The National Labor Relations Board recently ruled that graduate students at private universities have a right to unionize. Grad students at Cornell University have formed a group to do this and in news reported in school newspaper, one of their first acts was to eject a reporter from their first meeting.

The Cornell Daily Sun reports:

Graduate Student United Looks to ‘Build Union Culture’ Following Columbia Decision

Following the National Labor Relations Board’s August ruling giving graduate assistants at private universities the right to unionize, Cornell Graduate Students United held its first general assembly meeting of the semester Thursday in Thurston Hall.

Shortly after commencing the meeting, CGSU voted to expel The Sun’s reporter in attendance. One member was concerned that the reporter would divulge “strategy” that CGSU “wouldn’t want administration to know about.” Michaela Brangan grad, administrative liaison, expressed that the lack of “objective” for the story was “worrying,” adding later that the meeting’s content could be difficult to parse.

Per its constitution, CGSU retains the right to deny any non-member access to its meetings. However, Ben Norton grad, communications and outreach chairman, said he had no recollection of any graduate student being denied admission to a meeting, Brangan said the group last admitted a Sun reporter two years ago.