The California Faculty Association ( CFA ) is an American labor union that represents lecturers, professors, counselors, librarians and coaches from the 23 campuses of the California State University (CSU). It is the exclusive collective bargaining agent for all faculty in the CSU system. In 2022, their annual revenue was $ 18.1 million.
58-400: CFA has a board of directors which is composed of a president, vice-president, secretary, treasurer, associate vice president of northern campuses, associate vice president of southern campuses, council representatives, lecturer representatives, and campus chapter presidents. In addition to the board of directors, CFA contains caucuses, councils, and committees that conduct aspects of CFA work and
116-828: A Ford Foundation fellowship, he studied constitutional law at the National University of Mexico in 1958–59. Reynoso began his career in private law practice in El Centro, California . He served as a legislative assistant in the California State Senate (1959–60). He was an Associate General Counsel for the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission in 1967 and 1968. He then served as deputy director of California Rural Legal Assistance in 1968. Shortly thereafter, internal problems at CRLA led to his assuming
174-532: A Republican candidate for governor, urged voters to vote against justices Otto Kaus , Allen Broussard , and Reynoso; he hoped to replace them with conservative appointees, creating a new majority on the Court. The campaign labelled Kaus, Broussard, and Reynoso "Jerry's Judges". All three justices were retained; Reynoso received the lowest margin of victory, receiving the vote of only 52 percent of voters. A 1988 academic study of this election suggested that, although
232-820: A 12% pay increase ended with no agreement. The university leaders said that the system already spends 75% of their budget on staff compensation and that they cannot afford a 12% increase in pay. Later that day, the CFA reached a tentative agreement with the CSU system. CFA represents all California State University Faculty. As of 2018, the faculty were 56.17% lecturers, 37.9% tenured or tenure-track professors, 1.4% coaches, 1.3% librarians. While all faculty members are represented by CFA, only those who complete their membership applications may vote on CFA business. As of Fall 2015, 61% of all CSU Faculty are registered CFA members. Cruz Reynoso Cruz Reynoso (May 2, 1931 – May 7, 2021)
290-525: A ban on same-sex marriage . The campaign was largely funded by out-of-state organizations; George said that the January 2010 United States Supreme Court ruling allowing corporations and unions to contribute unlimited sums to independent political committees was likely to increase the influence of well-funded groups in nonpartisan judicial retention elections like those in Iowa and California. After leaving
348-623: A coma after the inducement was stopped. Reynoso was initially cited for pulling out into the path of the Hummer, which had the right of way, but a judge dismissed the case. Elaine Reynoso resigned from her position as a trustee of Sierra College in June 2011 to focus on recovering from her injuries; she has required extensive physical rehabilitation. After the accident, Reynoso said he has re-evaluated his priorities, and will focus on completing his memoirs and legal articles, as well as resuming work on
406-667: A judicial decision without regard to the potential political consequences. "You know it's there, and you try not to think about it, but it's hard to think about much else while you're shaving." "You keep wondering whether you're letting yourself be influenced, and you do not know. You do not know yourself that well," he wrote. "You worry about it in two different ways," wrote Reynoso; "First you worry it might influence you improperly. Then you worry because you're concerned you might overcompensate, and not pay enough attention to arguments that are perfectly legitimate." Erwin Chemerinsky ,
464-487: A law professor from the University of Southern California , agreed with the ousted Justice Grodin, saying "the legacy of 1986 could be that justices facing retention elections will decide cases with an eye, perhaps subconsciously, on how their rulings will affect their chances at the polls." Chemerinsky called for abolishing judicial-review elections. He wrote, "Largely due to defects in a poorly worded death penalty law,
522-588: A lifetime achievement event on September 15, 2007, at the Mondavi Center . The medal is the highest honor bestowed by the university. At the event, UC Davis announced the Cruz and Jeannene Reynoso Scholarship for Legal Access, which helps first-year students with financial needs. Documentary filmmaker Abby Ginzberg produced the film Cruz Reynoso: Sowing the Seeds of Justice . It was funded in 2009 in part by
580-405: A major trend turning such elections into "an ideological battleground over judicial philosophies and specific decisions", making them "as highly salient as races for overtly political offices", wrote one academic paper. Even before the election, California Supreme Court Justice Otto Kaus remarked "You cannot forget the fact that you have a crocodile in your bathtub", referring to the act of making
