AUS Tertiary Update Vol.3 No.36
In our lead story this
week…..
MASSEY COLLECTIVE AGREEMENT RATIFIED
Massey
University staff have ratified a one-year collective
employment agreement which includes a 1.7% wage increase and
an assistance package for staff made redundant this year as
a result of ‘repositioning’ at the university. The
Employment Assistance Fund -- jointly administered by the
unions and Massey management and totalling $250,000 -- is
being set up, and redundant staff will be able to apply to
it for grants of up to $10,000. The newly-elected AUS Massey
Branch President, Dr Karen Rhodes says other significant
gains include a management agreement to withdraw proposed
clawbacks in retirement clauses, and a workloads clause that
requires that workload allocations should be "transparent,
equitable and flexible, and promote the wellbeing and safety
of staff." Dr Rhodes says, however, that the vote on
ratification showed relatively strong resistance to the
agreement, with 16% of AUS members voting to continue
industrial action. "This is the highest level of dissent
against a settlement with management that we have ever
encountered. Staff are still angry about the management
style at Massey University, and staff will work toward the
collegial model of university governance", she says.
Other conditions include four weeks' annual leave for
general, as well as academic staff; the replacement of a
six-week gratuity payment for parental leave by six weeks'
paid leave; provision for inclusion of new academic
promotion clauses by ratification at a later date; union
consultation in the development of staff workload policy;
and provisions to include union involvement in restructuring
and review processes at an earlier date.
Also in Tertiary
Update this week:
1 New General Staff Vice-President
2 Government makes first council appointments
3.
The joint approach to cutting power bills
4. Tertiary
donation tax write-offs on the cards
5. Competition v.
co-operation
6. Career in maths doesn't add up
7.
Questioning the business model.
NEW GENERAL STAFF
VICE-PRESIDENT
Phil Etheridge of Massey University’s
Institute of Fundamental Sciences has been elected AUS
General Staff Vice-President for 2001. Phil is a computer
systems administrator and consultant and will represent the
views of general staff on the AUS Council. This year, he
has been the Massey branch representative on AUS
Council.
GOVERNMENT MAKES FIRST COUNCIL
APPOINTMENTS
The government has made its first
appointments to university councils since it was elected.
John Jackman, a senior policy analyst with the Ministry of
Agriculture and Forestry, and formerly Deputy Chief
Executive of Ag Research, has been apppointed to the
University of Waikato Council. Prudence Taylor, the
principal of Christchurch Girls' High School, joins the
council at Lincoln. The Associate Minister of Education
(Tertiary), Steve Maharey says the government wants its
appointees to strengthen the ability of the tertiary
councils to respond to local community needs and ensure the
quality of their programmes. He says the appointment process
has been changed to reflect this, with all appointees
needing the agreement of Cabinet as well as assessment by
the Ministry of Education. AUS has put forward nominations
for other councils.
Meanwhile the Minister is expected to
announce proposals this weekend for legislation to improve
governance and accountability at tertiary institutions.
Details in your next "Tertiary Update".
THE JOINT APPROACH
TO CUTTING POWER BILLS
Universities and polytechnics have
cut their electricity bills by more than $1.2m. a year as a
result of their decision to join forces to negotiate a
special contract price with Meridian Energy. Thirty-four
institutions are part of the Tertiary Education and Research
Electricity Buying Group which negotiated the deal. Peter
Rankin, who chairs the group, says the savings represent an
average cut in electricity bills for individual institutions
of 20% -- money that can be ploughed back in to education.
Dr Rankin -- who is from Victoria University -- says his
university cut its power bill by a "staggering" 38%. Who
says co-operation doesn’t work?
TERTIARY DONATION TAX
WRITE OFFS ON THE CARDS
Corporate donations and gifts to
universities and other tertiary institutions may become tax
deductible if a proposal being considered by the Government
goes ahead. The idea was raised at this week's forum
between government and business, and the Minister, Steve
Maharey welcomes it, saying it would promote strong
partnerships with business interests. He points out that
such a scheme works successfully in countries like the
United States, boosting university funds by millions of
dollars. He says the idea will be considered as part of the
current review of taxation.
COMPETITION v.
CO-OPERATION
"Tertiary Update" notes that there is still
very little evidence that the chief executives and managers
of our tertiary institutions have heard the government's
message about the need for co-operation. The latest (and
slightly curious) move is the decision by the Unitech
Council in Auckland to discontinue membership of the
Association of Polytechnics of New Zealand from next year.
It appears that Unitech believes it no longer has anything
in common with the polytechnics of this country and will
presumably continue its push to become a "University of
Technology."
WORLD WATCH
CAREER IN MATHS DOESN'T ADD
UP
A new report shows maths in Australia is in serious
crisis. A study released by the Federation of Australian
Science and Technology Societies (FASTS) highlights a brain
drain of the country's best maths researchers and bright
young graduates, a shortage of teaching staff, and falling
enrolments. The author of the report, Jan Thomas of the
Australian Mathematics Association, says maths must become
more visible, and the community made more aware of the way
it underpins technology and commerce. Among the proposals
for tackling the crisis are an organisation, along the lines
of the Australian Institute of Sport, to develop critical
research mass and enable high-level teaching of the nation's
small number of honours students. The report can be found at
www.usyd.edu.au/fasts/2000
QUESTIONING THE BUSINESS
MODEL
Participants at a conference in the United States
on governance have sounded a note of alarm over the
continuing push to use the corporation as a model for
running academic institutions.
The President of Francis
Marion University in South Carolina, Luther Carter cautioned
that many of the divisions between faculty and deans grow
out of "the compulsion to run an academic institution like a
corporation." His views were echoed by Larry Gerber of
Auburn University who referred to the "dubious fitness" of
the corporate model. "This is a model taken inappropriately
from the business world - where it's not that successful,
either," he said. Its adherents "look at results rather
than the quality of education provided to our students."
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