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IN Gov. says redistricting won't return in 2026 legislative session; MN labor advocates speaking out on immigrants' rights; report outlines ways to reduce OH incarceration rate; President Donald Trump reclassifies marijuana; new program provides glasses to visually impaired Virginians; Line 5 pipeline fight continues in Midwest states; and NY endangered species face critical threat from Congress.

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States are waiting to hear how much money they'll get from the Rural Health Transformation Program, the DHS is incentivizing local law enforcement to join the federal immigration crackdown and Texas is creating its own Appalachian Trail.

Students Hunger Strike For UVA Workers' Living Wage

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Monday, February 27, 2012   

CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va. - Students on a hunger strike at the University of Virginia are now in their second full week, demanding a living wage for university workers.

UVA anthropology grad student David Flood has taken nothing but fruit juice since Feb. 17. He says he's doing it because some of the low-wage campus workers are having a tough time keeping their families fed, and even some with full-time work have to go to food pantries.

"There are a number of full-time employees - many that we've talked to, and many others that we've heard anecdotally - who rely on a variety of social safety nets, including food banks."

The university administration says it already pays a living wage, but Flood says UVA gets its figures by using 'iffy' numbers.

The UVA living wage campaign has been going on for 14 years. Flood says they were forced to go on the hunger strike because every other avenue dead-ended.

"Sit-ins, rallies, marches, teach-ins, petitions, it's all been ineffective to this point. We reached the end of the road. We felt like we had no other options left to us. The situation for workers here is dire."

University wages start at $10.55 per hour. Flood says that's about $2.50 too low to meet the basic cost of living in an expensive town. And he says there are a lot of contract workers who make less, but the university won't even say how many of them there are.

"Contract employees may number in the thousands. There's no way to tell because the university refuses to release any numbers. They can be paid as little as federal minimum wage, $7.25, with no benefits. They make the university run, and yet through a convenient legal fiction, they're invisible."

There are about 20 students on the hunger strike, including a member of the football team. Twelve started the same day Flood did.

More information is at www.livingwageatuva.org.




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