638-410: A majority of his fellow justices that "basic fairness on the constitutional sense require that there be an interpreter for that individual". In May 1985, Reynoso cautioned about the negative effects of politicizing judicial elections. During the next retention vote in 1986, Bird, Joseph Grodin , and Reynoso were targeted by conservative and victims-rights groups. The 1986 campaign again portrayed
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#1732772511124696-683: A mediator. His agreement with the firm allowed him to spend up to 40 percent of his time on pro bono work. In 1991, he joined the faculty of the UCLA School of Law , where he taught until 2001. He was a faculty adviser for the Chicano-Latino Law Review . In 1995, UCLA law students selected him as Professor of the Year. The United States Senate appointed Reynoso to the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights in April 1993. He
754-548: A special election was held to create Fullerton Union High School. The school's first classroom, a rented room on the second floor of the Fullerton Elementary School building, was adequate to house the eight pupils, which constituted the first year's enrollment and the 32 books which made up the library. The high school was the second in Orange County . In 1908, FUHS's enrollment was increasing at
812-635: A student organization, Students for Quality Education. After the State Employer-Employee Relations Act of 1978 was passed in California allowing for union representation of state employees, two unions competed to become the exclusive bargaining agent of the CSU. The Congress of Faculty Associations prevailed in a close 1982 election over the United Professors of California, and then changed their name to
870-459: Is named in honor of Judge Robert Boochever and Bird's parents, and is awarded in recognition of outstanding scholarship, teaching, and commitment to preserving and expanding the understanding of "the virtues necessary of a great republic." He retired in December 2006, becoming a professor emeritus . In 2009, Reynoso spoke with UC Davis law students, noting that he has retired a few times, but
928-764: The John Marshall Law School in 2009. The State Bar of California gave Reynoso its Bernard E. Witkin Medal in September 2009 for his "significant contributions to the quality of justice and legal scholarship" in California, recognizing him as a "legal giant". In April 2011, the University of California, Merced awarded Reynoso the Alice and Clifford Spendlove Prize in Social Justice, Diplomacy and Tolerance. The prize honors people who exemplify
986-800: The Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts . In 2003, UC Davis law students organized the La Raza Law Students Association; donors established the Cruz Reynoso Social Justice Fellowship. The fellowship helps Latino law students attending Berkeley Law afford the opportunity to work as judicial externs or in social justice during the summer break. He was honored with the University of California Davis Medal of Honor at
1044-630: The U.S. Army , serving in the Counterintelligence Corps for two years. He was stationed in Washington, D.C. , where his assignments included reviewing the House Un-American Activities Committee files on potential applicants for Federal jobs, a task he found distasteful. He received his Bachelor of Laws degree from the University of California, Berkeley, School of Law in 1958. Under
1102-605: The U.S. Commission on Civil Rights from 1993 to 2004. After leaving the bench, Reynoso spent ten years on the faculty of the UCLA School of Law and five years at the UC Davis School of Law ; he was professor emeritus. In 2000, Reynoso received the Presidential Medal of Freedom , the United States' highest civilian honor, for his efforts to address social inequities and his public service. Reynoso
1160-478: The "decision to use pepper spray [on demonstrators] was not supported by objective evidence and not authorized by policy." Reynoso died on May 7, 2021, five days after his 90th birthday; the cause of death was unknown. On August 9, 2000, President Clinton awarded Reynoso the Presidential Medal of Freedom , the United States's highest civilian honor. The medal's citation said "Through his efforts to address social inequity in his rural community, his leadership of
1218-619: The California Documentary Project of the California Council for the Humanities . The film was screened at film festivals and other institutions in the United States, Cuba , and Uruguay . Ginzberg says she chose to make the film because "I was involved in the effort to save the justices in 1986, and I have always wanted to take a second look at why the campaign to recall them was so successful." It
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#17327725111241276-589: The California Faculty Association. Prior to 1986, librarians had a dual-track system with some librarians having faculty status and others classified as staff. All librarians were incorporated as faculty when newly represented by CFA. The Women's Caucus was CFA's first caucus, formed in the late 1990s with its first Women's Conference held in 2000. In 2002, the Latina/o and African-American causes were created. The Indigenous Peoples Caucus
