AUS Tertiary Update Vol. 5 No. 38, 17 October
In our lead story this
week…..
PROPOSED SETTLEMENTS AT OTAGO AND MASSEY
UNIVERSITY
Following further negotiations last week at
both Massey and Otago, union members at both Universities
will meet during the next two weeks to consider
ratification.
University of Otago staff will become the
highest paid university workers in New Zealand if they
accept a new pay deal. Union negotiators expect the
academic and general staff to accept the 4 percent rise,
packaged with a commitment by the university to look at
recruitment and retention problems.
The offer comes
after a lengthy negotiating round. If ratified by staff at
meetings on Thursday and Friday next week, lecturers would
be paid up to $61,830, senior lecturers up to $82,160 and
professors up to $118,980.
At Auckland University,
lecturers will be paid up to $60,490 and senior lecturers up
to $80,640. There is no specified upper limit for
professors.
Negotiators from the five combined unions
involved would recommend staff accept the offer.
A
further two days of productive negotiations concluded on
Friday for the Massey University Collective Agreement. The
combined union team from those negotiations, will be
recommending that Massey union members at meetings in two
weeks time ratify the deal hammered out.
“We have been
pleased at the tenor of this year’s negotiations compared to
previous rounds, and members at meetings last week expressed
that pleasure as well. Our negotiators look forward to a
robust debate on the merits of the current offer at our
stopwork meetings,” said Combined Union Spokesperson Dr
Karen Rhodes.
Also in Tertiary Update this week:
1.
Otago decision affirms right to strike
2. Safeguards
added to tertiary legislation
3. Student loan average a
myth
4. Opposition to UNITEC-AUT merger
5. Harper
College Faculty strike
DECISION AFFIRMS RIGHT TO
STRIKE
A recent Employment Court decision affirms the
right of workers to lawfully
strike in pursuit of
settling Collective Employment Agreements. The University
of Otago unsuccessfully sought an injunction on strike
action by staff at the University, after a series of rolling
stoppages by academic union members two weeks ago.
AUS
Otago Branch President Shef Rogers said members were pleased
with the result. "Members were angry that the university
again chose to litigate rather than negotiate during
bargaining. We are concerned at the cost that the university
management are prepared to incur litigating."
SAFEGUARDS
PROPOSED FOR TERTIARY EDUCATION REFORM LEGISLATION
The
government is proposing several changes to strengthen and
clarify the intent of the major tertiary education reform
legislation before Parliament and provide safeguards around
the way new Ministerial powers can be
exercised.
Associate Education (Tertiary Education)
Minister Steve Maharey has circulated the amendments the
government will seek to the Tertiary Education Reform Bill
during its Parliamentary clause-by-clause debate, which is
expected to commence this week.
The proposed changes
provide a number of important safeguards to the exercise of
the Ministers new powers in the Bill. Included in the
changes is a new objects clause, provision for public
submissions to be considered in the setting of student fee
limits, and a review, by no later than 1 March 2006, of the
new export education levy the bill allows for.
THE MYTH OF
AVERAGE STUDENT LOANS
The Aotearoa Tertiary Students’
Association (ATSA) takes issue with the government claim
that “the average Student Loan balance at 30 June 2002 was
$12,643.” They say the figure is misleading and paints an
unclear picture of real Student Loan Debt because there are
so many variables involved. They say an average loan based
on all borrowers is simply not credible. “New Borrowers,
those who have almost repaid, and the whole range in
between, can contribute to a lower looking average,” said
Julie Pettett, President of ATSA. “The solution is to use
the average debt of particular groups, such as recent
graduates or graduates by qualification.”
UNIVERSITY
STAFF OPPOSE PROPOSAL FOR UNITEC-AUT MERGER
The proposed
merger of Auckland University of Technology and Unitec, to
form a single “university” has been denounced by the
Association of University Staff [AUS] for making a mockery
of the goals of university education. AUS expects that the
Government will say “no” to the merger when it makes its
final decision on the matter.
“While Unitec does offer
degrees, to become a university they must either abandon
their very useful role in trades training and vocational
skill development, or retain those trade certificates and
make the status of university virtually meaningless,” said
Dr Grant Duncan, AUS National President.
Dr Duncan asked
whether Unitec should be allowed to get university status by
the “back door” method of merging with an existing
university.
Dr Duncan commented that, “New Zealand does
not need a further university campus, and the proposal for
the AUT-Unitec merger would do nothing to achieve the
national goals of improving vocational skills and of raising
the quality of university education. We would be better
served by focusing on achieving world-class university
standards on the one hand, and practical technical skills
development on the other. This means keeping clear
institutional boundaries around those different missions.”
WORLD WATCH
HARPER COLLEGE FACULTY HIT THE PICKET
LINES
Faced with a management team unwilling to budge on
salary and health insurance takebacks, the 210 full-time
faculty at Harper College in Palatine, Ill., are set to go
out on strike.
The union, the Harper College Faculty
Senate, is affiliated with the Cook County College Teachers
Union/IFT. Management is asking the faculty to absorb a
larger portion of rising health insurance costs by lifting
the employer/employee cap on the current 80 percent/20
percent share of the costs.
The employer also wants to
fold in the cost of promotions into the base salary offer.
What this amounts to, says CCCTU president Norm Swenson, is
an across-the-board increase of 3.3 percent, not 5 percent
as the college claims it is offering. The union is asking
for a 6 percent raise.
There are other issues at stake in
this strike, adds Swenson, such as the right of due process,
fair evaluations and full hearings in disciplinary matters.
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AUS
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