AUS Tertiary Update
Polytechnic staff poised to
strike
Staff at six polytechnics, including one of the
country’s largest institutes of technology, have voted to
take strike action in the wake of a failure to conclude
negotiations for a multi-employer collective agreement in
the sector. The strike ballot, which closed last night, gave
the Association of Staff in Tertiary Education (ASTE) an
overwhelming mandate to call the strike action.
ASTE
National President Lloyd Woods said that polytechnic staff
felt they had no other choice but to take this decision
after 16 days of negotiation resulted in pay offers ranging
from zero to 2.5%, contingent on concessions on a number of
existing conditions. He said the employers had not made any
commitment to backdating any eventual pay settlement, even
though a number of the employment agreements had expired in
March.
Mr. Woods said that a number of the employers
wanted to increase staff workloads by increasing their
teaching contact hours. He described this as ‘completely
unacceptable’. “These employers seem to have the view that
staff have to pay for a multi-employer agreement by
accepting concessions on conditions of employment that would
leave them worse off than staff at other polytechnics across
the country,” he said. “They are the very conditions that
enable academic staff to provide quality education of the
kind this country needs”.
Mr Woods said that
multi-employer bargaining was consistent with government
policy which promotes collaboration in the tertiary sector
and encouraged more efficient methods of bargaining.
“Bargaining on a site-by-site basis is a wasteful use of
resources,” he said.
ASTE has agreed to a request from
the employers to go into mediation on Friday in an attempt
to resolve the impasse. “We will enter mediation in a
genuine attempt to resolve this problem, but if agreement is
not reached at mediation our national executive has the
mandate to proceed with strike action,” said Mr.
Woods.
Staff at UNITEC, Waikato Institute of Technology,
Western Institute of Technology at Taranaki, Northand
Polytechnic, Bay of Plenty Polytechnic and the Whitireia
Community Polytechnic will be affected.
Also in Tertiary
Update this week
1. Trespass order withdrawn
2. MPs
pay hike confirms case for university staff
3. Carich
woes continue
4. New NZQA board members
announced
5. Wellington College exempted from fees
maxima
6. Berkeley lecturer detained as a spy in
Iran
7. UK pay talks resume
Trespass order
withdrawn
Massey University has rescinded a trespass
order made against New Zealand University Students’
Association co-president Fleur Fitzsimons after it was
reported in Tertiary Update last week. The order was served
on Ms Fitzsimons by police following the arrest of 12
students protesting against increases in student tuition
fees at Massey.
Massey University vice-chancellor
Professor Judith Kinnear says that on being advised a
trespass order had been issued against Ms Fitzsimons she
instructed that it be rescinded. She said that by the time
the university initially advised the police that it did not
wish to pursue the trespass order it had already been
served.
Ms Fitzsimons said that while she had not yet
been told by the University that the order was withdrawn,
she was pleased with the outcome. “There was no logical
reason for it to be issued in the first place,” she said.
“It was completely unnecessary”.
The vice-chancellor also
said that the university had sought diversion and leniency
in respect of the trespass charges laid by the police
against the 12 students arrested. She noted that the Massey
University Students’ Association had undertaken to pay for
damage caused during the protest.
Massey management and
students are setting up a working group to consider the
development of a policy on student protests. “We want to
ensure that in the future there is certainty about the way
the university handles any protest, so that any confusion
can be avoided,” said Massey University Students’
Association President, Andrea Grant.
MPs pay hike confirms
case for university staff
The pay hike for members of
parliament, announced last week, confirms the need for
salaries in the university sector to lift substantially
according to the National President of the Association of
University Staff, Dr Bill Rosenberg.
Dr Rosenberg said
that prior to 1988, backbench members of parliament and
university senior lecturers had the same salaries, both set
by Higher Salaries Commission. The latest increase now gives
those MPs a margin of $36,671, or 50%, over senior
lecturers.
“This further confirms that New Zealand
university salaries are languishing behind both
international and relevant domestic comparators,” said Dr.
Rosenberg. “It also seems extraordinary that government
ministers, a number of whom have been university staff, have
accepted their increased salaries without question, yet
refuse to adequately address unsatisfactory levels of
university funding. This is particularly galling as they
know that salary increases in the university sector are
reliant on increased funding”.
Dr Rosenberg said that as
recently as last Friday, Associate Education Minister
(Tertiary), Steve Maharey, stated that ‘tertiary education
is a key’ to achieving his government’s vision for New
Zealand as a ‘knowledge society’. Mr. Maharey said that the
“knowledge society is far more than a quick cliché – it’s an
imperative”.