1334-571: The Court, Reynoso returned to private law practice and academia. Shortly after his ouster, he was appointed to the California Post Secondary Education Commission. He has worked for the New York –based firm of Kaye, Scholer, Fierman, Hays & Handler , out of their Sacramento office, where he was a special counsel. He worked on complex civil litigation, as an expert witness on legal ethics, and as
1392-595: The Garment Workers Trust Fund. Reynoso served as the chair of a task force that investigated the UC Davis pepper-spray incident of November 18, 2011. The Reynoso Task Force released its report (the "Reynoso Report") in March 2012, and it was made public in April 2012. It concluded that the incident "could and should have been prevented" and faulted police and university officials, determining that
1450-750: The Yolo citizens' commission probe. The commission's work was put on hold while the Reynosos recuperated. Reynoso served on the boards of directors of the Mexican American Legal Defense and Education Fund , the Natural Resources Defense Council , and Children Now . He co-founded the Latino Issues Forum with Bob Gnaizda, and was chairman of its board of directors. He was a trustee of
1508-411: The attorney general and on the commission on judicial appointments, voted against Reynoso's confirmation. In 1982, Reynoso was up for reconfirmation: under a measure adopted in 1934, California voters confirm a governor's appointments, and periodic unopposed elections are held for each justice during general elections, giving voters the opportunity to vote a justice out of office. Deukmejian, running as
1566-535: The auditorium for Baccalaureate was the Class of 1972). Since then the stadium, locker rooms, and the agriculture complex have been rebuilt. The latest replacement was the swimming pool and the science building. In 2009 a new building housing many new classrooms including several new computer driven classrooms was opened. Renovations of Plummer Auditorium were completed in 1993. It included new lighting, audio and dressing room upgrades. Air conditioning and an orchestra lift
1624-449: The court had a strikingly one-sided pattern of decisions on the issue", noting that this, Bird's controversial history, the trio's appointments by an unpopular governor, and the realization by their opponents that the court's ideology could be completely changed if the campaign succeeded led to the opposition campaign. Jazon Czarnezki, assistant professor of law at Marquette University , attributed Bird's defeat to "her resolute opposition to
1682-511: The court led by Chief Justice Rose Bird , Reynoso was a reliable part of the liberal majority. With that majority, he extended environmental protections, individual liberties, and civil rights. When a case came before the Supreme Court regarding whether or not due process required that a non-English-speaking person charged with a crime be provided with an interpreter, Reynoso drew upon his experiences representing such clients to persuade
1740-479: The court refused to hear appeals of, or affirmed, 97 percent of convictions in the 1984/85 fiscal year; Reynoso remarked, "That doesn't sound at all like a 'soft on crime' record". Defending his death-penalty votes, he said that "most, but not all" of the reversals stemmed from the 1978 Briggs Amendment , which "does not comport with U.S. Supreme Court law". The campaign to remove the justices succeeded; voters rejected new terms for Bird, Grodin, and Reynoso. Reynoso
1798-408: The death penalty and overturning a series of death sentences". Exit polls indicated that the death-penalty issue was the major reason why voters refused to retain the justices. The justices were also impacted by a lack of support from Democratic legislative incumbents in safe districts. Despite the fact that California Supreme Court justices undergoing a retention election are running uncontested,
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1856-533: The delivery of social justice, diplomacy, and tolerance in their work. The prize included a $ 10,000 award. In May 2011, Chapman University conferred an honorary Doctor of Laws degree upon him. Fullerton Union High School Fullerton Union High School is a public high school located in the Orange County, California city of Fullerton , operated by the Fullerton Joint Union High School District . In 1893
1914-467: The directorship; he was the first Latino to hold the position. His work with CRLA gained him national recognition. Reynoso recalled that, during his tenure, CRLA was "mentioned not infrequently as being the leading legal services program in the country." Then-Governor Ronald Reagan attempted to cut state funding for the CRLA during Reynoso's tenure, but the agency successfully resisted the challenge. He
1972-511: The fight. The move to replace them occurred after the Commission released a draft of a report criticizing Bush's civil rights record. In July 2001, Reynoso joined the faculty at the University of California, Davis, School of Law as the first Boochever & Bird Chair for the Study and Teaching of Freedom and Equality. The chair, established with a gift from UC Davis alumnus Charles Bird,
2030-422: The justices, calling Reynoso "a thoughtful, decent man who got thrown out" and "a very capable judge who tried to do the right thing in cases." Reynoso said of the result, "you can't blame [the voters] when the governor of the state, who is a lawyer, says the justices aren't following the law. If I didn't know better, I would have voted against me, too." The 1986 California Supreme Court retention election started
