AUS Tertiary Update
University staff vote on industrial action
Union
negotiators are recommending that, unless significant
progress is made in the next two days of bargaining on 14
and 15 June, university staff withhold first-semester
examination grades and take national strike action on 20
July. They also recommend that it be followed by rolling
stoppages over the following fortnight culminating in a
further national strike on 3 August.
The recommendation,
for unprecedented industrial action in the sector, follows
the rejection by university employers of union proposals for
new national collective employment agreements for academic
and general staff. The employers say they are unconvinced by
union arguments, and made salary offers, at negotiations in
Wellington last week, which are conditional on
single-employer bargaining.
The salary offers ranged
between 2 percent at Massey University and 3.25 percent, as
part of a three-year deal, for academic staff at Victoria
University. The University of Auckland has already agreed to
pay staff an increase of 4.5 percent following a recent
Employment Court case which established that they were
required to participate in the national bargaining process.
The only university yet to make a salary offer is Otago.
Some of the universities are also claiming significant
claw-backs to conditions of employment.
The unions have
claimed a 30 percent salary increase over the next three
years for academic staff, and a 16 percent increase over the
same period, along with a proposal to develop a national job
evaluation scheme, for general staff. A minimum increase of
10 percent has been sought for this year.
The combined
unions’ lead advocate, Jeff Rowe, said that the employers’
salary offers were inadequate and would be unacceptable to
union members. “The employers claim that they do not have
the ability to pay more in the current funding environment,
and that they have made their best offers,” he said. “This
is clear evidence that the unions’ claim for national
multi-employer collective agreements is the only viable
strategy to alleviate the crisis in university salaries, one
which government ministers have now openly
recognised.”
Mr Rowe said the salary increases which had
been claimed were moderate ones and would barely bring New
Zealand staff salaries into line with their Australian
counterparts. “A 10 percent salary increase this year would
mean that lecturers’ salaries would still be similar rates
to those paid to kindergarten, primary and secondary school
teachers,” he said.
The ballots on industrial action
began yesterday and will conclude on Friday 10 June.
The
next two days of bargaining will be assisted by an
industrial mediator.
More details on the bargaining,
including the employers’ salary offers, can be found on the
AUS website:
http://www.aus.ac.nz/national_bargaining.htm
Also in
Tertiary Update this week
1. Waikato faces staff
cuts?
2. Funding category review completed
3. Funding
priorities to change
4. Student debt figures provoke
reaction
5. Thousands protest in
Australia
6. Professor deported from
Botswana
7. Oxford under challenge as UK’s top
university
Waikato faces staff cuts?
Waikato University
looks set to cut staff numbers according to a memo to staff
in the Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences (FASS) which says
that budgetary problems, compounded by declining enrolments,
are of such a scale that they must be dealt with through
significantly reduced expenditure. “In the case of most
schools, including FASS, this can only be achieved through a
reduction in salary costs,” reads the memo which was sent to
staff on Monday this week by Professor Dan Zirker, Dean of
the Faculty.
The memo initiates a consultation process
aimed at developing a plan for addressing what are described
as “further steps” which now must be taken to achieve
budgetary requirements for 2005 and beyond.
In a proposed
review of general and academic staffing levels in the
Faculty, Professor Zirker intends to look at
student-to-staff ratios, the cost of the delivery of
programmes and departments, the continuing viability of
“existing majors”, the ratio of general to academic staff
and the rationalisation of administrative
procedures.
Association of University Staff Branch
Organiser Sandy O’Neil said that University management was
consulting the unions and, while they would engage fully in
the consultation process, it seemed inevitable that there
would be an adverse effect on staff numbers. The review of
FASS is one of a number being conducted in the University
which has already, or has the potential to, lead to job
losses.
Sandy O’Neil said it was ironic that the threat
of cuts to salary expenditure came soon after the release of
Waikato’s new ten-year Vision and Way Forward document,
which says the University will deliver a world-class
education and research portfolio, provide a full and dynamic
university experience which is distinctive in character and
pursue strong international linkages to advance knowledge.
