AUS Tertiary Update
University bargaining
arrangements underway
University union and employer
representatives met in Wellington yesterday afternoon to
discuss formal arrangements for national collective
agreement bargaining. It follows the announcement last week
that the unions are to claim a salary increase of 10% per
annum for the next three years for academic staff and 10% in
2004 for general staff plus increases in job evaluation
alignments to the higher quartiles of the salary
market.
A team of 16 union representatives met with 12
representatives from six of the seven universities involved
in the bargaining. Otago Human Resources staff were unable
to attend yesterday’s meeting, but have confirmed their
participation in future discussions.
Negotiations will
commence on 6 and 7 October in Wellington, and continue on
13 and 14 October in Christchurch. 6 and 7 November have
been tentatively scheduled for further negotiations in
Wellington.
AUS Industrial Officer Jeff Rowe has been
named as the lead advocate for the unions with Jenny Chapman
(ASTE) and Mark Ryan (PSA) as co-advocates.
The central
issue of discussion at yesterday’s meeting was a bargaining
protocol, intended to establish the principles and
arrangements which will govern the bargaining process. Union
advocate Jeff Rowe described the protocol as setting the
foundation upon which the negotiation would be conducted. It
covered such issues as representation, how and when
bargaining will occur, communication, and a resolution
process for any disagreements which may arise between the
parties.
University employer representatives made it
clear to the unions they would not be combining to act as a
sector group, but would retain individual advocacy rights
for each university.
Jeff Rowe described yesterday’s
meeting as constructive and said he hoped the parties would
have the bargaining protocol finalised before negotiations
commenced.
Also in Tertiary Update this week
Millions
paid in subcontracts to PTEs
Free parking not a
condition of employment
New website identifies
qualifications and providers
Unions endorse motion
against top-up fees
Millions paid in subcontracts to
PTEs
Millions of dollars are being paid to private
training establishments (PTEs) by public tertiary providers
in subcontracts as a way of getting around the government’s
cap on PTE subsidies according to investigation by Education
Review. Public tertiary institution heads have told
Education Review that it is common for private providers to
approach them with the aim of setting up subcontracting
deals so they could grow beyond the cap imposed by the
government last year. That cap limits annual government
subsidies to the private sector to $146 million by
preventing them from receiving subsidies for more equivalent
full time students (EFTS) than they enrolled in 2001.
In
response to complaints about the level of subcontracting
within the sector the Tertiary Education Commission has now
asked tertiary providers to provide details of their
subcontracting details. This information will be collected
as part of profiles being prepared as a part of the current
charters and profiles exercise, but it is expected that this
information will not be available until later next
year.
While it is understood the subcontracting
arrangements are not unlawful it is felt by some industry
sources that the practice is a way undermining the
government’s intention to bolster public provision and
increase cooperation in the tertiary education sector. Some
have labeled the practice as EFTS laundering.
Education
Review reports that Te Wananga o Aotearoa, the biggest
public tertiary institution, paid more that $8 million in
contracts with 14 private providers last year. The biggest
of those were to Carich, paid $2.3 million for 635
equivalent full-time students, and Be My Guest, which was
paid $1.22 million for 272 EFTS.
A spokesperson for
Associate Tertiary Education Minister, Steve Maharey, told
Tertiary Update that the government was looking into the
situation, but had made no decisions about the
practice.
Free parking not a condition of
employment
The Employment Authority has turned down an
application to block to imposition of parking charges on
staff at the University of Canterbury. The Authority was
asked to determine the matter after the University imposed a
parking charge this year after previously providing free
parking for staff and students.
AUS lawyer, Peter
Cranney, argued that free parking was a condition of
employment for staff, and in any case was protected by a
savings provision in the collective employment agreements
restricting the Univefsity from reducing terms and
conditions of employment.
Employment Authority Member,
Helen Doyle, found that she did not consider that free car
parking at Canterbury was an express condition of
employment, nor was it implied from an historical background
of free parking. She found also that savings provision did
not apply and the University was entitled to change its
parking regulations from time to time.
New website
identifies qualifications and providers
A new website
containing details of over 5000 qualifications makes a
strong case for rationalising the number of courses
available for study in New Zealand, says Associate Education
(Tertiary) Minister, Steve Maharey.
www.kiwiquals.govt.nz
was launched at Parliament on Wednesady this week and will
enable users to find and compare all quality assured
qualification available in this country. It currently
covers more than 5000 qualifications offered by more than
1000 providers.
Steve Maharey said KiwiQuals will be very
useful for the independent quality assurance bodies who
approve new courses.
“Being able to search by
classification will reveal areas where we probably just have
too many course options and where there is wasteful and
pointless duplication.
“In the future the Tertiary
Education Commission (TEC) will be able to decline to fund
particular courses where they believe further proliferation
to be unnecessary. KiwiQuals will assist the TEC to
identify disciplines where further investigation, and/or
fewer providers, is warranted.
Worldwatch
Unions
endorse motion against top-up fees
The British Trades
Union Congress has endorsed a motion that is critical of
plans to introduce university top-up fees, under which
undergraduates could be charged up to £3,000 a year from
2006 to attend the best universities and courses. There was
unanimous criticism of the policy at the congress in
Brighton this week. The TUC statement asserted the union
movement's "fundamental opposition" to top-up fees.
"Students will end up owing vast sums of money when they
graduate," it said. Chancellor Gordon Brown signalled there
would be no retreat in the face of their demands.
A poll
carried out for the Association of University Teachers (AUT)
shows that 80 per cent of the public said they now opposed
the top-up fees. Only 12 per cent of respondents said they
agreed with the introduction of top-up
fees.
*******************************************************************************
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