January 30
The University of Michigan and the Graduate Employees’ Organization (GEO) met for their fifth bargaining session with the assistance of a mediator appointed by the Michigan Employment Relations Commission (MERC), part of the State of Michigan’s Michigan Department of Licensing and Regulatory Affairs.
MERC mediation is a well-established tool in public-sector labor negotiations; the MERC mediator is a neutral third party with the main goal of keeping negotiations moving forward.
Since bargaining began in November 2025, the university has presented 17 proposals addressing mandatory subjects of bargaining. GEO has not submitted its own proposals or counterproposals on these issues.
A primary reason negotiations have stalled is the emphasis GEO has placed on how bargaining sessions should be conducted, to the detriment of progress on mandatory subjects (i.e., wages, hours, and working conditions). An effective approach in bargaining, and one used by our other campus unions, is for each side to identify a bargaining team and a lead negotiator authorized to speak on behalf of the group and who conveys information back to the group.
Without defined representation, even simple procedural elements of negotiation are impeded, delaying forward movement on the core concerns of collective bargaining, which are agreements about wages, hours, and working conditions. Instead, GEO has prioritized bargaining logistics, such as "packing the room," with loosely defined limits on who may speak, at the expense of addressing proposals on the table that represent material steps toward a contract resolution.
In parallel to putting forward 17 proposals, the university has proposed multiple options to allow the broad union member access GEO desires while maintaining an orderly negotiating process, such as bargaining in rooms accommodating up to 50 people and live Zoom access for all bargaining unit members.
GEO has declined these offers and restated their commitment to in-person participation that is open to the public, includes up to 150 people, and allows anyone present to speak.
The university's focus remains on bargaining the contract itself. For that reason, university representatives have continued to attend every scheduled bargaining session and participate in shuttle bargaining through the mediator to advance discussions on substantive issues.
The university’s bargaining team will continue to attend bargaining sessions and looks forward to reviewing GEO’s proposals and counterproposals whenever they pass them.
January 23
The university and GEO met for the fourth negotiations session on Jan. 23, 2026, at Palmer Commons with the assistance of the state-appointed mediator.
The university previously informed GEO that U-M’s negotiators would meet with GEO in the bargaining room under the logistics the university proposed in October 2025. However, GEO declined to agree to those logistics, so the parties did not meet in the same room. Instead, the mediator facilitated negotiations while the parties remained in separate rooms.
GEO expressed interest in asking the university questions about proposals the university submitted in November 2025. Through the mediator, GEO posed several clarifying questions about two of U-M’s 17 proposals. The university provided responses to the questions on the following articles:
- Article XIII Leaves of Absence, Section B. Employee Maternity (Childbirth) and Parental Leave. The university confirmed for GEO that its proposal does not remove any benefit for GSIs and GSSAs, but reduces redundancies and updates non-substantive language that was not updated in the last negotiations cycle.
- Article XVI Changes Resulting in a Conference. The university confirmed that the removal of “class size” from the list reduces redundancies, since the process for changes to those policies is included in Article XVII Class Size.
GEO has not submitted any proposals in the four negotiations sessions to date. The university did not present any new proposals.
The next scheduled negotiations session is Jan. 30, 2026, at Palmer Commons.
January 16
On Jan. 15, 2026, GEO informed the university that the union will not meet for the scheduled Jan. 16 bargaining session. This is the second consecutive week that GEO has declined to negotiate as scheduled.
The next scheduled bargaining session is Jan. 23, 2026.
For more information, see previous negotiations updates or visit GEO Negotiations FAQs.
January 9
On Jan. 8, 2026, GEO informed the university that the union would forgo the scheduled Jan. 9 bargaining session. The next scheduled session is Jan. 16, 2026; the university awaits confirmation that GEO will attend.
For more information, see previous negotiations updates or visit GEO Negotiations FAQs.