®bt' Imly ®ar MM INSIDE Him SEPTEMBER 18,1996 Hooker tries to settle housekeepers’ lawsuit ■ Housekeepers’ leaders say they will not end their suit, despite the offer. BY SHARIF DURHAMS ASSISTANT UNIVERSITY EDITOR An offer of higher wages and better training programs will not prevent the UNC Housekeepers Association from suing the University for racial discrimi nation, members said Tuesday afternoon. Earlier in the day, Chancellor Michael Hooker announced a settlement offer including several initiatives and reim bursement for attorney’s feesifthe House keepers would abandon their suit. However, Hooker said he would con tinue to work on improving working con ditions for the University’s lowest-paid employees regardless. “We will go forward with these initia tives, regardless of whether the house keepers proceed with their grievance, because it's the right thing to do for our employees and the University,” Hooker stated in a press release. The Housekeepers announced they would continue to negotiate with Uni versity administrators while pursuing their lawsuit in a hearing set to begin Monday. “We instructed our lawyer that the better way to negotiate is quiet, good, fair talks building trust and confidence on each side,” the Housekeepers stated in a press release. Marsha Tinnen, a representative of the Housekeepers, said the offer, which provides University employees in the four lowest pay grades in-range salary in creases, was not adequate to stop the suit. “We’ll still be going to court,” she said. Several housekeepers filed a class-ac tion lawsuit against the University in 1992 charging racial discrimination. Fran tuition promise not high on Riley agenda BY CHARLES HELLWIG STAFF WRITER No government officials have heard yet about a Cabinet member’s statement this weekend, which promises financial aid to students who suffered from Hurri cane Fran’s destruction. On a stop Saturday, in Raleigh with President Bill Clinton, Secretary of Edu cation Richard Riley briefly outlined a plan to assist these college students. SETTING UP A SWEEP (HP* 111 • iHb sgigpflg : ' ■ .'if :S. ’> ..Sh: &‘x9hhQ|u . „ DTH/BRAD SMITH UNC outside hitter Maya Starks sets a ball during the Tar Heels' 15-9, 15-3, 15-7 sweep of East Carolina on Tuesday night. See story, page 7. Happy holidays The Calendar Committee decided Tuesday to keep Thanksgiving and Fall breaks intact. Page 2 n The Housekeepers offered a settlement to the University last year, which Hooker termed “excessive in the extreme.” The University’s settlement, which is its first to the Housekeepers, includes in range salary increases for housekeepers who received performance appraisals of good, very good or outstanding effective Nov. 1, Hooker stated. The proposal would further establish new programs, funded at SIOO,OOO annually for three years, thatwould provide job training for employees. The housekeepers were eligible for the pay raises because of a July 1 decision by the Office of State Personnel. The raises solve the problem of salary compression, which has held salaries down for the past decade, said Laurie Charest, associate vice chancellor for human resources. “If you are salary grade 52, you will stay in salary grade 52,” she said. “This will mean more pay in that range.” Charest said while the N.C. General Assembly has given all of the state’s low est-paid workers raises, it has not given specific raises to longtime employees. “If you started out at the minimum (pay), 10 years later you’re still at the minimum,” she said. Hooker announced when he was hired at UNC last year that he would address the Housekeepers’ complaints. Since then, he has restructured the Housekeeping Department under new director Barbara DeLon and has initi ated a certified nursing assistant training program and a light construction train ing program for employees in the lowest pay grades. The University has also put a supervisor training program in place. “We do not think there is any rush,” the Housekeepers stated. “We have waited over five and a half years. We know any settlement we negotiate will have to be reviewed by the judge to en sure we have represented our class ad equately and fairly." “For higher education students, we would like to look into having student loans for students who are having special difficulty (due to Fran),” Riley said to several hundred state and local leaders, national guardsmen, relief workers and residents. He added that in addition to loans, his office would be considering deferred pay ment plans to ease the financial burden Fran inflicted on students who received financial aid. Environmentally appealing State Senate candidate Eleanor Kinnaird spoke with SEAC members. Page 5