Reclassification of Part-Time Professors Cause Increase of Wage Lawsuits
/As California film schools reclassify part-time professors, the number of wage lawsuits is increasing. Numerous universities with strong ties to Hollywood have adjunct professors now classified as hourly workers. Some insist the change short-changes students and undercuts the staffers who are underpaid and, in some instances, underused.
Vetoed Bill Results in Reclassification of California Adjunct Professors:
In late fall 2019, California Governor Gavin Newsom vetoed a bill aiming to make most California adjunct professors salaried employees. In response, many part-time or “adjunct” professors in California’s universities became hourly workers effective January 1, 2020. The change keeps the universities compliant with California labor law and, in theory, provides adjunct professors with pay for all the hours they work. The reclassification to hourly wage also came with a bit of a pay bump for many, seen as an incentive while part-time professors dealt with the annoyance of logging their in and out-of-class work hours.
Reclassification for Many Adjunct Professors is Problematic:
In practice, adjunct professors see some problems with the reclassification. For instance, some part-professors saw their hours decrease for the upcoming interterm (the 4-week, short term between fall and spring semesters). They would need to teach their interterm class in half the time and for about 2/3 the pay (including the new “pay increase”). Before the reclassification, the professors would make an entire semester’s salary during interterm, but with the new pay scenario, this was no longer the case.
Problems Quantifying the Work of Professors:
Reclassifying adjunct professors has brought issues with quantifying the work of instructors (especially instructors handling creative projects) into the light. The current solution of reclassifying part-time professors as hourly employees is not a perfect fit for the adjunct professors or the school administration. Adjunct professors have cited poor pay and long hours for years, but recent reclassifications led to a series of wage and hour lawsuits alleging failure to pay for all hours worked, failure to provide meal and rest breaks, etc.
As More Private California Universities Face Wage and Hour Lawsuits:
California Assemblymember Jacqui Irwin introduced bill AB 1466 in response to the volume of lawsuits against universities across California. The bill intended to make many part-time faculty members salaried positions with a minimum salary. The bill passed, but the Governor later vetoed it, claiming there would be unintended consequences for a large number of workers and may create a substandard wage rate for teachers. Irwin and supporters of the bill disagree and plan to introduce a modified version later this year, bill AB 736.
In the meantime, part-time professors at various California universities are left in a tough spot struggling to follow strict guidelines limiting their hours, attendance at extracurricular school events, and a less than worthy pay structure. For example, payment for curriculum planning in the current pay schedule is limited to 1 week before the start of class.
If you have questions about misclassification or if you need to file a California overtime lawsuit, please get in touch with Blumenthal Nordrehaug Bhowmik DeBlouw LLP. Experienced employment law attorneys are ready to assist you in any one of various law firm offices located in San Diego, San Francisco, Sacramento, Los Angeles, Riverside, and Chicago.