AUS Tertiary Update Vol. 4 No. 41
In our lead story this
week…..
INDUSTRIAL OUTLOOK STORMY
Industrial action in
support of better pay and conditions is escalating in
universities around the country. Staff at Otago University
have begun working to rule, in addition to withholding the
release of examination results for the second semester. The
university's latest offer of a 2% lump sum payment before
Christmas and a 2% rise on salary rates from February next
year was rejected last week. Under the work to rule, staff
are sticking to a strict 37.5 hour week, and taking their
lunch, morning and afternoon tea breaks. The action is
expected to produce a backlog of report writing and routine
administrative work. AUS Otago branch president, Dr Shef
Rogers says three AUS members have resigned because they
were uncomfortable about marks being withheld, but he also
believes AUS had gained 50 new members during the month.
Staff at Victoria, who have also been withholding exam
results as part of their industrial campaign, say all grades
for this semester will be available to students by 10
December. AUS Victoria is also stressing that while the
delays will not cause disruption to graduations, scholarship
applications or future enrolments, they will significantly
inconvenience university management. Chris Hipkins,
Victoria University Students' Association (VUWSA) president,
advised students "desperate" for their results to contact
VUWSA, saying it will negotiate with AUS on their behalf.
"The AUS is very aware that some of this may have an impact
on students – they don't want that, they want to put
pressure on the management," he told "The Dominion".
Meanwhile, medical and dental staff at Otago have joined
their colleagues in rejecting a pay offer of a 2% lump sum
payment and a 2% salary rise from February next year.
“Tertiary Update” notes with interest that earlier this
year, Otago's Vice-Chancellor, Graeme Fogelberg, wrote to
Health Minister Annette King, bemoaning the fact that there
was a gap of up to $100,000 between academic and hospital
salaries [see Tertiary Update, Vol.4 No.8]. Two per cent
goes nowhere near closing that gap!
At Massey, Combined
Union spokesperson, Peter Blakey says Massey management is
under increasing pressure from staff and students to settle
the current pay dispute since the decision last week to
withhold grades. He says union members have stressed the
importance of not disadvantaging individual students and an
official exemptions process has been set up to avoid that.
He is also appealing to student leaders to acknowledge the
important distinction between real long-term "disadvantage"
and a short-term "inconvenience". Combined Union
representatives are critical of the reaction of some Massey
senior managers to the industrial action, saying their
attitude is ”less than constructive and fails to appreciate
how flexible union members are willing to be with this
low-level action".
Also in Tertiary Update this
week:
1. Incomes on the rise
2. AUS annual
conference
3. University severance call response
low
4. SIT proposes zone in face criticism
5.
UCOL/Wanganui merger plan still not finalised
6. South
Korean academics defy law to unionise
7. Canadian drive
for students
INCOMES ON THE RISE
Latest statistics show
workers' incomes have been rising more quickly this year
than last. The National Employers Annual Wage & Salary
Survey shows senior managers pay packets rose 4.4% to an
average of around $73,000 in the year to July. That compared
to a rise of 3.8% for the 1999/2000 financial year. Middle
managers' pay rose on average 3.84%, and incomes of "other
employees" went up just over 3.57% this year compared to
3.19% the year before. The figures need to be seen in the
light of an annual inflation rate of 3.2% for the year to
the end of June, and a rate of 2.4% in the year ended
September.
AUS ANNUAL CONFERENCE
AUS Annual
Conference, with the theme Invest in All University Staff,
will be held in Wellington on December 3 and 4. Guest
speakers will include the Minister in charge of tertiary
education, Steve Maharey; the Chair and Deputy chair of the
Tertiary Education Commission, Dr Andrew West and Professor
Kaye Turner; the Assistant General Secretary of Australia's
National Tertiary Education Union (NTEU), Ted Murphy; and
from Fiji, Sevanaia Dukaica, secretary of the University of
the South Pacific Staff Association. The conference agenda
and conference papers will be made available on the AUS
website: www.aus.ac.nz/conference/conference2001.htm over
the next few days.
UNIVERSITY SEVERANCE CALL
RESPONSE LOW
Fewer than 5% of Canterbury university
academic staff have volunteered for redundancy as part of
the university's programme to slice around $5m from next
year's budget. Twenty-six academic staff, representing 4.7%
of the total, had applied by the deadline of this week. The
interest from general staff was higher, with 131 (15.4%)
applications received. AUS Canterbury branch organiser,
Marty Braithwaite expressed surprise at the low level of
academic interest, saying he had expected up to 40 to apply.
"On the one hand, academic staff don't fit easily into other
employment in Christchurch and, on the other hand, I was
expecting a few more because the sense of disillusionment
around the place is so high," he said. The figure for
general staff was, he said, up to expectations because so
many had "just had a gutsful".
SIT PROPOSES ZONE IN FACE
CRITICISM
The Southern Institute of Technology (SIT) is
considering setting up an enrolment scheme for its no-fees
trade courses at its Christchurch campus. The move follows
strong criticism from small regional South Island
polytechnics, Aoraki and Te Tai Poutini. They fear they will
lose trade course students because of the SIT zero-fees
offer, which has been matched by Christchurch Polytechnic
Institute of Technology. SIT is reported to have sought a
legal opinion on whether it can refuse extending the no-fees
offer to students who live outside a yet-to-be-defined
Canterbury zone.
UCOL/WANGANUI MERGER PLAN STILL NOT
FINALISED
The Minister in charge of tertiary education,
Steve Maharey, says there is still no business plan for
merging Wanganui Polytechnic with UCOL in Palmerston North
because it is still being finalised. He was speaking in
response to concerns raised by the Friends of Wanganui
Polytech group. Members are worried that a merger will go
ahead before they have had a chance to respond to a UCOL
business plan currently with the minister's office.
WORLD
WATCH
SOUTH KOREAN ACADEMICS DEFY LAW TO
UNIONISE
Around 1000 South Korean academic staff have
defied the law to sign up to join South Korea's first union
for college professors. South Korean law prohibits
professors and private school teachers from forming unions.
The government had warned the organisers that they would
face serious legal consequences if they went ahead a formed
the union, but to date there has been no official reaction
from the Education Ministry. The new union leader, Seoul
National University School of Medicine professor, Hwang
Sang-ik’s response is: "It does not make sense that the
government bans public officials and private-school teachers
from forming unions when the Constitution ensures every
worker's right to unionise." The new union’s demands
include an end to plans to issue annual contracts, and a
call for professors to be included on committees studying
tertiary education reforms.
CANADIAN DRIVE FOR STUDENTS
Tertiary institutions in Canada have launched a two-year
campaign to attract more undergraduate students to arts and
science programmes. The Association of Universities and
Colleges of Canada has launched a website at
http://www.trainyourbrain.ca and produced a series of
sweatshirts bearing appropriate messages in the bid to
attract the students. It follows concern among the
Association's members, and some business leaders that there
is a growing need for generalists in the workforce.
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AUS
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