'Life-changing situation:' WSU graduate students secure tentative contract with wage boost as more students nationally consider unionization

Jan. 20—A major salary boost is on the horizon for thousands of Washington State University graduate students who teach classes and conduct research.

Students organized into a union last year and Wednesday went on a three-hour strike to pressure concessions from the university on their first bargained contract. Reaching a tentative agreement, students will vote on a proposal including a 38% wage increase for some.

It's the latest and potentially final chapter in the yearlong effort to bargain a contract for academic student employees — mostly graduate students at the university also employed in research or instruction. This includes teaching assistants and lab technicians, graduate-level researchers, veterinary assistants and tutors.

The student employees unionized in November 2022, forming the Coalition for Academic Student Employees under the Union of United Automobile, Aerospace and Agricultural Implement Workers of America.

The coalition has been bargaining with university officials for a contract since February , reaching tentative agreements on dozens of topics like discrimination protections, immigration and as of Wednesday: wages, health care, leave and fee waivers.

The final package, a three-year contract pending ratification from academic student employees, includes significant pay increases that graduate students say will allow them to focus less on survival and more on the work they perform for the university.

Effective three months after ratification, minimum monthly pay would increase by more than 38%. The lowest end of the pay scale, representing a Pullman student pursuing their master's degree, shifts from $1,670 monthly working 20 hour weeks to $2,318.50. All employees also would receive a 3% pay increase in October 2025.

On campuses where the cost of living is higher, such as Vancouver, wages are higher.

The contract sets a $17.09 hourly minimum wage for undergraduate students working in academic areas.

"This will be a big life-changing situation," said Beatrice Caffe, WSU graduate student in her second year pursuing a doctorate in evolutionary anthropology.

"We'll be able to spend more time doing research and not worrying about finances or saving and avoiding going to the doctors and all these things that we have to do because we just don't have the money for it."

Beginning in mid-August, covered students' health insurance deductible is $300, down from $500 in-network and $1,000 out-of-network.

The contract allots 36 hours of sick leave, six weeks parental leave and eligibility to apply for $2,025 per semester in child care subsidies.