AUS Tertiary Update
Protest action likely over
university negotiations
Protest action is on the cards
following the latest offers in negotiations between
university unions and employers. Unions, representing staff
in seven universities, initiated bargaining last year for
new national collective employment agreements for academic
and general staff to replace the 13 enterprise (site)
agreements previously negotiated. Pay claims of up to 10%
per annum over the next three years were also filed in an
attempt to address long-standing national and international
pay disparities.
Negotiations, which resumed in
Wellington on Wednesday last week, failed to make progress
after all seven employer parties rejected any move to
national collective agreements and reiterated pay offers
ranging between around 2% and 2.8%.
The employers earlier
proposed that a joint approach be made to Government on the
issue of university funding, but this was contingent on
enterprise bargaining, and on the pay offers outlined
above.
The level of government funding to universities
has fallen, in real terms, by 21% per student over the past
decade and the unions believe this is now having a
detrimental effect on the quality of university education
and the student experience.
The unions’ lead advocate,
Association of University Staff Industrial Officer Jeff
Rowe, said that negotiations were adjourned after the
employers failed to lift their pay offers to a level which
would have allowed interim settlements while the approach to
Government on funding was progressed. “We looked for a sign
that the employers were serious about resolving recognised
pay problems, but the current offers give no confidence that
they are genuine in this regard,” he said. “Their proposal
will be regarded as feeble, and seen simply as delaying any
attempt to seriously address funding problems which beset
the sector.”
There are no plans for negotiations to
resume.
Between 23 February and 4 March, staff at the
seven universities will hold stopwork meetings at which a
recommendation will be made to reject the offers and endorse
a low-level industrial campaign, with stronger action
foreshadowed if satisfactory progress is not made.
Also in
Tertiary Update this week
1. Search continues for new V-C
at Auckland
2. PBRF portfolios not to be published
3.
Wananga to defend $10m Carich claim
4. Polytech
multi-employer deal settled
5. Ire at export education
levy announcement
6. Strike action to hit UK
universities
7. Student strike spreads in
Guinea
Search continues for new V-C at Auckland
It is
understood that the current search for a new Vice-Chancellor
for the University of Auckland has not resulted in an
appointment being made, and that the search will now
continue. Current Vice-Chancellor, Dr John Hood, leaves to
head Oxford University in the United Kingdom later in the
year.
The international search for Dr Hood's replacement
is thought to have drawn as many as 60 applicants from whom
four candidates were shortlisted and interviewed.
Subsequent advice that the search is continuing has lead
to speculation that none of the shortlisted candidates will
be appointed as a result of the current process.
PBRF
portfolios not to be published
Formatting problems, along
with grammatical and factual errors, have contributed to the
decision of the Tertiary Education Commission (TEC) not to
publish the evidence portfolios of academic staff on its
website when the results of the Performance-Based Research
Fund (PBRF) are made public next month.
Education Review
reports PBRF Manager Roger Staples saying that the quality
of the evidence portfolios was variable, and the TEC did not
have time to tidy them up for publication. Although the TEC
had initially agreed to correct the portfolios, Mr. Staples
said it was not able to do so because of the high number of
mistakes. In addition to the factual and grammatical errors,
there were formatting problems caused because portfolios
were submitted using software built by some institutions
rather than the official PBRF software.
Mr. Staples said
the decision did not mean that evidence portfolios submitted
to the TEC would not be published in 2005. He said that
institutions would have more time to tidy up the portfolios
and researchers would be more familiar with TEC's
requirements.
Meanwhile, the Association of University
Staff has announced it will ask the Privacy Commissioner for
a ruling on whether it is appropriate under privacy
legislation for individual PBRF scores to be returned to
institutions. It follows a successful application by
Auckland AUS Branch President, Dr Peter Wills, to have his
personal score remain confidential.
Wananga to defend $10m
Carich claim
Maori tertiary provider Te Wananga o
Aotearoa said it would fight a $10 million claim against it
by the receivers of collapsed private training establishment
Carich Computer Training.
Te Wananga o Aotearoa Chief
Executive Rongo Wetere is reported by NZPA saying the
Wananga had rejected an offer of mediation and that he was
happy to defend their position legally. “I'm pretty relaxed
about that, in fact I think they'll have some difficulty
about that given the situation,” he said.
Carich, which
was New Zealand's largest private education provider, went
into receivership last year owing about $8.8 m, leaving more
than 200 staff jobless and 3000 students without a
school.
Mr. Wetere dashed any hope that litigation could
be avoided by out-of-court negotiations. “They would be
dreaming. They would be dreaming. There is no way I'm doing
any out-of-court settlement. If they think they've got a
legit claim, we want to take it upfront. We're not doing any
deals,” he said. "The failure to perform was on the other
side. We won't be doing any deals, you can tell him (Carich
receiver, Kerryn Downey) that.”
The claim centres on an
alleged breach of a joint-venture agreement under which
Carich was to train 2500 students on behalf of the Wananga.
Mr. Downey said Mr. Wetere “defaulted” on the contract
shortly before the course started in March last
year.