2088-478: The local school board about the Wilson School, after which the school was desegregated. After high school, Reynoso attended Fullerton College , a community college, receiving an associate of arts degree in 1951. A dean from Pomona College offered him a scholarship if he applied and was admitted to that school. He received his Bachelor of Arts degree from Pomona College in 1953, after which he joined
2146-650: The median spending for justices' campaigns rose from $ 3,177 in 1976 to $ 70,000 in 1994. Campaigns similar to the one expelling Bird, Grodin, and Reynoso have since been mounted against judges in other states, such as Justice Penny J. White of Tennessee , who also lost a retention election due to a death-penalty issue. Retired California Supreme Court Chief Justice Ronald George advocated eliminating retention elections and appointing justices to single 15-year terms, following an election in Iowa where three justices were removed from office after that state's high court overturned
2204-477: The other justices lacked the funds to compete with the campaign, raising a collective $ 3 million to the opposition's $ 7 million. Deukmejian allegedly told Grodin and Reynoso that he would oppose their retention unless they voted to uphold more death sentences. The campaign highlighted that the Bird court had overturned 59 consecutive death-penalty cases during Bird's nine-year tenure. Reynoso, who had voted to uphold
2262-610: The pioneering California Rural Legal Assistance program, his tenure as the first Latino on the California Supreme Court and his service on the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, he has been a strong force for change and a passionate voice for our nation's disadvantaged". Reynoso received the Hispanic Heritage Award in Education on September 7, 2000, during a nationally televised presentation at
2320-422: The polytechnic building and four tents that year. After the fire, the school's trustees debated the best location for rebuilding. The district owned the ground on which the polytechnic building stood, but the campus was small, and school work was disrupted by the numerous Santa Fe trains that roared by each day. In 1911, the present site was purchased one block east of Harbor (Spadra) Boulevard. A walnut orchard
2378-410: The rate of 18 percent a year. To accommodate the growth, the school was moved to new quarters on West Commonwealth Avenue, an area now known as Amerige Park. School enrollment continued to grow and within two years a new polytechnic building was built to ease the overcrowding. But on November 17, 1910, the day before it could be occupied, the older FUHS building burned to the ground. FUHS was housed in
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2436-528: The retention election was theoretically nonpartisan and intended to retain justices based on their merit, partisan information (such as the affiliation of the governor who appointed the justice) is used by voters to structure their decisions in such elections. Also during the 1980s, Reynoso was a member of the Congressional Select Commission on Immigrant and Refugee Policy. He was appointed by President Jimmy Carter . As part of
2494-410: The state's death-penalty law, voted only once for a death sentence during his seven years on the court. The Oxnard Press-Courier said in an editorial that Reynoso was Bird's "most consistent ally" and that "he has been second only to the chief justice in supporting decisions that favor criminal defendants over prosecutors". The California District Attorneys Association issued a 78-page report attacking
2552-491: The targeted justices as "soft on crime", but this time focused on the court's handling of the state's death penalty law. Reynoso believed Governor Deukmejian's decision to oppose him, Bird, and Grodin was the most important factor in that election. Deukmejian said that the justices' decisions on death-penalty cases demonstrated a "lack of impartiality and objectivity". Reynoso's advisors told him that it would take three campaign ads to counteract one ad by his opponents; he and
2610-504: The three justices, mainly over their death-penalty rulings, but dropped their campaign later because of fears a political campaign could affect the group's tax-exempt status. "There's clearly an effort to politicize the court", Reynoso told United Press International during the campaign. He was endorsed by the California Organization of Police and Sheriffs. According to California attorney general John Van de Kamp ,
2668-472: Was a professor of law at the University of New Mexico School of Law from 1972 to 1976. In June 1976, Governor Jerry Brown appointed Reynoso to the California Court of Appeal as an associate justice. He was the first Latino appointed to the Court. In 1981, Governor Brown elevated Reynoso to the California Supreme Court, succeeding the retiring Mathew O. Tobriner . George Deukmejian , then
