Bryn Mawr Strike Ends After 16 Days

The Collective ended the strike but left the student community with a statement on the need for continued activism.

Published on Nov. 20, 2020, by the Bi-Co College News.

After 16 days of boycotting campus jobs, classes, and extracurriculars, the UU直播 strike has officially ended. Before ending the strike in the evening of Thursday, November 19, the Bryn Mawr Strike Collective (BMSC) graded President Kimberly Cassidy on her administration鈥檚 response to their demands. While the strikers did not achieve all demands, they made significant progress on several demands. The Collective ended the strike but left the student community with a statement on the need for continued activism.

The Ending of the Strike

In the evening of Monday, November 16, President Cassidy issued two emails: first, an apology email for a controversial November 9 email and second, the long-awaited response to strike demands. The email clearly stated, 鈥淚 am in agreement with the areas for action laid out in the November 12 demands,鈥 and offered a plan for a timeline of when those actions would be put in place. The strike organizers planned a 鈥渕eeting with supportive faculty鈥 on Monday, followed by two student town halls and a Wednesday night collective meeting to determine whether the strike would end. During the first town hall on Wednesday November 18, the Collective put out a 鈥渞eport card鈥 on President Cassidy鈥檚 response. For each grade, the Collective gave an in-depth analysis of the benefits and deficiencies of each response, with grades ranging from A to F. Demands were marked on the ability to meet four criteria:

  1. A 鈥渃omprehensive framework, timeline, budget, and coherent response鈥
  2. A clear statement on groups/ committees responsible for implementing demands
  3. Plans to revisit demands
  4. If a hard deadline, 鈥渁 framework to meet the deadline for the demand.鈥

The Collective gave three demands an A, one demand a B, six demands a C, two demands a D, and three demands an F, for a total cumulative GPA of 2.3. However, the report card acknowledged that 鈥渨e appreciate the work that was put into this response. 鈥 Though these grades are low, we gave the most honest and critical response possible to ensure the work is done effectively and efficiently.鈥

The Student Town Hall

At the Wednesday town hall, a student asked what the Collective would do if the administration was unwilling to budge on demands. The Strike Collective replied that the strike was only one part of a wider movement. 鈥淚f we don鈥檛 get the thing(s) that we want 鈥 that will be the next step. That will also involve us and everyone who wants to be a part of that push.鈥

When a student asked if there could be a 鈥渂ack-and-forth鈥 with the administration, the Collective replied that they 鈥渉ope to keep collaborating.鈥 They also emphasized the need to 鈥渁dapt鈥 their strategies for working with admin. 鈥淚t doesn鈥檛 always need to be a constant back-and-forth in the same way it has been so far, especially if it is not in a way that is productive for us.鈥

In response to complaints in the chat about the impact of a lack of classes, one student discussed how her role in organizing the strike had made her miss internship deadlines. 鈥淚鈥檓 not calling you out. I鈥檓 asking you to hear me. 鈥 I hear you. And I feel it too.鈥

On Normalcy

As the strike concluded on the 19th, the Student Government Association put out two statements on behalf of the BMSC: a strike conclusion statement thanking students who stood by them and a document entitled 鈥淥n Normalcy.鈥

In 鈥淥n Normalcy,鈥 the BMSC focused on the need for a disruption of normalcy and a continued trust in the collective. 鈥淲e are not going back to 鈥榥ormal.鈥 鈥 鈥楴ormal鈥 is the invisibility of our experiences on campus yet the exploitation of our work.鈥 The Collective thanked students who had joined the strike and emphasized that 鈥淭hrough all we鈥檝e experienced, our engagement with and trust in the collective has carried us 鈥 [and] we invite you to walk alongside us.鈥

The former Bryn Mawr Strike Collective announced its intention to continue on as the Black Student Liberatory Coalition (BSLC). In speaking to peers, the Collective asked that the community 鈥渞emember that we, as students and as young people in this society, hold a lot more power than we think.鈥 As put forth in her response to strike demands, President Cassidy plans to implement a transition team, which will work with students to continue implementing Strike Collective demands. In making that system achieve stated goals, BSLC asked students to continue to 鈥渢o self-organize alongside us and to leverage their power in aid of this shared goal.鈥

On the evening of Friday, November 20, President Cassidy once again emailed the community to reiterate the Collective鈥檚 statements about normalcy, concluding: 鈥淚 thank the Collective for their tireless work on behalf of transformation, and I ask us all now to turn to the work of meaningful action and change.鈥

Provost Tim Harte confirmed to faculty that the strike was over, using a screenshot from the BSLC Instagram. A professor would later send 鈥淥n Normalcy鈥 to faculty as well.

Achievements List

The BSLC listed the following among their achievements:

  • Annual funding of $100,000 for the Enid Cook 鈥31 Center (ECC) to cover the salary of a full-time director position, the stipend of a paid student coordinator position, and the spending of campus-wide events hosted at the ECC.
  • Annual funding of $90,000 to cover scholarship taxes for international students.
  • The transformation of the Dean鈥檚 Emergency Fund into the Dean鈥檚 Student Assistance Fund and a doubling of the budget to $10,000.
  • The creation of 鈥淎 Radical Imagination: The Bryn Mawr Strike Collective鈥 fellowship with an initial budget of $10,000.
  • The creation of a new Student Success position to be hired with a salary of $60,000 to address the needs of DACAmented and Undocumented Students.
  • The removal of the M. Carey Thomas bust and portrait from Old Library.
  • A commitment to begin to implement universal design standards in curricular and co-curricular programs in spring 2021.
  • A revision to the College鈥檚 financial aid policy to ensure that paid fellowships no longer replace grants and compromise financial aid, to be implemented by the 2022鈥2023 school year.
  • A commitment to hire transformative justice experts to discuss the College鈥檚 relationship with law enforcement.
  • A review of the College鈥檚 endowment to determine investments related to the penal system and defense industry.
  • The administration of regular campus climate assessments.
  • An annual open forum on the College鈥檚 budget.
  • An impact survey to assess effectiveness of work being undertaken by the College.
  • If approved by the Curriculum Committee, a new distribution requirement focusing on diversity, equity, and inclusion education and the impact of systemic hierarchies.
  • A revamped THRIVE program focusing on issues of diversity, equity, and inclusion.
  • A continuation of successful teach-ins to occur regularly throughout the semester.
  • A commitment to use a transformative justice framework to change College protocols around mental health crises.
  • A commitment to hiring external consultants and other positions to support and resource work undergone at the College.
  • An establishment of budgets for previously instituted policies and action items (such as those about institutional memory).
  • A commitment to working with students and the Anti- Racism Committee on the implementation of the new work taken on by the College.

Conclusion

Over the 16-day strike, the Collective has realized major changes in Bryn Mawr. With both the BMC strike and the 14-day strike at Haverford completed, the community turns to its next steps in continuing the push for long-lasting institutional change.

Published on: 03/18/2021