“How can University staff be expected to
achieve this ‘imperative’ when funding has fallen by one
third since 1991?” asked Dr Rosenberg.
University staff
have claimed an increase of 10% per annum over the next
three years for academic staff salaries, and 10% in 2004 for
general staff in addition to increases in job evaluation
alignments to the higher quartiles of the salary
market.
Negotiations resumed in Wellington
today.
Carich woes continue
Attempts to sell the failed
private training establishment, Carich, as a single entity
have failed and it appears likely the assets of the company
will be now be sold or auctioned in parts. It ends any real
prospect of the enterprise continuing. Carich Training,
which had eight campuses throughout the country, went into
receivership last week with debts of about $5
million.
The New Zealand Qualifications Authority (NZQA)
advised on Tuesday that it now has access to records and
will be able to advise students by the end of the week about
alternative courses that will enable them to complete
qualifications started at Carich. NZQA is expecting to
organize a series of meetings, starting in Christchurch and
Hamiltion, to advise students.
The Authority also said it
is making arrangements for students to gain access to their
property, including computer files held on the Carich IT
systems.
Carich students have been advised to wait for
guidance from NZQA before enrolling in other courses.
New
NZQA board members announced
Education Minister Trevor
Mallard has appointed four new members to the board of the
New Zealand Qualifications Authority. The new members are:
Tracey Bridges, a partner in public relations firm Senate
Communications; Peter Chrisp, chief executive of Norske-Skog
Tasman Ltd; Angela Foulkes, former secretary of the Council
of Trade Unions and now an independent consultant; and
Graeme McNally, dean of the Faculty of Commerce, University
of Canterbury and a partner at Deloitte Touche Tohmatsu.
All new members have been appointed for a four-year
term.
Wellington College exempted from fees maxima
The
Wellington College of Education has been allowed by the
Tertiary Education Commission (TEC) to lift tuition fees by
up to 10% for 2004. Along with the Otago College of
Education, Wellington had applied to lift its fees above the
5% permitted by the fees maxima policy on grounds which
included that their fees were significantly behind those of
other colleges of education.
The application by the Otago
College of Education is expected to be considered and a
decision made when the Commission meets later this week.
Meanwhile the Otago University Students Association has
launched a petition against fee increases, as the university
prepares to consider its fee levels. The university, which
has not announced a date for fee setting, is the only
university yet to set its fees.
Worldwatch
Berkeley
lecturer detained as a spy in Iran
An Iranian-American
lecturer at the University of California at Berkeley is
being detained in Iran on charges of espionage. Dariush
Zahedi, an adjunct faculty member in the political-science
department, was arrested in Tehran in late July during a
trip to visit relatives. Mr. Zahedi is a naturalized
American and a former Iranian citizen, and has been a
part-time lecturer in political science at Berkeley for
three years, teaching courses in Middle East studies.
The Iranian government isn't giving any basis for the
arrest, nor have they brought any official charges against
him.
“Like all academics, he has been critical of the
Iranian government, along with the reformists and their
inability to deliver, but that's academic and not
political,” said Hooshang Amirahmadi, a professor of
international development at Rutgers University at Camden
and president of the American-Iranian Council. “He is not a
member of any political group, and there is nothing in his
academic publications that could make the Iranian government
suspicious”.
University officials are concerned about Mr.
Zahedi's detention, although they declined to disclose what
they are doing to win his freedom. A spokesperson for the
university said that the chancellor was well informed of the
situation and that the university would seek to make use of
contacts in Iran help the situation.
UK pay talks
resume
Negotiations between higher education unions and
employers in the United Kingdom resumed on Tuesday this week
following balloting on strike action over failed pay
talks.
The unions had previously rejected a new pay offer
which would have given increase of up to 7.6% over two
years. The unions have argued that salaries are 28% behind
comparable pay rates and had claimed an increase of 14% over
the next three years in addition to further increases linked
to average UK salary settlements.
A vote by the Leeds
University senate has backed the unions’ position, calling
on officers of the university to “use all their influence”
to prevent “the possible breakdown of national pay
bargaining arrangements for academic and academic-related
staff”.
********************************************************************************
Tertiary
Update is compiled weekly on Thursdays by
the
Association of University Staff
PO Box 11 767 Wellington,
New Zealand.
Phone (+64 4) 915 6690, Fax (+64 4) 915
6699
Back issues are archived on the AUS website:
http://www.aus.ac.nz.
Direct enquiries to Marty
Braithwaite, AUS Communications Officer, email:
marty.braithwaite@aus.ac.nz