AUS Tertiary Update
National university
bargaining deferred
Bargaining for new national
collective employment agreements for academic and general
staff in New Zealand’s seven traditional universities has
been deferred for the remainder of the year. This follows
progress in national bargaining, most notably an agreement
by university employers to engage in a working party with
the unions to look at the form of bargaining which would be
most productive in the sector. This includes looking at the
benefits of multi-employer and multi-union employment
agreements.
The employers have also agreed to work with
the unions on a “white paper” on funding and salaries which
would form the basis of lobbying Government, and have agreed
on a joint union and employer request for tripartite
meetings with Government to identify and address issues
facing the sector.
The change came during last-minute
negotiations called in an attempt to avert national strike
action, scheduled to take place throughout May.
Association of University Staff General Secretary Helen
Kelly said the deferral did not signal any lessening of
commitment to national bargaining and she expected new
national negotiations to begin early next year.
“The
decision to revert to enterprise agreements in this
bargaining round came only after Massey and Canterbury
Universities gave a clear indication that they believed
there may be benefit in national collective agreements,” she
said. “That is a significant change and one we have
acknowledged by deferring national bargaining this
year.”
Ms Kelly said the change was important given the
employers’ refusal, to that point, to engage with each other
or the unions on a collective and cooperative basis. “It
certainly gives us a practical base from which to address
funding and salary issues in a productive manner,” she
said.
While national bargaining has been deferred,
settlement of local agreements will now depend on acceptable
pay offers being made.
Union members at Auckland,
Waikato, Victoria (academic only), and Canterbury will
consider the pay offers made to them over the next
fortnight. Those at Lincoln, Massey, Otago, and Victoria
general staff have rejected their salary offers and will
determine whether to seek further negotiations with their
employers or to take industrial action.
Also in Tertiary
Update this week . . . . .
1. New Waikato Vice-Chancellor
announced
2. New TEC appointments
3. Students petition
for living allowance
4. Demographic data missing from
PBRF report
5. More on the PBRF
6. IDF kills
Palestinian lecturer “by mistake”
7. Warnings over
research funding
8. UK staff settle pay dispute
New
Waikato Vice-Chancellor announced
Professor Roy Crawford
has been appointed as the new Vice-Chancellor of Waikato
University. He is currently a Professor of Mechanical
Engineering and Senior Pro Vice-Chancellor at Queen's
University in Belfast, Northern Ireland, where he has
special responsibility for research and
development.
Announcing Professor Crawford's appointment
today, Waikato’s Chancellor John Gallagher said: “His
research and business skills and experience, coupled with
his very high-level academic experience, make him the ideal
person to lead the university, particularly at a time when
research performance affects our funding and we are looking
to start up more businesses based on university-developed
intellectual property.”
Professor Crawford has had
substantial and highly successful experience in Britain’s
Research Assessment Exercise (RAE), having led his School of
Mechanical and Process Engineering from grade 3 in the 1992
RAE to the top grade 5 in 1996 and again in 2001.
Queen's
is now rated in the top 20 for research power in the UK
“which is due in no small measure to Roy's leadership in
this area”, says Queen's Vice-Chancellor Professor Sir
George Bain.
Professor Crawford’s appointment takes
effect from 1 January 2005 after the current Vice-Chancellor
Bryan Gould retires.
New TEC appointments
New
appointments have been made to the eight-person Board of the
Tertiary Education Commission (TEC) to replace its Chair, Dr
Andrew West, and Board member, Dr Ian Smith. Associate
Minister of Education (Tertiary) Steve Maharey has announced
that Cabinet has confirmed the appointment of Kaye Turner as
the Acting Chairperson and has appointed current Board
member Shona Butterfield as Acting Deputy Chairperson.
Professor Graeme Fraser has been appointed as a new member
of the Board.
Professor Fraser, formerly Massey
University’s Assistant Vice-Chancellor (academic), chairs
the New Zealand Qualifications Authority Board and Health
Research Council, previously chaired the Committee on
University Academic Programmes, and has served on
polytechnic sector quality-assurance committees.
Former
TEC members Dr West and Dr Smith have respectively taken up
positions as Chief Executive of AgResearch and head of the
Australian Nuclear Science and Technology Organisation in
Sydney.
A decision about a permanent chairperson for the
Commission will be made later in the year.
Students
petition for living allowance
A high school leader has
joined tertiary student leaders to present members of
parliament with 15 boxes of petition forms, containing more
than 30,000 signatures, calling for a universal living
allowance for all tertiary students.
Cashmere High School
Head Boy Luke Doubleday, from Christchurch, joined the
students on Tuesday this week when the petition was formally
presented to Green’s Co-leader Rod Donald and
representatives from several other political parties.
New
Zealand University Students’ Association Co-President Fleur
Fitzsimons said that they had unprecedented support for the
petition’s call for the living allowance for all students.
“These signatures represent many more voters who think we
should move on from talking about the problems and move onto
a solution – fast,” she said.
