AUS Tertiary Update Vol 3 No 17
BUDGET SPIN HOLLOW FOR
UNIVERSITY STAFF
The positive spin on the Budget is
beginning to sound very hollow for university staff in the
wake of news this week of a financial crisis at Victoria
University.
“Financial crises at several universities
mean that ‘fairness, security and opportunity’ are fast
disappearing for many people working in our universities,”
said AUS National President Neville Blampied.
“University staff are not to blame for these crises, yet
they bear the painful costs in severe stress, constant
restructurings, large-scale redundancies, and destruction of
career opportunities,” he said.
The Victoria University
branch of the Association of University Staff (AUS)
responded to the news with a call for reasoned and
constructive analyses of the available options.
AUS
spokesperson, Guy Reynolds, said staff appreciated the more
consultative approach being adopted by the Acting
Vice-Chancellor after last year's difficulties. “At least
this year we are being presented with a rationale and
process that allows for effective staff input into the
decision making,” said Mr Reynolds.
The AUS is pleased
the University proposes to investigate possible reductions
in its overhead and management costs and recognises the need
to focus on core teaching and research activities.
“If
the ideas and expertise of the University community are
successfully utilised, new revenue-earning initiatives
should be able to be implemented,” Mr Reynolds said.
While there were internal initiatives that Victoria must
undertake, he said that the Government needs to act faster
and with greater commitment if the university sector is to
survive at all.
In recognition that the problems cannot
be solved just by local initiatives, the AUS is also seeking
a joint meeting between staff, students, management, the
University Council and the responsible Government Ministers.
“While TEAC does its work, the Government has a
responsibility to maintain the status quo in the university
sector, otherwise the integrity of the TEAC process is
called seriously into question,” said Neville Blampied.
“Returning the $62.5 million arbitrarily removed from the
sector in 1998 in response to the Asian financial crisis
would be a good start!”
Also in Tertiary Update this
week:
1. Science and Innovation Advisory Council
Launched
2. AUS Submission on TEAC Terms of
Reference
3. AUT Joins New Global Alliance
4. National
Intellectual Property Policy to be developed
SCIENCE AND
INNOVATION ADVISORY COUNCIL LAUNCHED
Nine New Zealanders
with diverse backgrounds in industry and science have
been named as members of a new Science and Innovation
Advisory Council
(SIAC) launched by Prime Minister Helen
Clark this week.
Chaired by Rick Christie, chief
executive of investment company Rangatira Ltd., the other
Council members are: John Blackham (XSOL Ltd), former
Christchurch Mayor Vicki Buck, Kate Frykberg (The Web),
Donna Hiser (Innovus), Dr Michael Matthews (Tatua Dairy
Co-op Ltd), Sir Angus Tait (Tait Electronics), Stephen
Tindall (Tindall Foundation and founder of The Warehouse),
and leading Maori scientist Dr Michael Walker of University
of Auckland.
The purpose of the Science and Innovation
Advisory Council includes increasing public recognition of
scientists, science and innovation; promoting a long-term,
strategic direction for research, science and technology;
building private-sector commitment to the sector; and
enabling co-ordination of Government and community science
activities.
For more information on the SIAC, visit the
Council's website at www.siac.govt.nz.
AUS SUBMISSION ON
TEAC TERMS OF REFERENCE
The AUS submission on the terms
of reference for the Tertiary Advisory Commission completed
this week focused on the strategic direction of the tertiary
sector.
It calls for, among other things, an independent
inquiry into university salaries and conditions in New
Zealand (similar to the recent Bett Inquiry in the United
Kingdom).
We have emphasised the need for a
legislatively-differentiated sector and stressed the public
and unique role of universities. Our submission also
suggests that TEAC consider the adaptation of successful and
appropriate aspects of overseas models, such as California,
Finland, Ireland and Israel. The submission is available on
the AUS website www.aus.ac.nz.
AUT JOINS NEW GLOBAL
ALLIANCE
The Auckland University of Technology is to join
forces with eight other universities and online education
company Nexted to create a rival to Universitas 21,
according to the Independent on Wednesday.
The new Global
University Alliance (GUA) has partners that include the
University of South Australia, RMIT, as well as the Chung
Yuan Christian University in Taiwan and aims to have courses
available from the end of September 2000. GUA and Nexted are
both based in Hong Kong.
Recently we reported that
Universitas 21 (of which Auckland University is a member) is
to join forces with Rupert Murdoch’s Newscorp and target
what is seen to be a lucrative market for delivery of
university education into China.
NATIONAL INTELLECTUAL
PROPERTY POLICY TO BE DEVELOPED
The New Zealand
Vice-Chancellors’ Committee (NZVCC) has responded positively
to an AUS request that a national policy position on
intellectual property be developed. NZVCC will collate the
current 8 university policies and will meet AUS
representatives in September to discuss the formation of a
working party to develop the national position.
WORLD WATCH
WORKPLACE RELATIONS LAW DEFEATED IN
AUSTRALIA
NTEU National Assistant Secretary Ted Murphy
welcomed the defeat of legislation in the Senate which would
have made the union’s ability to pursue common claims across
the industry illegal.
He expressed concern, however,
that the proposals may be revived later in the year in a
revised form.
Ted Murphy called on the opposition parties
to accept the principle that multi-employer or
industry-level bargaining was appropriate and, in fact,
protected by ILO Conventions to which Australia was a
signatory.
REPORT SUGGESTS TAX ALTERNATIVES FOR
FUNDING IN AUSTRALIA
A report on borderless education
suggests universities should press the Government to widen
tax deductions for employee education to increase their
privately-sourced income.
The report rejects new
providers such as the virtual universities and profit-only
colleges that have developed in the US which threaten
Australia's traditional institutions.
The researchers
say their findings are critical to Australian universities
because government funding of higher education has fallen
and university revenue is increasingly dependent on
full-fee-paying students who might be tempted to seek
education online.
But new providers are “likely to
heighten competition for the higher education of working
adults and continuing professional education”. Industry has
relatively low investment in education and prefers to
recruit people with skills it wants rather than to train,
the report says.
The Australian Vice-Chancellors
Committee has invited the researchers to present their
findings to next month’s meeting.
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AUS
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