Illinois State University faculty and students alike voiced their frustrations with the University during Friday's Board of Trustees meeting.
Members of the United Faculty of Illinois State (UFISU), Students for Justice in Palestine at ISU (SJP-ISU) and a student concerned about the impact of new U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) policies spoke during public comment. The board also approved several University requests, including a 5% increase in room and board rates for the 2025-26 academic year.
UFISU had an especially large presence at the meeting. The union has been in negotiations for a year, and members are frustrated that a contract agreement has not been reached.
“My message today is simple: we need a fair contract—now," said lead negotiator Ashley Farmer. "The faculty at ISU are frustrated and angry at the slow pace of negotiations."
Farmer pulled out a thick stack of papers as she spoke, representing the union’s “militant majority” that would authorize a strike if an agreement was not met.
“Everyone in this stack—a militant majority—has committed to vote to authorize a strike, withhold their labor during a strike and walk a picket line should we fail to reach an agreement in a timely manner,” Farmer said.
Jessica Rick, a professor in the School of Communication, said that she would have struggled during her pregnancy if she were employed at ISU at the time.
“As a new faculty member, I currently have 45 hours of sick leave. I would not have been able to make half of my prenatal appointments with those 45 hours being used up,” Rick said.
Rick stressed the necessity of such appointments.
“I currently teach four days a week, I would have missed several days of class to go to my doctor’s appointments. My life was at risk, I had no other choice,” Rick said.
Adding to students' frustrations, room and board fees will increase by 5% during the next academic year, representing a $578 increase for undergraduate students. The total cost will be $29,942 for those in programs with differential tuition, and $28,132 for all other undergraduate students.
Tuition and mandatory fees will remain unchanged.
During public comment, several members of SJP-ISU addressed their ongoing frustrations with the University’s lack of divestment from companies they claim are supporting Israel amid the Israel-Hamas war.
“I have two cousins who I have never hugged, for war has torn us apart across worlds. I have ailing grandparents that I cannot come to serve, as they have served me when I was sick and young… I am constantly checking the news, constantly worrying about never properly saying goodbye to my family,” said SJP-ISU President Aya Hussein.
“(Roughly) 318 members of our local community have endorsed divestment… how long until the very students you welcome as a part of your diversity can feel as though they truly belong?” Hussein continued.
Anthony Espinoza, a senior Spanish education major, outlined several concerns about ISU's approach to ICE’s tougher stance on illegal immigrants after meeting with “various groups of students.”
“We demand (ISU Police) and ISU (administration) not comply (or) work with ICE if and when they arrive. We demand a centralized webpage with a list of resources for DACA (Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals) and undocumented student resources," Espinoza said.
"The current webpage on the website has not been updated since 2022, and as such, it needs to be updated with current resources,” Espinoza continued.
Other demands included hiring an immigration lawyer and creating an undocumented student resource center similar to one at Northern Illinois University. Members of the audience chanted, “No hate, no fear, immigrants are welcome here,” after Espinoza spoke.