2726-661: Was added as well. The Charles Kassler fresco "Pastoral California" was uncovered and completely restored in 1997. The school provides opportunities for students to be involved in Honors , Advanced Placement (AP), and International Baccalaureate (IB) courses. Fullerton's sports teams are known as the Indians, and are members of the California Interscholastic Federation 's Southern Section. Many of Fullerton's notable alumni are listed on
2784-652: Was among the commissioners that looked into complaints that some eligible voters were denied the right to vote, or that votes were improperly counted, in Florida. Reynoso, along with Commission chairwoman Mary Frances Berry , resigned his commission on December 7, 2004, after President George W. Bush 's White House staff announced that their six-year terms had expired on December 5 and announced replacements for them. Berry and Reynoso maintained that their commissions were not due to expire until midnight on January 21, 2005, but said in their resignation letters that it wasn't worth
2842-810: Was an American civil rights lawyer and jurist. Reynoso was the first Chicano Associate Justice of the California Supreme Court , serving from 1982 to 1987. He also served on the California Third District Court of Appeal . In 1986, along with two other liberal members of the California Supreme Court—Chief Justice Rose Bird and Associate Justice Joseph Grodin —Reynoso became one of only three State Supreme Court justices ever recalled and removed by voters under California's judicial-retention election system. He served as vice-chairman of
2900-414: Was appointed the vice-chairman of the commission by President Bill Clinton on November 19, 1993. During his tenure, he accused California Governor Pete Wilson of generating anti-immigrant sentiments to gain popularity. When the Commission harshly criticized Florida's handling of the presidential election of 2000 , Reynoso said "the greatest sin" was the number of people who weren't allowed to vote. He
2958-547: Was born in Brea, California on May 2, 1931. He grew up as one of 11 children, and from age eight worked as an agricultural worker in orange groves. His father was a farmworker . When Reynoso was seven, the family moved to a barrio outside of La Habra, California . While there, he attended the Wilson Grammar School , a racially segregated grade school for children of Mexican descent. His junior high school
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#17327725111243016-769: Was first screened on March 16, 2010 at the Chicano Resource Center of the East Los Angeles Library. The film was a Gold Winner of the 2010 Davey Awards in the Film/Video/TV category. It also received the Jury Award for Best Feature Documentary at the Sacramento Film and Music Festival . The City of Chicago passed a resolution honoring Reynoso that was presented to him while he was a visiting distinguished scholar at
3074-593: Was formed in 2019. The first equity conference was organized in 2004 and the keynote was delivered by Justice Cruz Reynoso about CA Proposition 209 and its impact on students of color in the CSU. In 2019, CFA disaffiliated with the California Teacher's Association and the National Education Association . On 22 January 2024, the CFA went on strike to protest low starting pay among other issues. This came after negotiations for
3132-481: Was injured in a car accident in Virginia , along with his wife, Elaine, and grandson. Reynoso suffered a broken collarbone, a punctured lung, and other injuries when a Hummer struck their rental car at an intersection, hospitalizing him for nine days. His wife suffered "grave injuries" to her brain and internal organs, requiring multiple surgeries. Both were placed into medically induced comas ; Elaine remained in
3190-481: Was integrated, as was Fullerton Union High School , from which he graduated. The United States Postal Service refused to provide Rural Free Delivery service within the barrio, even though non-minority families living nearby received the service. Reynoso circulated a petition demanding service; the Postal Service responded to his petition and began providing mail delivery to the barrio. He also challenged
3248-421: Was rejected by 60 percent of voters. This made Deukmejian the first governor in California history to have the opportunity to appoint three justices to the court at once. The justices left the bench when the court's term ended on January 5, 1987. Afterward, Donald Heller, a former Federal prosecutor who drafted the 1978 death-penalty initiative approved by California voters, disagreed with the campaign to unseat
3306-471: Was removed prior to building, and the former site was sold to the City of Fullerton for use as a park. The school's facilities have changed over the years to meet educational and community needs. Plummer Auditorium was built in 1930-32 and its original ironwork, which was made by students on the campus, was kept when Plummer was refurbished and remodeled to meet earthquake standards in 1972 (the first class to use
3364-556: Was then chairing a citizens' commission investigating the death of Luis Gutierrez, a farm worker shot by police in Yolo County . President-elect Barack Obama appointed Reynoso to his White House transition team in early 2009, as part of a justice and civil rights sub-team. Following a screening of the Abby Ginzberg documentary film Cruz Reynoso: Sowing the Seeds of Justice in June 2010 in Washington, D.C. , Reynoso
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