AUS Tertiary Update Vol. 4 No. 39 8.11.01
In our lead story this
week…..
RESHAPING THE COST CATEGORIES IS THE REAL
PRIORITY!
The Association of University Staff (AUS) has
cautiously welcomed the fourth and final report of the
Tertiary Education Advisory Commission (TEAC) and says its
recommendation for a review of the cost categories for
funding is an absolute imperative for action. The national
president, Neville Blampied says the categories were
established in the early 1990s and have been cut regularly
since then. "It is an acknowledged fact that these cuts have
resulted in a fall in the value of course funding of more
than 20% in real terms over the past decade," he says. "It
is vitally important, therefore, for the Government to
commit itself to giving this review priority and commencing
it as soon as is practicable. Mr Blampied also welcomed the
report's recognition of the importance of staff in the
tertiary sector, calling it "a welcome change after a decade
of neglect by previous governments".
Also in Tertiary
Update this week:
1. Industrial action spreads over pay
claim
2. Global unions day of action
3. Signing of
agreement with waning
4. Adjust allowance thresholds –
students
5. Massey Registrar appointed to Kiwibank
6.
Southern Polytechs braced for trouble
7. Legal opinion
backs free trade fears
INDUSTRIAL ACTION SPREADS OVER PAY
CLAIM
Staff at Wellington's Victoria University have
voted to step up their industrial action in support of their
pay claim by delaying the submission of student grades and
withdrawing their goodwill. Staff also voted to escalate
their industrial action until their claims were settled, and
a further stopwork meeting will be held on 13 December.
Campaign co-ordinator, Reece Walters, says the vote
indicated the anger of staff. "The outcome of this meeting
sends a clear message to Victoria University's
Vice-Chancellor and the government that our staff mean
business." The University is offering Victoria staff an
increase of 1.8%.
Meanwhile academic staff at Lincoln
have withheld second semester examination results for a week
as part of their industrial action campaign following the
breakdown of pay negotiations. Lincoln Association of
University Staff (AUS) branch president, Jim McAloon said
that by the 2 November deadline, 80% of undergraduate
results were missing from the database, showing outstanding
support for the campaign among staff. "While some may have
tried to downplay the effect of the proposed action, to find
such unity among academic staff sends a very strong message
to management," Dr McAloon said.
And AUS members at
Massey are to hold a stopwork tomorrow (Friday) to vote on
their revised pay offer of 1.8% a year for three years.
Jenny Collett of AUS Massey said union negotiators would
recommend that members reject the offer.
GLOBAL UNIONS
DAY OF ACTION
The International Confederation of Free
Trade Unions (ICFTU) has called a day of action tomorrow to
coincide with the opening of the World Trade Organisation
(WTO) meeting in Doha in Qatar. ICFTU has called the action
to highlight the threat globalisation poses to workers'
rights. In New Zealand, individual unions and CTU Local
Affiliate Councils will mark the day with local activities.
AUS members are invited to participate in activities that
are taking place in Auckland, Wellington and Christchurch.
The current WTO meeting is of particular interest to AUS and
other education unions in light of New Zealand's support,
with Australia and the United States, for the further
liberalisation of education services. A recent CTU
conference called on the government to support the removal
of education from all such international trade agreements.
Meanwhile, the combined education unions (AUS, ASTE, NZEI,
PPTA and TIASA) are awaiting a response from the Minister of
Education, Trevor Mallard, Minister of Education, to a
number of questions on the issue they want answers to (see
also “World Watch” below).
SIGNING OF AGREEMENT WITH
WANANGA
The government has signed an agreement with Te
Whare Wananga o Aotearoa in Te Awamutu that for the first
time recognises wananga as an integral part of the state
tertiary education system. The agreement follows a Waitangi
Tribunal report recommending capital works funding for
wananga. Under the agreement, the wananga receives $40
million over 3 years with a suspensory loan facility for the
three years after 2003. In return, the wananga must meet
targets for student growth and retention, and infrastructure
development. Negotiations are still in progress for
assistance for the remaining wananga.
ADJUST ALLOWANCE
THRESHOLDS – STUDENTS
The New Zealand University
Students’ Association (NZUSA) says the government should
immediately adjust the threshold for student allowances to
make up for the fact that the select committee tertiary
inquiry has failed to suggest ways of alleviating student
debt. NZUSA says the thresholds for allowances based on
parental income have not been adjusted in ten years, and
says increasing students' access to allowances would help
students out, and slow down the rise in student
indebtedness. Co-President Andrew Campbell said it was hard
to image that the income thresholds set in 1992 were never
supposed to be adjusted. "There are thousands of students
who should be receiving student allowances who are missing
out," he said. NZUSA statistics show 33% of full-time
tertiary students are currently eligible for an allowance,
down from 45% in 1993.
Meanwhile NZUSA has released new
research showing that students from the wealthiest 20% of
schools are nearly five times more likely to go to
university than students from the poorest schools. Students
from the top schools are also 50% more likely to attend
polytechnics than their counterparts from low decile
schools. Co-president, Andrew Campbell says the research
shows that equal access to tertiary education remains a myth
in New Zealand.
MASSEY REGISTRAR APPOINTED TO
KIWIBANK
Massey University's registrar, Adrienne Cleland
has been appointed a director of Kiwibank. Mrs Cleland has
worked as a private consultant in the banking and financial
sectors and worked for many years in marketing and account
management for the BNZ.
SOUTHERN POLYTECHS BRACED FOR
TROUBLE
Regional polytechnics in the South Island fear a
drop in enrolments as a result of the fees war between
Southern Institute of Technology (SIT) and Christchurch
Polytechnic. The two have pushed down fees for trades
courses in Christchurch, and the Chief Executive of the West
Coast polytechnic, Tai Poutini says his institution, among
others, is bracing for a possible fall in student numbers as
a result. "Southland has found people are attracted from
outside the region to do courses because they're free, and
the same effect could be found in Christchurch," he says.
Association of Staff in Tertiary Education president Jill
Ovens says SIT's zero fees scheme is sparking a "supermarket
war" around the country, with a North Island polytechnic now
signalling it would also implement zero fees. "We're seeing
price wars that will lead to the demise of institutions, she
said."
WORLD WATCH
LEGAL OPINION BACKS FREE TRADE
FEARS
An international trade law firm is of the opinion
Canada's public university system lies unprotected under key
international trade rules – an opinion that contradicts the
Canadian government's assurances that higher education is
exempt from current negotiations on the General Agreement on
Trade in Services (GATS). The 26-page opinion says the
narrow scope of trade tribunals could allow international
private education providers to argue for the opening up of
public sectors under government protection. Where
government subsidised its own services, GATS rules would
mean an equivalent subsidy also had to be given to private
providers. Executive Director of the Canadian Association
of University Teachers, Jim Turk, says the only way Canada's
public universities can be protected is to have higher
education on an equal footing with national security,
meaning there could be no private service providers.
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AUS
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