The Committee for Fair Wages
PASO had the opportunity to accompany public university workers who staged a wildcat strike beginning on February 20, shutting down the National University accross the country including the main campus in Bogota. The Committee for Fair Wages that is leading this campaign democratically represents members of several unions (including Sintraunal and Sintraunicol) as well as a significant number of non-union workers. The second largest campus in Medellin joined the strike two weeks later. The Rector of the National University, already under fire in the national media for the misuse of public resources, had threatened to cancel the academic semester if the strike continued through Easter. Students and workers shut down the university for 28 days. After more than ten days of negotiations the Committee’s demands were met by the administration.
Workers´ Demands:
1) Salaries equal to those of other public sector workers who make around 30% more than National University employees.
2) That newly subcontracted positions be returned to direct hires.
As a result of the general trend towards privatization of the public sector, security guards and custodians at the Bogota campus are now employed by private, third-party intermediary entities. However, Decree 2025 of 2012, passed within the scope of the Labor Action Plan between the US and Colombia, outlaws practices in which core workers are hired through unwanted intermediaries.
The Committee held daily marches and temporary blockades of the major highways next to the main campus of the Universidad Nacional in Bogota. Throughout the strike permanent encampments were set up in several campuses accross the country, while building were blockaded and access to university grounds controlled by security guards who supported the strike.
In Colombia. workers who employ this kind of strategy (nonviolent direct action) often become the target of anti-union violence at the hands of the armed forces or assassins hired by the private sector.

The Fight Continues

This is a campaign deserving of international solidarity and support. Cutting-edge tactics (union and non-union public sector workers on strike in coalition with students groups and private-sector campus workers) are being used to demand a living wage for workers, a reversal of the privatization of university jobs, and rejuvenation of labor activity among National University workers who last went on strike 16 years ago. The collective agreement included raises and increased job security for all university workers, union and non-union alike, while a probable result of the victory will be the affiliation of new members to both unions involved. It is an example of workers and the community coming together to demand that their voices be heard and their rights respected, despite the possibility of violent retaliation, and provides a new model that can be used by workers in Colombia and internationally of how to fight for change – and win.
Originaly published: www.pasointernational.org