AUS Tertiary Update Vol 4 No 11
CALL FOR MEDICAL
EDUCATION SALARY PARITY
The AUS National President,
Neville Blampied has blamed the funding crisis facing the
university sector for the failure of medical education to
keep pace with salaries in the hospital system. In a letter
to the Minister of Health, Annette King, he says AUS has
tried for many years to negotiate salaries that are
competitive with those in public hospitals, but has been
unable to make progress because of the widespread funding
crisis in the university sector. Mr Blampied lays the blame
for the funding crisis squarely with "deliberate government
action over more than a decade". He points out that the
quality of the health system depends on maintaining high
quality medical education and research. He says, however,
that the capacity of both New Zealand's medical schools to
deliver graduates trained to the highest international
standards is now seriously under threat. "We need immediate
action to close the enormous gaps that have developed
between academic and state and private sector salaries, and
to restore investment in quality university education across
the board," he says. Mr Blampied calls on Mrs King to
support AUS efforts to reverse the damage done by the past
decade of "severe underfunding".
The Vice-Chancellor of
the University of Otago, Professor Graeme Fogelberg has also
written to the Minister of Health advising her of the
growing crisis in the Otago University Medical School
because it is unable to offer salaries on a par with those
enjoyed by public and private hospital staff in New Zealand
and overseas.
Also in Tertiary Update this week:
1.
Minister releases papers on CIT closure
2. ASTE battles
to save CIT staff jobs
3. "College of Education" to
stay
4. End of strike by academic staff in
Hawaii
MINISTER RELEASES PAPERS ON CIT CLOSURE
The
Minister in charge of Tertiary Education, Steve Maharey has
released official papers on which he based his decision that
the Central Institute of Technology (CIT) be disestablished
and combined with Hutt Valley Polytechnic (HVP) to form the
Wellington Institute of Technology. Mr Maharey said he was
making public the Ministry of Education's recommendation
paper and its analysis of public submissions on the HVP/CIT
combination. An independent analysis of the feasibility of
operating from both the Petone and Heretaunga sites has also
been released. He said he was releasing the information to
" to promote the transparency of the decision taken on CIT’s
future". The papers can be viewed at the Ministry of
Education website:
http://www.minedu.govt.nz/web/document/document_page.cfm?id=5678.
The Minister says a small amount of information has been
withheld from the Ministry's recommendation paper because of
commercial considerations. The Minister also points out
that the cost to the Crown of combining the two institutions
is $5m less than stated in the recommendation paper.
Meanwhile, a working party has been established by
Government to come up with options for the future of the CIT
site at Heretaunga, bearing in mind Upper Hutt's regional
development needs. The terms of reference for the working
party are to be published before the end of this month.
ASTE BATTLES TO SAVE CIT STAFF JOBS
The union
representing CIT staff, the Association of Staff in Tertiary
Education (ASTE) is angry that the 220 odd staff at CIT
staff are to be declared redundant under the move. About
120
will be offered jobs with the Wellington Institute
of Technology [WIT], but in a news release, the Association
says the "consultation" document given to staff makes it
clear that they will have to apply for the WIT jobs and go
through an interview process with outside consultants. ASTE
is arguing that where a course is to be retained, staff
should simply transfer across on their current salary and
conditions. If there is a competitive situation, it says,
then the "normal surplus staffing processes" should apply.
ASTE says those CIT staff accepting jobs at the WIT are also
being required to waive all rights to redundancy, even
though they may be offered jobs on less favourable
conditions.ASTE is also sceptical about the working party
brief to come up with suggestions as to uses for the CIT
Heretaunga campus. It would, the Association says, be "a
prime site to be sold off to a trans-national private
language school with its superb hostel facilities and
excellent lecture theatres.
"COLLEGE OF EDUCATION" TO
STAY
The Government says it will not act on the Tertiary
Education Advisory Commission's (TEAC) recommendation that
the term "college of education" no longer be subject to
legal protection. The Minister, Steve Maharey gave the
assurance to tertiary education sector leaders as the
consultation process on TEAC's "Sharing the System" report
drew to a close. Mr Maharey said he did not believe TEAC had
suggested the legal protection be removed as part of any
attempt to undermine the colleges. Rather, he said, it was
a case of the Commission believing that the term did not
need to be protected. The Minister said the debate
generated over that particular recommendation had "risked
diverting attention from the main task of developing a
framework which can prepare the tertiary education system
for a lead role in developing New Zealand as a knowledge
economy and society." For that reason, he said he would not
be taking the proposal to Cabinet. "Essentially, if the
Colleges and their students feel it is important to them
that the term continue to protected, then it will be," he
said.
WORLD WATCH
UNIVERSITY OF HAWAII ACADEMIC
STAFF END 13-DAY STRIKE:
University of Hawaii’s staff
union, an affiliate of the National Education Association
[NEA], has reached a contract settlement with the State,
ending a 13-day strike on the system’s 10 campuses. The
3,100 members of the University of Hawaii Professional
Assembly had joined a strike by 13,000 members of the Hawaii
State Teachers’ Association. The strike -- which began
about two weeks ago -- was the first time the entire
education system in a US state has staged a joint strike.
The issues under dispute were salary, workload equivalencies
for community college faculty, and pay for lecturers.
Faculty members went out in strength on the picket lines,
including more than 850 people a day at the University of
Hawaii's Manoa campus. Hawaii ranks 50th in State
appropriations for higher education and salaries are lower
than for similar institutions elsewhere in the country. Full
professors at the University of Hawaii earn an average of
$US77,300, compared with the national average of $US89,800
among doctoral institutions. The tentative settlement
includes a flat rate increase in the first year, a 6%
increase in the second, a 3% increase for lecturers in both
years.
AUS Executive Director, Rob Crozier, at the request of the NEA, has been in Hawaii helping with the organisation of the strike by academic staff.
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