“The Government should take
note of the support this campaign is receiving from school
students who will probably miss out on a living allowance,”
Ms Fitzsimons said. “Thousands of them from all over the
country are angry about this issue.
Progressive MP Matt
Robson welcomed the petition, saying the student debt-burden
was compounded by the fact that many students borrow money
to pay for living costs. “Students should not have to borrow
money for living expenses,” he said.
Demographic data
missing from PBRF report
Missing from the Tertiary
Education Commission’s report on the Performance-Based
Research Fund (PBRF) is any demographic analysis of the
results. TEC’s 2003 guide on the PBRF advised that the
report would contain a range of demographic data about
eligible staff, including ethnicity, gender, age, tenure,
and employment status (full-time versus part-time).
Any
such analysis is, however, completely missing from the
report, other than of students completing research degrees.
It says that not all Tertiary Education Organisations
provided the relevant data and so it has not been possible
to provide comprehensive and reliable demographic data. A
spokesperson for the TEC advised Tertiary Update that it
does not intend, at this juncture, any follow-up report on
demographic issues.
AUS National President Dr Bill
Rosenberg said that the lack of this data makes it
impossible to investigate rigorously whether there are any
systemic biases that disadvantaged any particular groups of
staff, such as women or new staff establishing academic
careers. “The lack of data is very disappointing given that
there are already concerns over potential biases,” said Dr
Rosenberg. “The TEC’s own Report acknowledges problems
recognising the quality of the research produced by staff
early in their careers, for example.” Dr Rosenberg said it
was very important to establish a baseline for comparison
with future PBRF rounds.
Dr Rosenberg said it would not
be unreasonable for the TEC to go back to institutions and
ask for the data they were required to provide in the first
place so that this could be remedied.
More on the PBRF
The TEC has advised that it will proceed with a
consultation process in a few weeks about an international
comparison of research quality involving New Zealand
universities. The Commission is working on a process to
obtain views about making an international comparison as
well as the methodological considerations which would need
to be considered. It is not expected that this will get
underway for several weeks yet.
The reports of each of
the thirteen assessment panels that evaluated the Evidence
Portfolios of almost 6,000 research academics, as a part of
the PBRF process, are now available on the TEC website:
www.tec.govt.nz
An independent evaluation of the process
used in the TEC’s quality evaluations is being undertaken
and will be available later this year.
Worldwatch
IDF
kills Palestinian lecturer “by mistake”
The Israeli
Defence Force (IDF) has admitted that it accidentally shot
and killed a lecturer at the Arab-American University in
Jenin last week when troops were pursuing two Hamas
operatives. An investigation by the IDF Central Command and
the coordinator of government activities in the territories
found that the lecturer had accidentally wandered into the
area of the chase and had no connection with the wanted
men.
Although military sources initially claimed that he
was linked to the two wanted Hamas men, Palestinian sources
said that the lecturer was walking to his family home when
shot.
The IDF said that soldiers spotted two armed men in
the area and opened fire. One of the men was injured but
both suspects managed to flee. An attack dog was released
and, for some reason, attacked the lecturer.
The soldiers
then fired at him from a distance. He was not
armed.
Warnings over research funding
The Federation of
Australian Scientific and Technological Societies (FASTS)
has warned the Australian Government that it must deliver at
least $A4.6 billion in research spending if it is to
maintain funding at the present share of Australia’s gross
domestic product. FASTS said that even under conservative
inflation rates a big boost was required to ensure that
research spending did not go backwards.
The warning came
prior to Australia’s Budget to be delivered next Tuesday
night. Prime Minister John Howard is expected to announce a
shake-up of funding, with priority funding given to research
that has commercial potential.
Supporting FASTS’ call for
increased investment, the National Tertiary Education Union
(NTEU), which represents many of Australia’s research staff,
said the Government must deliver at least a $6.8 billion
increase over its 2003-04 levels of expenditure until the
end of the decade, simply to maintain the status
quo.
“The research community is expecting the Government,
not just to maintain current spending, but for increased
investment targeting infrastructure development, university
block-grants, adequate support for publicly-funded research
agencies and initiatives aimed at research students and
encouraging business research and development,” said NTEU
National President Carolyn Allport.
UK staff settle pay
dispute
University staff in the United Kingdom have
voted, in a postal ballot conducted by the Association of
University Teachers (AUT), to accept a pay offer by their
employers. The result will see pay rises of between 8.7% and
24.7% over the next two years at UK’s “old universities”.
The average increase is understood to be around
12.2%.
The new agreement comes after months of
negotiation, culminating in industrial action across the UK
earlier this year. It removes threatened losses of career
earnings, safeguards present pay and grading links between
academic and related staff, and provides a national
agreement.
A total of 22,238 union members, or 52.1% of
the eligible AUT membership, participated in the ballot with
84.5% of votes in favour of settlement.
AUT General
Secretary Sally Hunt welcomed the result, saying that union
members had assessed the offer and wholeheartedly agreed
with the recommendation of the union’s Executive and
National Council to accept the
deal.
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AUS
Tertiary Update is compiled weekly on Thursdays and
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