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While offi cials with the state and the American Federation of State, County and Municipal CAP Employees, the biggest union of state CITY employees, hurl accusations and insults at each other while contract negotiations go nowhere, the faculty at the University of Illinois Springfi eld have taken a less verbose approach as they attempt to get a labor contract with the university. Last week, UIS United Faculty, the union chapter certifi ed in 2015 that represents faculty members, organized an observance, complete with cake, at the university’s Public Affairs Center to mark the one-year anniversary of contract negotiations that have so far produced no contract. There was no name calling in the press release, no accusations of being greedy or unfair. “We are proud to be at an institution where teaching is the fi rst priority and students are our focus,” Donna Russell, an English professor and contract negotiator, said in the release. “We are fi ghting to keep UIS a great place to go to college. But we face many challenges, including low salaries that have hardly budged in 10 years.” How’s that for some white-hot rhetoric? John Little, fi eld service director for the Illinois Federation of Teachers that includes the UIS union in its portfolio, said that it isn’t unusual for negotiations for a fi rst contract to take awhile. Still, Little says that the in public statements doesn’t refl ect satisfaction with the pace of negotiations.

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