Bargaining for a first collective agreement between the Nova Scotia College of Art and Design (NSCAD) component of CUPE 3912 and NSCAD University has reached an impasse after conciliation talks failed late Tuesday night. 

The 133 academic workers at NSCAD organized with CUPE in 2023 and are now negotiating their first collective agreement.  

NSCAD workers are asking for a fair and equitable hiring procedure and meaningful job security protections — basic standards the union says are necessary in a first contract. 

Currently, instructors receive no formal preference in course assignments between terms. Course assignments turn over four times each year, leaving many workers without any guarantee of continued employment beyond a single semester. 

“People are moving to Halifax from elsewhere in the country to work at NSCAD, only to find out they’re guaranteed work for just three months once they arrive,” said Lachlan Sheldrick, Unit Vice-President of CUPE 3912’s NSCAD component. “That’s hard on our members, and it’s not a reasonable expectation from the employer. As a newly organized group, we’re trying to establish clear, fair hiring rules that provide stability and recognize experience.” 

CUPE 3912 President Lauren McKenzie says the union’s proposal reflects common practice across the post-secondary sector.