Adding to the intrigue over the Carich collapse,
The Press reports that it was technically insolvent long
before Chief Executive Caron Taurima was named New Zealand's
Entrepreneur of the Year in 2003. Independent financial
performance reports, released to The Press under the
Official Information Act, raise concerns about Carich's
deteriorating financial position in the first five months of
2003.
Based on the information provided by Carich
directors, the company was considered insolvent on a
balance-sheet basis as at July 2003, and by October it was
believed to be insolvent in a cashflow sense because it
could not meet debts as they fell due. Taurima was later
named the Ernst and Young Entrepreneur of the
Year.
Polytech multi-employer deal settled
The
Association of Staff in Tertiary Education (ASTE) has agreed
to a new multi-employer collective employment agreement with
six polytechnics and institutes of technology after staff
voted overwhelmingly in favour of the agreement.
ASTE
National President, Lloyd Woods, said it was a major
achievement for ASTE and all of the members who participated
in what has been a long drawn out process. “We are all very
pleased with the outcome as it proves that it is possible
and beneficial to negotiate common conditions across a
number of employers,” he said.
Mr. Woods went on to say
that despite the fact that the process had taken 23 days of
face-to-face negotiations, significant strike action, and
mediation to reach a satisfactory outcome, members believed
it was worthwhile. “We are part of a national teaching
service and our conditions of work and rates of pay should
be negotiated in a way that reflects this,” Lloyd Woods
said.
He added that he hoped the Employment Relations Act
would be amended to ensure that multi-employer bargaining
becomes the norm rather than something workers have to fight
for before they can even begin talking about what will be in
their collective agreements.
The agreement covers the
Waikato Institute of Technology, Auckland's Unitec,
Taranaki's Western Institute of Technology, Northland
Polytechnic, Bay of Plenty Polytechnic, and Whitireia
Community Polytechnic.
Ire at export education levy
announcement
An announcement by Government this week that
private training establishments (PTEs) would be paying one
rate for the export education levy and that all other export
education providers would be paying a lower rate has aroused
the ire of private tertiary training
providers.
"Submissions to the Education and Science
Committee on the Export Education Levy (Amendment) Bill only
closed last Friday, but the Government is already assuming
that there will be no amendments and that the Bill will be
passed. The Bill would allow the Government to charge PTEs
for the failures of their competitors despite there being no
other instances where good operators are required to pay for
the business failures of others, even if they are in the
same industry," said Sandra McKersey, President of the New
Zealand Association of Private Education Providers
(NZAPEP).
NZAPEP is opposed to the new levy, which is
being introduced in response to the high profile collapses
of Modern Age Institute of Learning and Carich training
centres last year.
AUS National President Dr Bill
Rosenberg said it was entirely appropriate that PTEs faced a
higher levy given their performance in the sector. “A high
failure rate of PTEs risks damaging the entire sector, and
this is not a cost which should not be picked up by the
taxpayer and public institutions,” he
said.
Worldwatch
Strike action to hit UK
universities
University staff in the United Kingdom are
planning to join with students next week in protest at
attacks on pay and conditions of employment for staff and
plans for variable top-up fees for students.
Staff voted
overwhelmingly to reject the latest pay offers from
university employers that would have introduced a
significant restructuring of university salary scales.
Association of University Teachers (AUT) General
Secretary Sally Hunt hailed the outcome as a stunning rebuff
for the plans tabled by management which, among other
things, would lead to smaller annual salary increments. "Our
members have comprehensively rejected the employers'
proposals that would lead to many lecturers losing £6,300
over eight years, researchers losing £17,300 over nine
years, and senior support staff losing £47,000 over 21
years," she said.
The AUT's decision to hold a ballot for
strike action has been endorsed by the National Union of
Students (NUS). In a joint statement with Ms Hunt, NUS
President Mandy Telford said students recognised that
industrial action may be necessary by the AUT to protect its
members' interests. "Further," she said, "the NUS supports
the AUT in its struggle against the employers' attacks on
academic and related staff pay and conditions."
The week
of action will see a day of strikes at institutions in each
of the UK's four home nations respectively, and one day of
strikes across the whole of the UK on Wednesday 25
February.
Student strike spreads in Guinea
Seventeen
students have been arrested at Gamal Abdel Nasser University
in the Guinea capital of Conakry, triggering a crisis that
threatens to spark a nationwide strike by students at public
universities across the West African country.
The
University's 14,000 students walked out of their classes
last week and pledged not to return until one of their
leaders, whom the police had arrested, was released. The
authorities had accused the student of leading political
agitation at the University aimed at increasing students'
$US10 monthly stipends and reinstating 11 students who were
expelled last year from Kankan University, about 350 miles
inland from the capital. Tensions rose when the police
arrested 16 more student leaders while they were organising
the strike.
The dispute worsened when students at other
universities in the country threatened to join the strike.
Students at the Institute of Geology and Mines, at Boké, 125
miles northwest of Conakry, stayed away from lectures last
week, and their peers at Kankan also are planning to go on
strike.
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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