AUS Tertiary Update
In our lead story this
week…..
Education Concerns Further Heightened by GATS
Demands
Concerns about the potential impact of the
General Agreement of Trades in Services (GATS) on
universities have been further heightened by the release of
information from the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Trade
(MFAT) last Friday. At least one country, thought to be the
USA, has asked New Zealand to open up its entire tertiary
and adult education sectors to foreign competition as part
of the GATS agreement.
AUS National President, Dr Bill
Rosenberg, said that if accepted this would allow foreign
access to subsidies and would place limits on the ability of
our government to regulate or manage the sector. It would
accelerate commercialisation and widen leakage of scarce
public funds to private and international companies,” he
said.
New Zealand, for its part, has asked other
countries to open up their entire education sectors to
foreign competition.
Dr Rosenberg accused the New
Zealand Government of putting the university sector, and
public tertiary education generally, into an extraordinarily
exposed position.
“While the Government has proposed a
number of guiding principles to guard against any limitation
of its right to provide, fund or regulate public services,
including education, it appears to disregard those same
principles in the requests it has made of other countries.
It is effectively saying to other countries: we expect you
to do what we won’t do at home”.
Dr Rosenberg says that
AUS is most disturbed that the government has given away any
moral high ground in protecting public education by its
requests of other countries.
AUS has joined calls for
the 28 February deadline for comments to MFAT, and the 31
March deadline for New Zealand’s initial GATS offer to the
WTO, to be substantially extended in order to allow proper
public debate. AUS will be joining a number of unions,
including the New Zealand Council of Trade Unions (NZCTU),
and other organisations in a day of protest action on 13
March against public services being included in the
GATS.
Also in Tertiary Update this week . . . . .
1. New VC for Canterbury
2. Canterbury Staff to
Strike
3. Vic Students Face Additional
Charge
4. American Academics Criticise Push towards
War
5. Minnesota Pay-Bias Suit Settled
6. Taxpayers
may foot EU students' fees bill
New VC for
Canterbury
Professor Roy Sharp has headed off a field of
three final candidates to be appointed as the new
Vice-
Chancellor of the University of Canterbury.
Currently Deputy Vice-Chancellor at Victoria University,
Professor Sharp has Master of Arts and Doctor of Philosophy
degrees from the University of Oxford and is a Fellow of the
Institute of Professional Engineers New Zealand.
Formerly
Professor of Materials Engineering, Dean of Engineering,
Assistant Vice-Chancellor and Deputy Vice-Chancellor at
Auckland, Professor Sharp moved to Victoria University in
1997, serving as Deputy Vice-Chancellor and, from January to
November 2000, as Acting Vice-Chancellor.
Reaction from
staff at Canterbury has been cautiously optimistic. Many are
pleased that an external appointment has been made and hope
it is an opportunity to resolve a number of outstanding
issues, including the current industrial unrest (see story
below), the highly contentious academic restructuring and
the ailing financial position of the
University.
Canterbury Staff to Strike
Members of the
unions representing academic, general, maintenance and
cleaning staff at the University of Canterbury have voted to
strike for 24 hours during that university’s enrolment week
(17 – 21 February). The strike vote, taken last Friday,
comes after union members rejected a 2% salary offer made in
negotiations late last year.
The decision on which day to
strike will be made at a stop-work meeting to be held on
17th February – the first day of enrolment. AUS Branch
President Jane Guise said that “The vote was overwhelmingly
in favour of strike action. Union members have sent a clear
message to university management that they will not accept
the lowest pay offer to university staff in the
country.”
Jane Guise said that the ball is now firmly in
the employer’s court. “They can take the sensible approach
and meet our revised salary claim of 3% to avert the strike,
or they can force members into taking the action that has
been planned. The responsibility for disrupting enrolment
week rests entirely with them.”
More than 250 staff also
attended a rally on Monday this week to voice their
frustration at the lack of progress in the pay talks. AUS
General Secretary, Helen Kelly, told those at the rally that
the 2% offer represented a salary cut in real terms.
Negotiations are due to resume on Monday 10 February
with further time set aside on Friday 14 February.
Vic
Students Face Additional Charge
Students enrolling at
Victoria University are being required to pay all annual
tuition fees at the beginning of the year or face a fee of
$45 to pay fees by trimester. Until now, students have been
able to pay their fees each trimester, but this year those
who do not pay their fees in full by the end of February
will incur the additional charge.
The new charge has been
labelled unfair by Victoria student president Catherine
Belfield-Haines. “This charge goes against the spirit of the
fee freeze, where institutions are supposed to hold costs to
students in exchange for a funding increase. University
management are being mean spirited, and making it more
difficult for students to save for their fees through part
time work,” she said.
University administrators say the
charge has been introduced to pass on the administrative
costs to those who pay by
instalment.
Worldwatch
American Academics Criticise
Push towards War
Nearly 30 American professors and
students, just back from a trip to visit academics in
Baghdad, have signed a statement calling for scholars to
oppose a U.S. war with Iraq and instead to create academic
exchanges with the country.
The trip, dubbed an
"Academic Airlift," was the first of three planned visits to
Iraq by American faculty members and was organized by
Conscience International, an Atlanta-based humanitarian-aid
organization. Subsequent trips are scheduled this spring and
fall.
Besides professors and students from 28
universities, members of the group included Bianca Jagger,
who is on Amnesty International's executive committee. The
group was led by James E. Jennings, president of Conscience
International and a former professor of history and Islamic
studies.
Minnesota Pay-Bias Suit Settled
The Minnesota
State Colleges and Universities System has reached a
tentative settlement with a group of female faculty members
at Minnesota State University at Mankato who had alleged in
a class-action lawsuit that they were paid less than their
male counterparts. Although the university system did not
admit to intentional discrimination, it agreed to pay the
women a total of more than $500,000 in back pay and raises.
The lawsuit was filed in 1998 and was certified, four
years later, as a class action on behalf of all non-adjunct
female faculty members who worked at the university from the
1996-97 academic year through until January 8, 2002.
Preliminary approval of the proposed settlement
agreement; under which 324 female faculty members will
receive a total of $360,000 in back pay, was given last
week. Thirty-eight of the women who are current faculty
members will also receive prospective pay raises totalling
nearly $146,000. The original plaintiff in the case, Susan
Burum, a professor of political science, will receive an
additional $15,000. A hearing on final approval of the
settlements is set for March 28.
Taxpayers may foot EU
students' fees bill
Thousands of students from the
European Union may be able to study free in Britain because
the government has not worked out how to make them repay
tuition charges. Unlike British students, the government has
no power to enforce repayment of their debts by deducting
money from their salaries through the tax systems of their
home countries. The Student Loans Company will be
responsible for chasing up those who fail to pay. Damian
Green, the shadow education secretary, said he would be
demanding an explanation in the Commons after inquiries by
The Times established that the Department for Education and
Skills has not drawn up plans for recouping the money.
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AUS Tertiary Update
is compiled weekly on Thursdays and distributed freely to
members of the union and others. Back issues are archived on
the AUS website: http://www.aus.ac.nz. Direct enquires to
Marty Braithwaite, AUS Communications Officer, email:
marty.braithwaite@aus.ac.nz