Local 5810 represented over 6,000 postdoctoral researchers at the University of California,[5], which was roughly one-tenth[6] of all postdoctoral researchers in the United States. Local 5810 also represented 5,000 academic researchers at the University of California.[7]
UC postdocs work in all fields of the academy, but are overwhelmingly concentrated in the fields of science, technology, engineering and math (STEM). Postdocs perform highly technical work, often under exacting conditions.[8] Prior to ratification of their first contract, the majority of postdocs at UC were paid less than $41,000 per year.[9]
In 2019, other nontenured research staff at UC elected to unionize and join UAW 5810 under the umbrella term Academic Researchers.[7]
Formation
In 2005, a group of postdoctoral researchers employed by the UC, many of whom were previously members of UAW Local 2865[10] and other local unions representing academic student employees, approached the UAW and asked for help forming a union. The group began an organizing drive as Postdoctoral Researchers Organize/UAW or PRO/UAW.
On August 19, 2008, the California Public Employment Relations Board (PERB) certified that a majority of UC postdocs had chosen PRO/UAW as their union.[3] Contract negotiations began in February 2009.[8]
During the hearing, Vice President of Human Resources for the University of California Dwaine Duckett testified that the delay was due to difficulty tracking complex funding formulas used to allocate postdoc salaries. A postdoctoral researcher also testified about her difficult experience as an expectant and new mother within the UC system.
After the hearing, Committee Chairman George Miller wrote UC President Mark Yudof expressing "deep concern"[15] about UC's slow-paced approach, saying he "left the hearing thoroughly disappointed"[8] in UC's efforts to reach agreement. Congressman Miller was then joined by Congresswoman Barbara Lee and Congresswoman Lynn Woolsey in sending a letter to the Government Accountability Office asking the agency to look into "how universities, including the University of California, track how funds provided for laboratory research grants are spent."[16]
First contract
The contract[17] was ratified on August 11, 2010 with 96 percent of the vote,[18] and made significant advances in pay, health benefits and safety on the job for postdocs.[4] Postdoc negotiators were successful in linking minimum salaries to an experience-based scale set by the NIH for NRSA Postdoctoral Fellowships.[19] UC postdocs are guaranteed minimum salary increases with every year of experience.[19]
Second contract
As of September 2015,[update] the union was in negotiations for a second contract.[20][21]