers, whether directly employed or hired through outside firms, must be paid a living wage of at least $10.25 per hour, adjusted annually to inflation, and with basic health benefits. Complete implementation of such a living wage policy requires three other simple steps: * To ensure that the university does not use subcontracting and reclassification to cut wages and benefits-as the Harvard Corporation has agreed it should not-Harvard must adopt a policy of maintaining wage and benefit levels when jobs are outsourced or reclassified. Our Implementation Report contains methods for assuring this which should be adopted. * A board must be created, not appointed by the administration, to oversee implementation of the living wage policy. The board should have binding policy-making power to enforce the policy, and should consist of workers, union representatives, faculty, members of PSLM, and an administrator. * Harvard relies on the labor of workers both on campus and off, and both must be covered by the university's living wage policy. Workers in factories that produce Harvard goods must therefore be assured a living wage for their community; indeed, Harvard has already agreed to a Code of Conduct which contains a commitment to this very idea. In order to determine whether factories are complying with Harvard's Code, however, the university must join the Worker Rights Consortium, the only independent factory monitoring group which satisfies the Code's guidelines. Thanks for your support! Harvard Living Wage Campaign www.livingwagenow.com