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...Harvard’s day in court, for a case that dates back to the early 1990s. Over the summer, the U.S. Department of Justice filed a motion against Harvard for $102 million, alleging conflicts of interest that violated the Harvard Institute for International Development’s (HIID) contract with the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) in Russia from 1992 to 1997. During that time, HIID was advising the restructuring of the Russian economy—and HIID’s officers were under strict orders, the U.S. says, not to personally invest in the companies that their...

Author: By Emma S. Mackinnon, | Title: Harvard’s Dirty Hands | 10/23/2002 | See Source »

...largest cleaning company in Boston, and the most intransigent in its opposition to the janitors’ demands, is UNICCO. It employs over half of the 10,000 janitors currently seeking a new contract. Although six contractors have signed an interim agreement with the janitors that would give them health care and full-time work, UNICCO remains openly defiant, employing hundreds of replacement workers as strikebreakers and continuing an ad campaign aimed at discrediting the janitors and their union. UNICCO is widely despised by Boston janitors for their abusive employment practices...

Author: By Daniel Dimaggio, | Title: Support the Striking Janitors | 10/21/2002 | See Source »

Although at Harvard UNICCO now pays higher wages to its janitors, wages equivalent to those earned by Harvard’s direct employees, Harvard still plays a role in supporting UNICCO’s exploitative practices by continuing its contract with it. UNICCO can continue its exploitative practices only due to the support of institutions like Harvard, which provide it with capital through contracts...

Author: By Daniel Dimaggio, | Title: Support the Striking Janitors | 10/21/2002 | See Source »

...there is growing pressure on UNICCO to agree to the janitors’ demands. Two weeks ago, Acting Governor Jane Swift announced that UNICCO will lose its contract to clean the State House if it does not meet the janitors’ demands. Earlier in the strike, the California Public Employees’ pension fund decided to terminate UNICCO’s contract in a Boston building which it is part-owner, and it is considering doing the same in two Washington buildings where it is majority owner...

Author: By Daniel Dimaggio, | Title: Support the Striking Janitors | 10/21/2002 | See Source »

Harvard must use its extensive ties with UNICCO to pressure the company to agree to the janitors’ reasonable demands. Harvard should recognize that health care is a human right that must be provided by employers. If UNICCO refuses, then Harvard has an obligation to cut its contract with UNICCO. As was negotiated in the Harvard janitors’ contract last winter, all janitors would retain their jobs were this to happen. The practice of subcontracting is generally harmful to workers, and it has always been a demand of the Living Wage Campaign that Harvard discontinue this practice. Rather...

Author: By Daniel Dimaggio, | Title: Support the Striking Janitors | 10/21/2002 | See Source »

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