Skip to main content

How to Win a Strike - Harvard Students Support Dining Workers

1. Roughly 500 students walked out of classes and rallied in Harvard Yard, more than 100 students and supporters of Harvard’s picketing dining services workers sat in the lobby of 124 Mt. Auburn St., singing, and chanting—and, eventually, doing homework—for nearly seven hours. 2. Tentative agreement reached after a day of intense picketing and rallying by both HUDS workers and student supporters.

Hundreds of students and HUDS supporters marched into 124 Mount Auburn Street, home to several Harvard offices, where negotiations over contracts continue Monday afternoon. ,Thomas W. Franck

1.

Students, Supports Show Out in Force Monday for Dining Hall Workers

Monday marked a showing of force in support for Harvard’s dining services workers as more than a hundred students and supporters flooded the lobby where negotiations between the University and HUDS’s union took place.

After roughly 500 students walked out of classes and rallied in Harvard Yard, more than 100 students and supporters of Harvard’s picketing dining services workers sat in the lobby of 124 Mt. Auburn St., singing, and chanting—and, eventually, doing homework—for nearly seven hours.

Harvard’s dining workers have picketed for nearly three weeks, demanding the University increase their wages and maintain their current health benefits.

Students had planned to occupy the building until Harvard’s negotiating team came to a “fairer resolution” with the union, Gabe G. Hodgkin ’18, an organizer with Harvard’s Student Labor Action Movement, said earlier in the afternoon.

Indeed, Harvard and UNITE HERE Local 26, the union representing HUDS employees, did reach a tentative agreement early Tuesday morning. Though Local 26 President Brian Lang did not provide details, he said the agreement “accomplished all of our goals.” That agreement must first be sent to a 30-member bargaining subcommittee Tuesday, he said, before the full membership of dining workers in the union vote on the deal Wednesday.

The lobby was near capacity at about 3 p.m. when the sit-in began, as students sporadically broke into protest songs and chanted “We love HUDS” while bemused office workers looked on from above. Roughly 100 HUDS workers, union members, and supporters demonstrated outside the building initially, dwindling to nearly a dozen by 10:30 p.m., when police asked demonstrators inside the building to leave.

The demonstration at 124 Mt. Auburn St. followed a rally Monday afternoon at 2 p.m. in which roughly 500 students walked out of class in a show of support for striking dining services workers, the second such walkout of the nearly three-week long strike.

If you like this article, please sign up for Snapshot, Portside's daily summary.

(One summary e-mail a day, you can change anytime, and Portside is always free.)

The crowd of supporters gathered around the John Harvard statue in Harvard Yard, where Jonathan S. Roberts ’17, the first student speaker, urged continued action as workers spent their 20th day on picket lines.

“They’re not on strike to hurt us or to hurt the community, they’re on strike because they understand what their rights are,” Roberts said.

Dining hall employee Anabela A. Pappas also addressed the crowd in the Yard and thanked the students for their support.

“First and foremost I want to thank the students who have been side by side fighting with us,” Pappas said. “My coworkers and I would not be here without you.”

At 10:30 p.m. in 124 Mt. Auburn St., Aaron J. Duckett, a dining services worker who attended Monday’s negotiations, addressed students and said both bargaining units “made a lot of headway” that evening.

“The specifics we can’t get into… but we have a little bit more work to do upstairs right now,” Duckett said to the roughly 50 students remaining in the building near 10:30 p.m. “I feel like we’re on the right path.”

Earlier in the day, The Boston Globe’s editorial board called on Harvard to meet its dining workers’ demands, and one dining hall employee—Rosa Ines Rivera—shared her story in a New York Times op-ed entitled “Struggling to Serve at the Nation’s Richest University.” Both articles came after a weekend of fervent activism, and a roughly 1,000 person march in support of dining services workers.

—Staff writer Daphne C. Thompson contributed reporting.

—Staff writer Brandon J. Dixon can be reached at brandon.dixon@thecrimson.com. Follow him on Twitter @BrandonJoDixon.

—Staff writer Hannah Natanson can be reached at hannah.natanson@thecrimson.com. Follow her on Twitter @hannah_natanson.

—Staff writer Leah S. Yared can be reached at leah.yared@thecrimson.com. Follow her on Twitter @Leah_Yared.

