AUS Tertiary Update Vol 5 No 6 7 March 2002
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AUS
Tertiary Update Vol. 5 No. 6, 7 March
2002
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In
our lead story this week…..
AUS 'DISMAY' AT NEWS OF YET
ANOTHER FEES FREEZE
The Association of University Staff
(AUS) is dismayed at reports of a 4.5% increase in
Government funding of universities in return for another
freeze on student fees, pointing out that the increase is
not adequate for rebuilding the sector. AUS National
President Dr Grant Duncan says the net effect would be to
leave institutions in "the same mire" they are in at the
moment, and would inevitably lead to further industrial
unrest. "To make a fee-freeze deal acceptable to staff, an
increase in Government funding in the range of 12% to 20%
would be essential, to reinvest in and rebuild a sector that
everyone knows has been underfunded for years," says Dr
Duncan. He suggests another solution would be to have
cumulative 12% increases each year for the next 3 years. AUS
calculates that would require an estimated $91.3 million in
the first year – if student participation remains stable, or
a total new input of $593 million over the next 3 years.
"The kind of money we're talking about is less than that
invested in rescuing Air New Zealand," Dr Duncan says, but
he warns that if the Government's next budget continues the
trend of inadequate funding, AUS may be forced to reject
further fees stabilisation policies, eventhough the
Association does not wish to see student fees rise.
Also
in Tertiary Update this week:
1. National day of action a
first for AUS
2. Maharey urges resumption of university
pay talks
3. Victoria University loses employment
case
4. Let them eat cake!
5. Five Centres of Research
Excellence named
6. Age seen as an academic
question
7. Wanted: thousands of university
teachers
NATIONAL DAY OF ACTION A FIRST FOR AUS
On
Monday this week, staff at Massey, Waikato and Canterbury
universities held a strike in protest at inadequate
university salaries and underfunding of university
education. Their stand was supported by colleagues at other
universities who held lunchtime rallies and meetings. In
Palmerston North, Massey members marched to a rally at the
City Square to hear speeches emphasising how a decade of
underfunding by both National and Coalition Governments has
left universities understaffed and overworked. At
Canterbury, hundreds of protesters staged a two-hour rally
and handed out leaflets to students explaining their case.
Lincoln and Victoria universities were to have joined the
strike, but last-minute offers saw them at work. Victoria
staff , however, sent a delegation to Parliament and were
received by Wellington Central MP, Marian Hobbs. AUS members
received messages of support and encouragement from their
international counterparts, including the National Tertiary
Education Union in Australia and the staff association at
the University of the South Pacific (AUSPS).
MAHAREY URGES
RESUMPTION OF UNIVERSITY PAY TALKS
The Minister in charge
of tertiary education, Steve Maharey, has urged university
staff and employers to go back to the negotiating table. In
a news release coinciding with Monday's industrial action by
university staff, Steve Maharey said that while tertiary
institutions have autonomy in industrial issues, he was
urging both sides to resume negotiations in good faith in
order to reach an acceptable settlement. “The Government is
not a party to the negotiations which have broken down on
some campuses. However we have introduced a new industrial
relations framework which allows staff to organise
collectively and bargain in good faith to share the gains.
Staff at Otago and Auckland universities have used this
framework to reach an acceptable settlement and I believe
that staff and management at other universities can do the
same," he said. AUS National President, Grant Duncan, noted,
however, that the Minister claims that he has no direct role
in industrial relations and yet the Government makes funding
decisions that directly predetermine industrial outcomes in
the universities.
UNIVERSITY LOSES EMPLOYMENT CASE
Victoria University has lost an appeal against an
Employment Tribunal decision which saw a former employee
awarded more than $35,000 in damages. Karen Reader, who had
been with Victoria's science research department since 1986,
took her claim to the court in 2000 after departmental
restructuring a year earlier saw her lose her position as
Head Technician in the electron microscope facility. She
had been asked to apply for another position, which she
claimed was significantly different from her previous job.
Lawyers for the university had argued that the skills
required for the new position were "broadly within Ms
Reader's technical capability." But lawyer for AUS, Sandra
Moran, argued that the university would not concede there
was a significant difference in the two positions, because a
clause in Ms Reader’s contract required them to pay
severance if she left the job within a nine-month period,
which she had done. The Tribunal decided the differences in
the two positions were significant enough to warrant
redundancy and awarded Ms Reader $25,488 in redundancy
compensation and $6,903 in retirement leave, plus costs and
interest on the amount.
LET THEM EAT CAKE!
Student
leaders presented current and former tertiary ministers with
birthday cakes this week to mark the 10th anniversary of the
student loan scheme. Recipients included National's Lockwood
Smith, Wyatt Creech, and Max Bradford as well as current
minister, Labour's Steve Maharey. NZUSA noted the cakes were
a reminder to the politicians of the role they had played in
creating and maintaining one of the harshest and most
inequitable student loan systems in the world.
FIVE
CENTRES OF RESEARCH EXCELLENCE NAMED
The Royal Society of
New Zealand has announced the five Centres of Research
Excellence chosen to receive money from the government's new
$60m. CoRE fund. They are the Allan Wilson Centre for
Molecular Ecology and Evolution based at Massey; the Centre
for Molecular Biodiscovery, the New Zealand Institute of
Mathematics and its Applications, and Nga Pae o te
Maramatanga (the National Institute of Research Excellence
for Maori Development and Advancement) – all based at
Auckland; and the MacDiarmid Institute for Advanced
Materials and Nanotechnology based at Victoria.
WORLD
WATCH
AGE SEEN AS AN ACADEMIC QUESTION
The Australian
Department of Education, Science and Training has
commissioned a study aimed at revealing how universities are
coping with, and can overcome, the problems that will arise
from an ageing academic workforce. In relation to the
changing nature of academic work, the study will look at the
past two decades, changes in what academics do and how they
do it, with a view to informing recruitment and training
activities. The project brief cites changes in teaching and
technology of teaching, the structure of the academic
environment and work conditions and incentives. The project
will be part of a longer-term study. [AUS has been
advocating for years that similar research be carried out in
New Zealand and is hoping that the Tertiary Education
Commission will provide strategic initiatives in this
area].
WANTED: THOUSANDS OF UNIVERSITY TEACHERS
In
Britain, the Association of University Teachers (AUT) has
calculated that around 40,000 new university teachers must
be found if the government is to meet its target of 50%
participation in higher education. The AUT data is based on
maintaining current student:staff ratios and replacing the
17,000 university teachers who are due to retire by
2010.
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