Graduate students fighting for the power to unionize suffered a defeat when a House committee rejected a bill that would give them collective bargaining rights.

“It’s a blow but not a death blow,” said Laura Moore, president of Graduate Student Government at the University of Maryland, College Park, and a master’s candidate in entomology.

“We are very cautiously optimistic.”

The legislation next heads to the Senate for a hearing Thursday, and proponents hope that if amendments are approved, an updated bill would be kicked back to the House for further consideration.

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William Kirwan, chancellor of the University System of Maryland, which represents 11 colleges and two research centers, was happy to hear last week of the House committee rejecting the bill, which would give graduate students and adjunct professors the power to unionize to negotiate better salaries and workloads.

“We’re very pleased that the House has agreed with the position we articulated,” said Kirwan, who believes teaching assistants are students, not university employees.

kvolkmann@baltimoreexaminer.com