=====

2.

Harvard and Dining Workers Reach 'Tentative Agreement.'

Harvard and its dining workers reached a “tentative agreement” around 1:05 a.m. Tuesday morning—the closest the two parties have come to a contract settlement during months of tense negotiations.

Brian Lang, president of UNITE HERE Local 26—the Boston-based union that represents Harvard’s dining workers—said the accord “accomplished all of our goals.” The deal is yet to be ratified; it must first be sent to a 30-member bargaining subcommittee Tuesday, Lang added, before the full membership of dining workers in the union vote on the deal Wednesday.

Though he declined to provide specific details on the agreement, Lang said HUDS employees could return to work as early as Thursday. According to an email sent last week by College Dean for Finance and Administration Sheila C. Thimba, it will take at most two days from the official end of the strike before the University’s dining halls can resume “normal operations.”

University spokesperson Tania deLuzuriaga wrote in an email that further details about the agreement would be forthcoming Tuesday morning.

Protesters greeted news of the tentative deal with cheers and jubilation outside 124 Mt. Auburn St., the Harvard office building where Monday’s negotiations took place.

“I’m feeling great about it, everything feels good,” dining services worker William H. Sawyer, who participated in the negotiation process, said at around 1:30 a.m. as he prepared to bike home. “The students and everyone behind us [have] been really inspirational… they kept us up, up, up, up and alive about this.”

“Even right now, they still here,” he added, pointing to the handful of students—all members of the Student Labor Action Movement—who remained outside the building, shouting and jumping up and down in celebration in the wee hours of the morning. “Everybody else gone home.”

In early October, HUDS workers launched an unprecedented strike—their first to take place during the academic year—calling on the University to increase wages and to maintain the current health benefits package it offers to dining hall employees. The last HUDS strike occurred more than 30 years ago.

The tentative agreement came after a day of intense picketing and rallying by both HUDS workers and student supporters. More than 500 students walked out of class—the second walkout of the strike—before marching to 124 Mt. Auburn St. for a sit-in that lasted late into the night, wrapping up around 10:30 p.m. at the urging of police officers.

By the time Harvard affiliates and union negotiators announced their tentative agreement, only a small cohort of students remained outside the building, along with a few HUDS workers. At one point during the night, students and strikers joined hands and marched in a circle, singing “We Shall Overcome.”

Abhinav Reddy, a School of Public Health student and graduate student union organizer, described the final moments of the night. Local 26’s bargaining team joined the demonstrators remaining outside, he said, and “everyone gathered back up and started chanting.”

“You could just see it on their faces before they even said anything,” Reddy said. “And everybody was like screaming and yelling, and then they said ‘we won, we got it.’”

SLAM member Grace F. Evans ’19, also present at the negotiations’ conclusion, said workers came out of the building visibly emotional before Lang announced to the assembled crowd of supporters that the union had “won.”

“It was a really emotional moment,” she said. “The workers were crying but Brian Lang was smiling, so we knew it was good news.”

Reflecting on the day’s events, Evans said she felt students had been important to HUDS workers’ success, a sentiment some workers echoed.

“It was definitely powerful that we were here,” Evans said, referring to the earlier lobby sit-in. “The negotiators looked down and they saw that.”

The nearly three-week long strike shook Harvard’s campus, led to multiple dining hall closures, and spurred waves of student activism and nation-wide support. At the largest strike event Saturday, more than 1,000 HUDS workers and supporters marched to Cambridge City Hall.

Edward B. Childs, a dining services workers who picketed from 7 a.m Monday morning until around 1 a.m Tuesday, said he had suspected Monday’s negotiation session would be fruitful.

“Well, with the escalation we had this weekend and today, I was expecting something,” Childs said. “I knew something had to break.”

—Staff writer Brandon J. Dixon can be reached at brandon.dixon@thecrimson.com. Follow him on Twitter @BrandonJoDixon.

—Staff writer Hannah Natanson can be reached at hannah.natanson@thecrimson.com. Follow her on Twitter @hannah_natanson.

—Staff writer Leah S. Yared can be reached at leah.yared@thecrimson.com. Follow her on Twitter @Leah_Yared.