“The University proposes enhancing its academic reputation
by establishing world-class facilities for teaching and
research, and wants to attract top-quality staff and
students. Cutting salary costs is counter-productive and
will only make it more difficult for the University to
achieve its vision,” said Ms O’Neil.
The Dean will meet
with staff over the next few weeks and consider submissions
on his proposals in July and August. Recommendations will
then be submitted to the Vice-Chancellor for a final
decision, expected to be taken in late August.
Funding
category review completed
The Tertiary Education
Commission (TEC) has released the report of the Funding
Category Review (FCR) Project Group which has been
identifying potential funding anomalies in the student
component funding system for tertiary education
organisations (TEOs). The report is the result of
substantial work by a cross-section of representatives from
the tertiary sector as well as personnel from TEC and the
Ministry of Education.
The FCR Project Group report says
that student component funding is based on classifying
individual courses, and in some cases programmes, into one
of thirty-nine defined classifications based primarily on
the predominant subject matter. However, since the
introduction of the current funding regime, it says, the
resourcing requirements for providing different types of
courses and the demands for subjects and disciplines have
changed considerably.
The methodology used in the FCR
included a comparison of the revenue and costs for each area
under investigation within each TEO against the revenue and
costs for the respective TEO as a whole.
Included among
the findings are that the weighted average income-to-cost
ratio for natural and physical sciences is 9 percent lower
than the whole-of-TEO averages, while the differential in
optical sciences is 15 percent. It also shows there is
evidence that undergraduate course funding cross-subsidises
taught postgraduate courses which, in turn, cost 119 percent
more to run than undergraduate courses.
Any decision on
whether to adjust funding rates will be made by the
Government after taking into account the content of the
report alongside other policy initiatives. $132.7 million
from Budget 2005 and previous budgets has been allocated to
increase funding rates in “strategically relevant areas” as
part of the FCR. These include natural and physical
sciences, trades and technical, agriculture and
horticulture, optical science and osteopathy.
The full
report and findings can be found
at:
http://www.tec.govt.nz/funding/ttf/keypolicydevelopments/fund_cat_review.htm
Funding
priorities to change
The Minister of Education, Trevor
Mallard, has told tertiary education institutions that those
who have not exploited 5.1 community education will not lose
any funding as a result of the current
tertiary-education-funding reviews. The assurance follows
indications from the Minister that announcements will be
made soon that will involve shifting funding from
low-priority and low-quality courses to areas of high
priority and excellence.
Trevor Mallard was also
responding to a statement from National Party Education
spokesperson, Bill English, who said that polytechnics would
be hit hard by the Minister’s move to renege on a three-year
deal to “wind down” from the controversial courses. “Mr
Mallard’s actions are totally unfair to polytechs that did
not exploit the community education loopholes,” he
said.
A number of 5.1 community education courses gained
notoriety last year, among them Christchurch Polytechnic’s
Cool-IT programme, and those described by Mr English as
“phantom computer” and “sing-along radio courses.
Trevor
Mallard said that the current reviews of tertiary education
expenditure are designed to ensure that funding is
reinvested in, and shifts to, areas of demonstrated quality.
“This is about ensuring taxpayers get value for money, but
it is not to save the Government money as the savings will
be reinvested in tertiary education,” he said. “It’s ironic
that Bill English spent most of last year criticising
community education funding, labelling it as a “scandalous
waste of taxpayer funds”. Now he wants to keep it. So what
does National stand for?”
Student debt figures provoke
reaction
More than seven hundred people have student
loans of more than $100,000, an increase of 85 percent in a
year, according to the March 2005 quarterly report on the
Student Loan Scheme. The highest recorded individual debt is
$249,747.
The report showed the average loan balance was
$14,871 with the median balance $10,206. While 0.15% of the
461,632 borrowers had a balance of more than $100,000, just
fewer than 50 percent had a balance of less than $10,000.
