University talks founder
University talks
founder
The likelihood of university unions and employers
collaborating on approaches to deal with funding and salary
woes in the university sector seems remote after employers
stipulated that such an approach could proceed only if
unions dropped claims for national collective employment
agreements.
University employers have walked away from a
proposal for an independently researched ‘white paper’ on
university funding and salaries, to form the basis of a
joint employer/union approach to government, after saying
that such a project was contingent on enterprise (site)
bargaining. They said that the ‘white paper would not
proceed’ if the unions’ claim for national agreements
remained.
The unions had earlier initiated bargaining for
two national collective employment agreements across the
sector with salary increases of 10% for next year, based on
studies of local and international
relativities.
Negotiations, which resumed in Hamilton
this week, explored the possibility of the interim
short-term rollover of current enterprise agreements to
allow for the ‘white paper’ to be developed, however they
have been adjourned after the unions rejected the employers’
terms for the rollover, which included salary offers of
between less than 2.0% and 2.8%.
Union advocate Jeff
Rowe said that meetings of union members last week had shown
continued strong support for national bargaining, and
impatience with the employers’ refusal to make realistic
salary offers and to accept national bargaining. Union
members had authorised the bargaining team to explore the
possibility of interim site settlements to allow the ‘white
paper’ proposal to be developed, but the present salary
offers were unacceptably low and showed no sign of any
commitment by the employers to resolving long-term salary
woes in the sector.
Mr. Rowe said there was no logical
reason that the development of a ‘white paper’ was reliant
on enterprise bargaining “and, in fact, the employers have
acknowledged that it is only because we are bargaining
nationally that the suggestion has even been explored”. He
said that the unions remained open to working on a
collaborative basis on this matter. “We see national
bargaining as assisting, not impeding, this process,” he
said. “What is apparent, however, is that the employers are
using this as a lever to try to delay national
bargaining”.
Mr. Rowe said that the salary increases
which had been on offer were lower than average wage and
salary settlements across New Zealand and did nothing
towards resolving long-accepted funding and salary problems
within New Zealand universities.
Negotiations are
scheduled to resume in Wellington on 11 February
2004.
Ends
For further comment please contact:
Jeff
Rowe, Advocate, Association of University Staff
(AUS)
Ph (04) 915 6692 (work) (04) 380 9212 (home) 021
375 670 (mobile)
email:
jeff.rowe@aus.ac.nz