AUS Tertiary Update Vol. 5 No. 10
In our lead story this
week….. UNIVERSITIES 'STARVED'
The Vice-Chancellor of
Otago, Graeme Fogelberg has strongly criticised the
government's level of funding for universities. In his
review of the year, Dr Fogelberg made it clear he believed
funding shortfalls threatened the quality of teaching and
research in this country. "While New Zealand's leading
universities are starved of funding, those tertiary
institutions abroad with whom we must benchmark favourably
in order to achieve and maintain a global reputation are
moving ahead as their governments significantly boost
funding," he said. Otago, he added, had reviewed its
budgets, made extensive cuts, and put all but absolutely
essential capital funding on hold. "A serious consequence of
this remorseless pressure is that staff, both academic and
general, are dealing with higher levels of stress as a
result of ever-growing workloads," he added.
Also in
Tertiary Update this week:
1. More from 'Auckland
Corp'
2. Waikato nears settlement; Victoria still at
impasse
3. Christchurch College of Education to buck
merger trend
4. Misuse of government funding
confirmed
5. Students opposed to savings scheme for
tertiary education
6. Birzeit University surrounded
7.
Strike over at Dalhousie
8. Woollongong loses Steele
case
MORE FROM 'AUCKLAND CORP'
An AUS member at
Auckland has sent us the following email message, which was
recently sent to all staff in the School of Biological
Sciences by the Director. We have reproduced it in
full.
“I have already personally talked to many of you
about this matter – for the others please read this e-mail
very carefully. The Vice Chancellor is concerned that
competition within the biomedical research community has led
to some individuals talking down in public other parts of
the University. From our perspective this means talking
down the Liggins institute or the Medical School. He has
evidence that this had happened at relatively high levels,
and he is concerned that this can have a negative impact on
the recruitment of new staff and graduate students. It
could also adversely affect potential income from investors,
sponsorships and partnership appeals. The matter is serious,
and the V.C. did not mince his words when he said that
anyone caught talking down another part of the University
will be “summarily fired”. It is recognised that competition
for research funding and top graduate students is fierce –
and we need to present ourselves in the best light. Please
do so by showing all the best attributes of SBS without
putting down the others. Take care of the fact that we all
work for the same “company”, and we either rise or sink
together. Food for thought.” [Indeed! – Ed..]
WAIKATO
NEARS SETTLEMENT; VICTORIA STILL AT IMPASSE
University of
Waikato union members have voted to send their employer's
latest offer to ratification. The offer is for a 3.2%
increase on all personal salaries, backdated to 1 October
last year in the case of union members. A working party will
be set up to come up with a transparent mechanism for
budgeting for legitimate salary increases in the future.
Meanwhile, staff at Victoria University of Wellington held a
24-hour strike last week over a claim from the university to
alter the traditional term of the employment agreement. AUS
branch co-presidents say that if that was accepted, it would
compromise the union's ability to bargain effectively in
future negotiations.
CHRISTCHURCH COLLEGE OF EDUCATION TO
BUCK MERGER TREND
The principal of Christchurch College
of Education, Ian Hall says his institution is in good
shape, and is unlikely to follow its counterparts in
Dunedin, Auckland and Wellington and pursue a merger with
the neighbouring university. Dunedin College of Education is
the latest to announce a merger, saying it will merge with
Otago university in 2004. Last year, the Tertiary Education
Advisory Commission recommended that colleges of education
should lose their protected status and merge or align
themselves more closely with universities. But Dr Hall says
that has been overtaken by the Tertiary Education Reform
Bill, which includes colleges as stand-alone
institutions.
MISUSE OF GOVERNMENT FUNDING
CONFIRMED
The minister in charge of tertiary education,
Steve Maharey says initial investigations into the New
Plymouth-based Practical Education Training Centre (PETC)
have confirmed misuse of government funding in the case of
enrolments for its distance travel courses. The minister
says that as a result he has asked the Ministry of Social
Development – which administers student loans – to look at
the records of all PETC distance travel students enrolled
during 2001. Mr Maharey said a system had also been set up
to identify and monitor closely any suspicious enrolment
activity to prevent something similar happening again.
STUDENTS OPPOSED TO SAVINGS SCHEME FOR TERTIARY
EDUCATION
The New Zealand University Students Association
(NZUSA) has written to the Minister of Education, Trevor
Mallard opposing a proposal that an individual savings
scheme be set up to fund tertiary education, so avoiding
student debt. The proposal would see parents setting up
individual accounts under a private savings scheme to pay
for their children's higher education. NZUSA says it
opposes the idea mainly because education is a public good,
and should be fully funded by the state.
WILL HE, WON'T
HE?
Massey University Council is keeping mum on reports
(see "Tertiary Update" Vol. 5 No. 9) that a former
Vice-chancellor, Sir Neil Waters might temporarily fill in
when Professor James McWha leaves to head Adelaide
University. However, Sir Neil is quoted as saying he has
been "invited to be available" but not formally asked to
take on the job. Staff union negotiator Peter Blakey says he
does not think the Massey unions would have a problem with
Sir Neil stepping in as interim vice-chancellor.
WORLD
WATCH
BIRZEIT UNIVERSITY SURROUNDED
AUS has received a
moving letter from Riham Barghouti at Birzeit University on
the West Bank describing the turmoil as Israel troops moved
on Ramallah, base for the Palestinian Authority and
President Yasser Arafat. He describes the worrying reports
of occupation and "total destruction" coming through and
comments: If this is not terror then I don't know what is
and I don't know what more we can say or do," adding: "
Hopefully, some day the world will wake up and say what is
happening is wrong and we will be able to keep working and
studying and moving freely with no constraints and no fear.
"Tertiary Update" takes up that call and encourages the
Government to lend its voice to the growing calls for a
peaceful solution to the Palestine–Israel conflict.
STRIKE
OVER AT DALHOUSIE
In Canada, staff at Dalhousie
University have reached a tentative agreement with the
university's board of governors, raising the possibility of
an end to a strike that began about a month ago. Staff
walked out on 4 March, saying the university left them no
alternative, after talks on a new settlement broke down
after six months of unsuccessful negotiations.
WOLLONGONG
LOSES STEELE CASE
The Australian Federal Court has
dismissed an appeal by the University of Woollongong against
an earlier ruling that it had acted illegally when it sacked
Dr Ted Steele early last year. The president of the National
Tertiary Education Union (NTEU), Dr Carolyn Allport said the
decision sent a strong message to university employers that
they "must abide by their enterprise agreements based on the
standards of justice and fairness". She called on the
university to honour its commitment to reinstate Dr Steele
if it lost the appeal. AUS was among a number of
organisations which wrote letters of protest to the
Woollongong
Council.
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AUS
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