AUS Tertiary Update
In our lead story this
week…..
AUS settlements prompt Auckland 'catch up'
Salary settlements at other New Zealand universities
have prompted the University of Auckland to make a
supplementary 2.5% salary offer to staff, effective from 1
February next year.
Auckland University had settled on a
4.5% pay deal over 2 years, from 1 February this year, but
settlements reached by the Association of University Staff
(AUS) at other universities have created a benchmark of 7%
over the same two year period. AUS members at Massey,
Victoria, Waikato and Otago have all recently reached
agreement with their employers.
Auckland has consequently
been left lagging behind other universities, resulting in
the decision by Auckland Vice Chancellor, John Hood, to
increase salaries by the further 2.5%.
AUS General
Secretary, Helen Kelly, said that the original Auckland
settlement had left the door open for further pay increases,
although dependent on Government funding. While the
University had initially claimed the Government funding
increase for 2003 was insufficient to provide further salary
increases, it has now been forced to find the money from an
internal un-allocated fund called the Planned Case
Initiative Fund.
Helen Kelly said staff welcomed the
increase but questioned why the University did not make the
offer in the original negotiations. She said the 'catch up'
confirmed the AUS view that University bargaining patterns
are so similar, they simply follow each other, making
multi-employer bargaining the logical and efficient step to
pursue in the next bargaining round.
Also in Tertiary
Update this week:
1. Unitec/AUT merger talks
confirmed
2. Waikato staff settle agreements
3. Sector
leadership sought for tertiary reforms
4. Otago funding
campaign launched
5. UK Universities under fire over
short-term contracts
6. Iran professor
persecuted
Unitec/AUT merger talks confirmed
Auckland’s
University of Technology (AUT) and Unitec are considering
merging following the release of a working group report on
the benefits of such a merger. It is understood that the AUT
Council has now sought a comprehensive academic and business
analysis, including details of costs, benefits and potential
risks. The analysis, expected to be completed early next
year, will look at the academic implications, following
which a decision will be made whether to proceed to formal
merger negotiations.
The Associate Minister of Education,
Steve Maharey, said that while he was aware of the
discussions between AUT and Unitec there had been no formal
proposal presented to Government.
AUS National
President, Dr Grant Duncan, said that if the merger proceeds
it would leave Manukau as the only polytechnic operating in
the Auckland region. “Auckland needs an expansion not a
contraction of traditional polytechnics and such a merger
could jeopardize the public provision of high quality
training in the trades and other areas, including the health
sector”, he said. Dr Duncan pointed to current Government
policy which focuses on a need to radically improve and
expand New Zealand’s skill-base and said that polytechnics
were essential to achieving that goal. “There is a
significant potential for polytechnics in the Auckland
region to liaise with Industry Training Organisations and
the health industry in particular to capitalise on the
training needs of those sectors”, he said.
Waikato staff
settle collective agreements
Staff at Waikato University
have voted to ratify new collective employment agreements
for academic and general staff. The settlements will see
around 800 union members receive a minimum 3.5% salary
increase, backdated to 1 October 2002. In addition, eligible
staff will receive increases in paid parental leave, and a
number of working groups will allow University management
and unions to address on-going workload issues. The academic
staff agreement includes a significant restructuring of the
salary scales, allowing some staff to receive as much as
5.6%.
Meanwhile, negotiations at Lincoln are set to
resume on 5 December after that University made a 2% salary
offer to general staff and 1.5% to academics. Canterbury
staff will consider their current offer, of a 2% salary
increase, at meetings over the next fortnight.
Sector
leadership sought for tertiary reforms
Associate
Education Minister, Steve Maharey, has urged delegates
attending the recent Association of Polytechnics in New
Zealand conference to seize the opportunities opened
up by the government's tertiary education reforms. He
told conference delegates that there is a middle way
between a laissez-faire competitive model and a highly
centralized control model. “Possibly the biggest challenge
for the tertiary sector”, he said, “will be an increased
need, in light of the new culture and new incentives, to
respond collectively, as a sector, rather than each
institution working in isolation. The role of the
Tertiary Education Commission will not be to direct all the
operations of this system, but instead to facilitate,
coordinate and sometimes to ask searching
questions”.
Otago funding campaign launched
Otago
University has launched a campaign aimed at securing
government funding on the basis of matching private
donations dollar-for-dollar. The campaign, launched last
week, is intending to raise $50 million in the next three to
five years with half to come from private and corporate
donations and half from the government’s Partnerships for
Excellence scheme. Otago University’s development director,
Clive Matthewson, said the increased funding will be used
for new initiatives including scholarships and new
professorial chairs.
Applications for the Partnership for
Excellence scheme will be considered in the budget round
each year and decisions based on the applicant’s
contribution to increasing New Zealand’s tertiary education
capacity at a world class level, enhancing innovation and
supporting national economic and social goals.
Worldwatch
UK Universities under fire over short-term
contracts
The Association of University Teachers (AUT) in
Britain has welcomed a report from a Select Committee
inquiry into the abusive use of short-term contracts in
higher education. The inquiry, by the House of Commons
Science and Technology Committee, found that some 40,000
researchers across the UK are employed on short-term
contracts, some for as little as one month. Most damning of
the report findings is the conclusion that: 'through poor
management and planning, universities have failed their
research workforce and the UK’s science base'.
While the
blame for the growing crisis is to be shared by a number of
key parties, notably the research councils, the report is
scathing in its criticism of university managements: “It is
hard to identify a single culprit for the continuing
mistreatment of our research workforce, but top of the list
must be a management culture in some of our
research-intensive universities, which is callous and
shortsighted.
In the commercial world, businesses have
to make predictions about their future income and
productivity, and plan accordingly. Universities reserve the
right to look no further than the end of the current
research grant and place the entire burden of risk onto
researchers.”
AUS is looking forward to the Government’s
review of the tertiary workforce next year. It is likely the
issue of the continued casualisation of the research
workforce in New Zealand will be an issue in this
forum.
Iran professor persecuted
A court in Iran has
sentenced university professor Aghajari making comments
during a student gathering to death for allegedly insulting
Prophet Mohammad. The local court has further sentenced
Aghajari to exile in desert cities of Tabas, Zabol and
Gonabad and banned him from teaching for 10 years!!! The
death sentence issued against the university him, too, has
outraged the university students across Iran, who have been
staging strike after strike in protest against the verdict.
The majority of Iranian parliament members, too, have
seriously condemned the verdict, and Parliament Speaker
called the death penalty against him a shame for the
country's judiciary system. Also two of Hamedan Constituency
MPs presented their letters of resignation to show their
objection to the verdict issued by their constituency's
court. It is comparable with verdicts issued by Middle Ages
courts in Europe. Of course, this event must be considered
as a serious war between two dominant parties in Iran. The
sentence is backed by religious leader as a private
reprisal.