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Georgetown Solidarity Committee
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Georgetown Solidarity Committee (GSC) is a student organization at Georgetown University in Washington, DC, that takes action to support the struggles of service workers on the Georgetown campus as well as workers around the world. GSC was created in 1997 and is a chapter of United Students Against Sweatshops (USAS). Hunger Strike, March 2005 GSC gained national attention in March 2005 when 26 student activists engaged in a hunger strike, refusing to eat until Georgetown adopted a living wage policy. The proposed policy was created by student members of GSC and MEChA de Georgetown with campus workers, especially contracted janitors, and included provisions to guarantee all campus workers a living wage, basic benefits and the right to organize unions. Since 2001, campus workers and GSC had been negotiating with Georgetown administrators, including President John DeGioia and Vice Presidents Daniel Porterfield and Spiros Dimolitsas. As Georgetown is a Jesuit university dedicated to social justice ideals, the administrators were genuinely concerned to learn about injustices occurring at their institution. However, the administrators did little more than create a series of committees to discuss living wages and others of campus workers' issues. Students and workers eventually were frustrated by years of committee discussion with virtually no concrete change. In 2004, the students created a broader group of student activists called the Georgetown Living Wage Coalition and engaged in a direct action campaign for living wages. The coalition gained momentum by holding rallies and marches, performing plays and organizing a series of other colorful actions and educational events. Campus workers, especially Latin@ immigrant contract janitors, courageously risked their livelihoods by speaking at rallies and to the press about the injustices they faced at Georgetown, defying the looming threat of firing or harassment by their employer for speaking. By March 15 2005, when administrators still rejected the proposed living wage policy, students decided to increase the pressure by launching a hunger strike. The students refused to eat for 10 days before Georgetown finally adopted their current "Just Employment Policy" . During those 10 days, the campaign received major media attention (including several articles in the Washington Post) and enjoyed the support from labor unions, religious leaders and many others across the United States.
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