The report also showed that a total of $6.91 billion is
owed, with $538 million of that by people now living
overseas.
The latest figures have drawn a mixed response,
with the New Zealand University Students’ Association
(NZUSA) quick to point to a 70 percent increase in the
number of student loans with loan balances of over $80,000
and a 40 percent increase in balances over $50,000. NZUSA
Co-President Andrew Kirton said that, although there had
been small improvements in the scheme, Labour could not deny
that its policy of high tertiary student fees and severely
restricted allowances has failed thousands of students and
graduates.”
By contrast, the New Zealand
Vice-Chancellors’ Committee Executive Director, Lindsay
Taiaroa, said that most of the borrowers with a loan higher
than $100,000 would be medical and dental students who would
repay their debt relatively quickly because of their higher
earning capacity after graduation.
That explanation did
not sit well with the New Zealand Medical Association whose
President, Ross Boswell, pointed out that the flow-on cost
of repaying high student debt may be that general
practitioners would be forced to charge patients
more.
Minister of Education Trevor Mallard said that,
while the loan scheme was not perfect, it worked pretty
well. “The Government is committed to making the loan scheme
fairer and easing the financial burden on students,” he
said. “We have frozen interest on loans while students are
studying and we have changed repayment policies so that half
of all repayments go towards the principal of the loan.
Interest no longer mounts up like it used
to.”
Worldwatch
Thousands protest in
Australia
Thousand of tertiary-education staff marched in
Australia yesterday, protesting against proposed Federal
Government workplace relations changes for universities.
Eight unions supported the national day of protest against
the Government’s plan to tie $A1.5 billion in Commonwealth
funding to hard-line industrial reforms, including forcing
staff on to individual Australian Workplace agreements with
inferior conditions and introducing more casual and
fixed-term employment arrangements. Rallies attracted more
than 2,000 staff in Sydney, 1500 in Melbourne and 800 in
Perth, and protest action was also taken at a number of
university campuses.
National Tertiary Education Union
President Dr Carolyn Allport said that yesterday’s action
was the first in a month of activities being planned by the
Australian trade union movement against the Howard
Government’s workplace relations changes which are due to
become law after 1 July.
Professor deported from
Botswana
An Australian academic, Kenneth Good, has lost
his appeal and been deported from Botswana after criticising
its Government. Good, for fifteen years a professor in the
Department of Political and Administrative Studies at the
University of Botswana, was detained on the orders of the
country’s President in February after it was learned he was
to give a seminar critiquing the growing autocracy in that
country and criticising the President of the southern
African country.
Botswana’s Attorney General told the
Court that the President considered Professor Good a threat
to national security and had the right, under immigration
law, to expel him from the country.
Professor Good, who
is now understood to be in South Africa, said the decision
symbolised the death of democracy in the country.
The
University is reported to have declined to comment on
Professor Good’s deportation, saying it was a matter for the
State.
Oxford under challenge as UK’s top
university
Oxford has held off Cambridge for the fourth
successive year at the top of the rankings of the United
Kingdom’s best universities, according to the latest Times
Higher rankings. It says that Oxford’s spending power gives
it the edge in the league table, but Cambridge holds a clear
intellectual lead, coming top in twenty-five of the
individual subject tables compared with Oxford’s ten. Unlike
Oxford, Cambridge also ranks in the Top Ten for overall
teaching quality, a listing led by Dundee and
York.
Despite narrowing Oxford’s lead this year,
Cambridge loses out principally in the calculation of
spending on facilities and student services. More of
Oxford’s money goes through the central University than at
Cambridge, where colleges have a bigger share of the
spending.
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AUS
Tertiary Update is compiled weekly on Thursdays and
distributed freely to members of the Association of
University Staff and others. Back issues are available on
the AUS website: www.aus.ac.nz . Direct enquires should be
made to Marty Braithwaite, AUS Communications Officer,
email:
marty.braithwaite@aus.ac.nz