Politics & Government
University Of Minnesota Service Workers Vote To Strike Over ‘Poverty Wages'
"We intend to end poverty wages at the University of Minnesota," said Mick Kelly, 65, a cook who's worked at the university for 20 years.

Some 1,500 custodians, cooks, groundskeepers and other services workers across the University of Minnesota’s five campuses are threatening to strike for the first time in history unless the university agrees to substantial pay increases.
“We intend to end poverty wages at the University of Minnesota,” said Mick Kelly, 65, a cook who’s worked at the university for 20 years. “We have members who are homeless. We have members who are my age living in people’s basements. That’s the reality of work at the university right now.”
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Workers, who are unionized with the Teamsters Local 320, voted by a 93% margin to authorize a strike, rejecting the university’s “last best final offer” which included the highest pay increase for Teamsters employees in 26 years, according to the university.
Service workers would see a 5% pay increase on average under the one-year contract proposed by the university, while workers at the top of the pay scale would get a one time bonus of $500. The average starting wage for a Teamster job would rise to $21.67 an hour, according to the university.
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“The University provides our employees not only with fair pay, but with extensive and generous health and wellbeing benefits,” Kenneth Horstman, the university’s vice president for human resources wrote in a statement sent to students, faculty and staff last week.
The Teamsters balked at the offer, pointing out that the raises wouldn’t make up for what their paychecks have lost in value because of soaring inflation. The union is seeking a 10% general wage increase and an additional 5% increase for long-term workers at the top of their pay scale. They also want year-round work for their members, many of whom are only contracted for the school year yet cannot collect unemployment benefits during the summers.
“We know (President) Joan Gable and the university administration can afford to pay us living wages. The university has record revenues, and administrators are giving themselves huge raises,” said Sara Parcells, who’s worked as a groundskeeper at the university for 25 years. “The time is now for teachers to get the raise they deserve.”
Gable received a 22% raise this fiscal year with her entire compensation package valued at $1.08 million, which is in line with the salaries of other Big Ten university presidents.
Mick Kelly, a cook at the University of Minnesota, speaks at a press conference announcing a strike vote by service workers unionized with Teamsters Local 320 on Oct. 10, 2022. Photo by Max Nesterak/Minnesota Reformer.
The union didn’t say when it would strike or for how long. Teamsters Local 320 Secretary-Treasurer Brian Aldes said the union would file its intent to strike on Tuesday, which kicks off a 10-day cooling off period.
“I don’t know if the university believes that the union and its membership are bluffing. But the union’s membership has spoken loud and clear. We are not willing to continue to earn poverty wages,” Aldes said.
University service employees working full time do earn enough to be above the federal poverty level, which is $27,740 for a family of four. However, many workers’ wages do not cover the cost of living, which is $112,487 a year for a family of four in Hennepin County, according to the state’s Department of Employment and Economic Development.
A recent survey of service workers at the university found that 61% do not have enough money to pay for basic expenses, 44% have put off paying bills to buy groceries in the last year and 8% have experienced homelessness while working for the university.
After years of modest raises, staff wages are 13% lower than the market rate, according to the university’s own analysis.
The union is also pushing to increase the minimum wage for its members to $20 an hour at the university. It’s currently $15 an hour, where it’s been stuck since 2017.
The union’s minimum wage is now the same as that for all workers at large companies in Minneapolis, under the city’s minimum wage law. Starting this fall, non-union university students will also make at least $15 an hour.
Union workers say the low wages are why the university can’t fill scores of vacant jobs. The labor shortage is particularly severe in food services with some dining halls serving lunchables. The university has said it will refund students for a lack of food options.
To fill empty positions, the university has also turned to gig workers and out-of-state temporary workers, who earn higher hourly wages than longtime union staff.
The Minnesota Reformer is an independent, nonprofit news organization dedicated to keeping Minnesotans informed and unearthing stories other outlets can’t or won’t tell..