AUS Tertiary Update
In our lead story this
week…..
Lincoln University denies partnership
claim
Lincoln Vice Chancellor, Frank Wood, has hit back
at media claims that Christchurch Mayor, Garry Moore, is
seeking urgent ministerial intervention to halt a proposed
partnership between Lincoln and Massey Universities.
Ministerial intervention was reported as being sought by the
Mayor after it was claimed that a high-level report
recommending a merger between Canterbury and Lincoln had
been axed in favour of a partnership between Massey and
Lincoln’s science faculties.
Frank Wood described the
media reports as misleading to the point of mischief-making,
and based on incorrect presumptions, out of context quotes
and an “outburst” from the Mayor. “None of this”, he wrote
to staff, “was a fair or well informed representation of
Lincoln’s position or policies.” He says while alliances and
cooperation are being actively pursued, in line with
Government tertiary policy, it is certain that the
University will not be pushed into any arrangements that do
not preserve what is special about Lincoln. Working
relationships already exist with a number of universities,
including Massey, Canterbury, and Auckland, and with Crop
and Food research, Agresearch and WRONZ.
AUS Lincoln
Branch President, Walt Abell, said however that the recent
media statements could suggest that planning for a possible
merger or alliance may be far more advanced than staff have
been led to believe. He says that while most staff are aware
that Lincoln has had discussions with a number of
institutions about possible alliances, there has been no
consultation with unions on any specific proposal. He says
that while AUS has made several requests for open
discussions with management, little information has been
forthcoming.
Associate Education Minister, Steve
Maharey, has declined to comment on the issue, saying that
any formal partnership would require a statutory
consultation process.
Also in Tertiary Update this
week:
1. Government to review tertiary institution
governance
2. Universities get research funding
boost
3. Victoria, Otago medics pay claim
settled
4. Tertiary Reform Bill on track
5. Injunction
stops Canadian Middle East debate
6. AUT strike closes
London universities
Government to review tertiary
institution governance
The Government’s independent
review of the governance of tertiary education institutions
comes closer with the announcement yesterday that it will be
conducted by Professor Meredith Edwards, Director of the
National Institute for Governance at the University of
Canberra. The Government has asked Professor Edwards to
advise it on good governance practice for the tertiary
education sector, optimal ways to develop overall governance
capability; and a preferred option for governance in
tertiary institutions. The review will look at how modes of
governance can be developed that best reflect the character
and contribution of tertiary institutions, while ensuring
that governance and management still conform to best
practice.
Professor Edwards will be assisted by a
reference group made up of key stakeholders, including
representatives of tertiary institutions, business, unions,
and Maori. She will visit New Zealand this week to meet with
sector group and other representatives and hopes to complete
her report by March 2003.
AUS National President, Dr
Grant Duncan, welcomed the opportunity for union involvement
in the review but said it was insufficient to expect one
union representative to represent all tertiary unions and
the Council of Trade Unions. He noted that there are four
employer representatives and called on the Government to
increase the number of union participants.
Universities
get research funding boost
A further two Centres of
Research Excellence, announced on Tuesday by the Associate
Minister of Education, Steve Maharey, will pump a further
$21 million into the University sector.
The National
Centre for Advanced Bio-Protection Technologies, based at
Lincoln University, was given $8.12 million to develop new
ways of meeting New Zealand’s pest management control and
biosecurity needs over the next three years. Included in the
research will be the development of new generation superior
crops with enhanced pesticide resistance.
The National
Centre for Growth and Development, based at the University
of Auckland received $12.5m to develop new preventative and
therapeutic approaches to maintain human health and improve
animal productivity in agriculture.
In announcing the
funding Steve Maharey said that the Centres had been chosen
because they demonstrated their excellence in international
terms
Victoria, Otago medics pay claim settled
Staff at
Victoria University voted overwhelmingly on Tuesday to
settle their collective agreements after a month of
negotiations. The settlement covers four collective
agreements and will see about 690 academic and general staff
receive a 3.5% salary increase from I December. AUS Victoria
Branch President Robyn May said the settlement was welcomed
by members who believed it was the best deal they could get
in the circumstances.
A similar message was echoed as
medical and dental academic staff employed at Otago
University’s three Schools of Medicine accepted a 4% salary
offer this week. AUS Branch Organiser Shaun Scott said that
although settlement had been reached, the salary offer did
not begin to address the serious salary anomalies faced by
medical and dental academic staff. “The differential between
hospital and university salaries is now more than $15,000
per annum”, said Shaun Scott, “but we predict that under the
current government funding arrangement that differential
will increase to around $40,000 within the next eight
years”. The new salary rates will take effect from 1
February next year.
Cash strapped Canterbury University
has increased its salary offer to staff, from 1% to 2%,
during further negotiations earlier this week. The increased
offer came after report-back meetings of staff rejected the
offer and threatened strike action.
Tertiary Reform Bill
on track
The Tertiary Education Reform Bill is most of
the way through its Committee Stages (the clause-by-clause
debate) and it is now planned to complete the remaining
stages of the debate in the last sitting period of
Parliament for the year, beginning on 3 December. A
spokesman for the Government said he was confident the
second and third readings of the Bill would be completed
prior to Christmas in time for the new law to take effect
from 1 January 2003.
Worldwatch
Injunction stops
Canadian Middle East debate
A judge in Quebec granted an
injunction to Concordia University, in Montreal, last week,
allowing it to prohibit two members of the Canadian
Parliament and a professor from speaking on the campus at a
"Peace and Justice in the Middle East" event. The event was
organized by the Concordia Student Union in defiance of a
university ban on public events related to the Middle East.
The university imposed the three-month moratorium after
violent protests in September forced the cancellation of a
speech by Benjamin Netanyahu, the former prime minister of
Israel.
Justice Jean Guilbault, of the Quebec Superior
Court, granted a 10-day injunction, saying freedom of speech
is not without limits. The three who were scheduled to speak
at Concordia maintain that the campus moratorium violates
Canada's Charter of Rights and Freedoms, which guarantees
freedom of opinion and expression. The Canadian Association
of University Teachers is awaiting legal opinion as to the
next legal step. "We're upset by what Concordia has done and
by the court ruling," said James Turk, executive director of
the association. "We share the outrage. A university should
protect free speech."
AUT strike closes London
universities
University staff across London forced a
virtual shutdown of the capital’s higher education
institutions last Thursday in a one-day strike against the
low level of their London allowance. The day of action hit
more than 40 institutions across London, resulting in
closure for some, and severe disruption for others. It was
the first ever strike over “London Weighting”, involving
university staff at every level, from porters to professors.
Up to 120,000 students were affected by the dispute, called
by the unions after their claim for an increase to £4,000
was rejected by employers. There has been no increase in
London allowance payments for staff at the University of
London for ten years, while staff at other institutions have
been offered a maximum increase of £90.
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AUS Tertiary Update is compiled
weekly on Thursdays and distributed freely to members of the
union and others. Back issues are archived on the AUS
website: http://www.aus.ac.nz. Direct enquires to Marty
Braithwaite, AUS Communications Officer, email:
marty.braithwaite@aus.ac.nz