AUS Tertiary Update Vol. 4 No. 24
In our lead story
this week…..
SUBMISSION ON SALARIES TO TEAC
Further to
our story last week, AUS has made a submission to the
Tertiary Education Advisory Commission on salary-fixing
mechanisms for New Zealand university staff. It notes the
serious deterioration in university salaries since the
introduction of enterprise bargaining under the Employment
Contracts Act and identifies several international models
for the effective setting of university salaries. It argues
that the government must accept responsibility for funding
an appropriate share of any negotiated salary increase. The
submission also suggests two alternative approaches:
national co-ordination and agreement about salary levels,
job weights and career structures combined with local
negotiation about details; or periodic reviews to establish
baselines followed by regular local negotiations. The full
submission can be viewed at
http://www.aus.ac.nz/teacsalaries.htm.
Member solidarity
will be essential as we endeavour to develop a more
appropriate salary negotiating structure, and so is
increasing our membership. We would urge university staff
who are not AUS members but who may be reading this
newsletter to join the Association. You can apply to join
online at www.aus.ac.nz
Also in Tertiary Update this
week:
1. Eternal Optimists
2. Government stand means
stark choices
3. Massey downplays fees hike story
4.
Student borrowers failing to meet the repayment
threshold
5. Ireland to boost access to higher
education
6. University pay gap 'injustice'
7.
Stressed out and sick, but no time to talk about
it
ETERNAL OPTIMISTS
Unitec has renewed its bid for
university status despite the Government's message that it
does not want to see any more than eight universities in New
Zealand. The Government introduced a bill in May last year
which, if enacted, would set a limit on the number of
universities. The Chair of Parliament's Education and
Science Select Committee, Dr Liz Gordon says Unitec is
arguing that it should be awarded university status on the
basis of its achievements. But she says any decision must
be based on a wider analysis of what is in the public
interest. For more information on the Unitec application,
see www.whynot.ac.nz.
GOVERNMENT STAND MEANS STARK
CHOICES
With talks on the Government's fee freeze offer
to universities apparently deadlocked, the Vice-Chancellors'
Committee has written to the Government saying its members
are left with no option but to recommend their councils
reject the offer. The two sides met on 19 June to discuss
the controversial offer, which universities say is so low
that it will seriously jeopardise the quality of university
education. In a letter sent this week, the Committee
expresses concern that the Government has not changed its
position in any significant way, with the only offer a
"vague promise of something being discussed in the future."
The letter says that the Vice-Chancellors are sympathetic to
the Government's ideal of stabilising student fees, but adds
that "Government's unwillingness to contemplate an
arrangement which genuinely meets inflation means that
universities now face stark choices". “Universities can
decline the Government’s offer, raise student fees by a
figure that is likely to exceed $500 per student and in
doing so, protect the quality of university education at
least to the current level," the letter says.
"Alternatively, the institutions could accept the offer but
place a freeze on salaries and research funding, and make
further staff redundancies and reductions in expenditure in
key areas such as equipment and library resources.” The
Vice-Chancellors say they are willing to hold further
discussions on the issue.
MASSEY DOWNPLAYS FEES HIKE
STORY
The registrar of Massey University, Adrienne
Cleland is downplaying claims that massive student fee hikes
are looming at the university. The National party's
tertiary spokesman, Maurice Williamson has said papers he
received under the Official Information Act show that Massey
students could face fee increases of up to 27% if Massey
rejects the Government's offer. He said that if the deal
was accepted, the papers show that Massey would have to make
cuts of $11.5m. Mrs Cleland said the papers presented a
number of "different scenarios" and the figures cited by Mr
Williamson were at the top end of the scale of
possibilities.
The Tertiary Education minister, Steve
Maharey said the magnitude of the mooted fee rise underlined
the need for Massey to accept the Government's offer. He
repeated that there would be no more new money for tertiary
education at least until after the TEAC report due in
September. "We anticipate being a second-term government.
Therefore we have long-term plans," he said.
STUDENT
BORROWERS FAILING TO MEET THE REPAYMENT THRESHOLD
The
New Zealand University Students' Association says IRD
figures show that most graduates are not earning enough to
pay off their student loans. Co-President Andrew Campbell
says statistics for 1999 show that just under 70% of
borrowers were earning loess than the $15,000 a year above
which they were required to make repayments. Mr Campbell
acknowledged that a significant proportion of those would be
students still studying, but he said it was shocking that
only 12% of borrowers were making more than $30,000 a year.
"These figures show that graduates are not walking into the
high paying jobs that many think they are,” he says.
“Vice-Chancellors should be aware that if they raise fees
they will be loading more and more debt on to graduates
whose salaries cannot sustain loan repayments.”
WORLD WATCH
IRELAND TO BOOST ACCESS TO HIGHER EDUCATION
Thousands of disadvantaged students in Ireland look set
to receive a cheque in the mail after the Government
announced it would accept a recommendation to increase
grants to these students. The recommendation came in a
report by a working party set up last September to examine
way of getting more low-income students, people with
disabilities and older students into colleges and
universities. The Education Minister said the recommendation
would be implemented retrospectively so that students
studying at the moment who met the criteria would benefit.
UNIVERSITY PAY GAP 'INJUSTICE'
In Britain, the
Association of University Teachers (AUT) says the pay gap
between male and female academics has widened to a
"shocking" level over the past 5 years. Figures compiled by
the union show women lecturers earned 16% less than their
male colleagues compared with 15% less in 1995. The "worst
offender" cited by AUT was Leicester University, where women
academics earned on average 27% less than men.
STRESSED
OUT AND SICK, BUT NO TIME TO TALK ABOUT IT
Overworked
staff at the University of Sydney are playing host to a
major occupational health and safety conference, but their
union says they are too busy to attend. National Tertiary
Education Union (NTEU) Branch President, Dr Bronwyn Winter
says health and safety has become a major issue, with
overcrowded lectures, day long queues in front of faculty
offices, irritated students, long working hours and high
student: staff ratios. She says concerns were raised with
management in March, but the union is still awaiting a
response. NTEU has carried out surveys on stress among
staff in Australian universities using the same model that
AUS used to survey staff workloads in 1994 and 1998 -- and
with similar results.
Meanwhile, Australian
Vice-Chancellors have condemned the Federal Government's
treatment of tertiary education. The comments were made at
a Senate inquiry in Sydney. The president of the
Vice-Chancellors' Committee, Professor Ian Chubb told the
inquiry there had been a steady decline in public funding
since 1983, but the fall had become "precipitous" since
1996, when the Howard Government came to office. The result
was rising staff-student ratios and a decline in quality of
education. And that, we should add, in a country where
tertiary institutions receive, on average, 50% more per
student in NZ dollar terms than New Zealand universities
do.
***************************************************************************
AUS
Tertiary Update is produced weekly on Thursdays and
distributed freely to members of the union and others. Back
issues are archived on the AUS website: