AUS Tertiary Update Vol. 3 No. 15, 9 June 2000
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AUS
Tertiary Update Vol. 3 No. 15, 9 June
2000
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MOTIONS
MOVED AT MASSEY
Four motions passed at a meeting of about
230 Massey staff at the Palmerston North campus this week
received strong, often unanimous support.
The four
motions:
condemned the ‘repositioning’
exercise
called on the Academic Board and
University Council to cease all action on the
‘repositioning’ plan until after TEAC has
reported
expressed no confidence in James McWha
as Vice Chancellor and Chief Executive of Massey and called
for his resignation
thanked student
organisations for their support.
Also in Tertiary Update
this week:
1. USP Staff Concerned About Boycott
Call
2. Budget Awaited
3. More Money for Careers
Advice
4. No R&D Tax Breaks Says Cullen
5. Employment
Relations Bill Promotes More Certainty in Law
6. Former
AUS President Honoured
USP STAFF CONCERNED ABOUT BOYCOTT
CALL
Staff at the University of the South Pacific (USP)
responded to the AUS/NTEU academic boycott mentioned in last
week’s Tertiary Update.
They asked us to note that USP is
not a Fiji institution, but a regional institution with 12
small island member countries and were concerned that such
actions could harm other regional organisations.
AUS
regrets that actions directed against USP and in support of
constitutional, representative, democratic government in
Fiji may potentially adversely affect other Pacific region
countries, organisations and students. National AUS
President Neville Blampied says blame for that should be
directed at the coup leaders.
“We will monitor the
situation closely and modify our stand as soon as the
situation in Fiji warrants,” he said.
BUDGET
AWAITED
AUS will be attending the Budget ‘lock-up’ next
Thursday 15 June and will also be at the pre-Budget briefing
arranged by Ministers Trevor Mallard and Steve Maharey with
representatives of other education sector groups.
Pre-budget announcements continue…
NO R&D TAX BREAKS SAYS
CULLEN
Tax breaks for research and development were ruled
out in the upcoming Budget by Finance Minister Michael
Cullen, who said they could lead to creative accounting by
companies without R&D being undertaken.
The Employers
and Manufacturers Association (EMA) has accused the
Government of reneging on a pre-election pledge that it
would allow businesses to fully expense R&D spending in the
year they incurred it.
Advice from Treasury and IRD
suggested tax breaks would be irrelevant to small and young
research-orientated companies which may not be making a
profit, Dr Cullen said.
EMPLOYMENT RELATIONS BILL
PROMOTES MORE CERTAINTY IN LAW
Employment law specialists
John Hughes, Gordon Anderson and Paul Roth have taken issue
with claims from employer groups that the drafting of the
Employment Relations Bill is “too legalistic” or
“prescriptive”.
They argue that the descriptive nature
of key provisions in the ERB promotes, rather than reduces
certainty, as to the operation of the law.
The academics
find it puzzling that employers, who have complained for
years of the lack of prescription regarding the requirements
of procedural fairness, should now complain that the draft
legislation is too prescriptive.
Recognising that, as
with any bill, some aspects of the ERB require technical
amendment, they argue that certainty is promoted, rather
than undermined, by clear guidelines in legislation.
HUTT
VALLEY POLYTECHNIC AND UNITEC GET TOGETHER
Associate
Minister of Education, Steve Maharey, has hailed the
recently launched memorandum of understanding between Hutt
Valley Polytechnic and Unitec as part of a welcome shift
towards a more cooperative and collaborative tertiary
sector. He noted that the Tertiary Education Advisory
Commission was currently grappling with how to construct
such a sector, the drivers were not yet in place, but the
Government’s objectives were clear: “Institutions should
start now in moving away from the competitive model and
towards more cooperative, collaborative
strategies”.
FORMER AUS PRESIDENT HONOURED
AUS
congratulates all those current and former academic staff,
scholars and researchers honoured in the Queen's Birthday
Honours List. In particular, we congratulate Ruth
Butterworth, former National AUS President, on becoming a
Companion of the New Zealand Order of Merit (CNZM).
WORLD WATCH
EUROPE: SPEND MORE ON RESEARCH
The
European Parliament wants each member state to spend at
least 3% of its gross domestic product on research within
the next two years – this is nearly double the present
amount. [New Zealand currently spends only 0.57% of its GDP
on research]. It acknowledges that this would be impossible
through public funding alone and states that considerable
political efforts must be made to improve the preconditions
for increasing private sector contributions – and for
raising public
awareness.
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AUS
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