AUS Tertiary Update
Tertiary bosses get big pay
rises
Tertiary education bosses have been big winners in
the pay-increase stakes according to salary statistics
released by the State Services Commission. The 2003 Annual
Report of the State Services Commission reports that the
University of Auckland Vice-Chancellor, Dr John Hood, topped
the remuneration table for a chief executive in the tertiary
education sector in 2002, with a remuneration package worth
between $370,000 and $379,999. It is up by $10,000 on 2001
and increased by $50,000 between 2000 and 2002.
In
second place was University of Otago Vice-Chancellor, Dr
Graeme Fogelberg, who received between $320,000 and $329,999
in 2002, up around $20,000 on 2001. Biggest mover amongst
the vice-chancellors was Lincoln’s (former) head, Dr Frank
Wood, whose package increased from between $220,000 and
$229,999 in 2001 to between $250,000 and $259,999 in 2002.
Dr Wood resigned in 2003 citing ill
health.
Vice-chancellors at Waikato, Massey, and Victoria
all received between $260,000 and $269,999.
The
remuneration package paid to the University of Canterbury’s
Vice-Chancellor was reported at between $240,000 and
$249,999 for the year to October 2000, a drop from the
$300,000 to $309,999 reported in 2001.
Association of
University Staff (AUS) National President, Dr Bill
Rosenberg, said that during the five years to 2002,
vice-chancellors received remuneration increases of up to
42%. At the same time listed salary rates for staff
increased by less than 10%. “It is hard to accept that
vice-chancellors felt they were entitled to salary increases
of that proportion when they were offering their staff
significantly lesser amounts,” he said. “Staff will feel
more than justified in rejecting the salary offers being
made in current negotiations, and will be looking to the
vice-chancellors to remedy the situation by working with the
unions to resolve funding issues”.
The biggest
remuneration increase in the tertiary education sector was
reported at the financially troubled Otago Polytechnic where
the Chief Executive’s package increased by at least 53%. It
rose from between $200,000 and $209,999 in 2001 to between
$320,000 and $329,999 in 2002. The figure includes what is
described as “payment of all contractual entitlements up
until 18 December 2002”. It suggests a large payout to the
then Chief Executive, Dr Wanda Korndorffer, who resigned
“with immediate effect” following an Audit New Zealand
investigation into what was described as a “botched”
redevelopment of the polytechnic campus.
Also in Tertiary
Update this week
1. $10 million claim filed against
Wananga
2. Students say PM misleads Parliament over
fees
3. University negotiations resume
4. College to
cut costs
5. Audit report says Wananga needs to improve
administration
6. US Government withdraws subpoena on
university anti-war meeting
7. Italy faces huge fines for
academic discrimination
$10 million claim filed against
Wananga
Receivers for failed private training
establishment, Carich Computer Training Ltd, today confirmed
that they have issued legal proceedings against Te Wananga O
Aotearoa for a sum in excess of $10 million. It arises from
the Wananga’s withdrawal from a joint venture between the
two organisations whereby Carich would provide Phase 3
ComputerGym courses to students enrolled at the Wananga.
Carich receiver, Kerryn Downey of KPMG, said lawyers had
filed a statement of claim on the Wananga yesterday and he
expected the parties would explore several options to try
and resolve the matter. He said the joint venture
arrangement between Carich and the Wananga allowed for
arbitration where matters were in dispute, but said they
could also look at either a negotiated settlement or
proceeding directly to litigation.
Mr. Downey said that
around 2500 students were affected when the Wananga abruptly
terminated the joint venture in March last year, shortly
before the programme was about to commence. He said that
Carich had fully set up to start the courses and was taking
enrolments at the time the Wananga pulled out of the
venture. He said they had incurred significant costs in
areas such as advertising the course, hiring staff and
leaseing premises.
Mr. Downey said he was unable to
comment on why the Wananga had pulled out of the deal, but
noted the parties had successfully co-shared the Phase 2
ComputerGym courses which had involved about 2,200 students.
The Wananga again failed to respond to a call from
Tertiary Update.
The acting General Manager of the
Tertiary Education Commission (TEC), Max Kerr, confirmed
that the TEC has received a claim of approximately $750,000
related to student funding and is also in discussion with
Carich’s receiver. No legal action is being taken against
TEC.
Students say PM misleads Parliament over fees
The
Prime Minister’s speech at the opening of Parliament this
week glossed over the grim reality of debt and poverty for
students according to Victoria University of Wellington
Students’ Association President, Amanda Hill.
In her
speech to the opening of Parliament this week, the Prime
Minister said that this year’s Budget will provide for more
students to qualify for allowances from the 2005 year and
new Step-Up scholarships are available this year for
students from low and modest-income families studying health
and animal sciences.
Ms Hill said that Labour had
campaigned on affordable education, yet had failed to
address the problem of $6 billion of student debt. “They
have failed to realistically adjust the parental income
thresholds within the allowance system, and they have failed
to reinstate the Emergency Unemployment Benefit, leaving
many students without an income over summer,” she said.
While the New Zealand University Students’ Association
(NZUSA) welcomed the announcement by Ms Clark that more
students will receive allowances, they criticised the lack
of detail on numbers. “It’s no coincidence that the first
new allowances will come in an election year. The public
deserves specific information about how many students will
benefit - not vague election year carrots,” said NZUSA
Co-President, Andrew Kirton.
“Two-thirds of students are
currently shut out of government support while studying. All
students should be eligible for living allowances, and we
will not let Clark and Maharey get away with tiny increases
phased in slowly,” said Mr Kirton.
University negotiations
resume
Negotiations for new national collective
employment agreements for academic and general staff in
seven universities resumed in Wellington yesterday and are
scheduled to continue until Friday this week.
Talks were
adjourned in late December last year with union negotiators
rejecting pay offers ranging between approximately 2% and
3.8%.
A proposal for the parties jointly to develop an
independent white paper on university funding was shelved
after university employers stipulated that such a proposal
was contingent on the continuation of site
bargaining.
College to cut costs
Christchurch College
of Education is to cut costs in its secondary school teacher
training programme at a time when there is a national
shortage of secondary school teachers.
College Principal,
Dr Ian Hall, said that about $500,000 would be cut from the
School of Secondary Education programme, and blamed the
College’s financial position on under funding and the
recently imposed fee-maxima which limited student tuition
fee increases to a maximum of 5%.
Dr Hall said the
problem had been looming for some time and proposals on cost
savings would be put to the College Council at its June
meeting. He is reported in The Press as saying that
everything is being looked at and the College is still far
from making any decisions. “I’m just putting up the early
warning flag,” he said.
Dr Hall said an internal review
of the department had been started with the intention of
making significant cutbacks, but described any potential
staff redundancies as the “worst case scenario”.
Audit
report says Wananga needs to improve administration
Te
Wananga O Aotearoa, New Zealand's largest tertiary
institution, has been told it needs to improve its
administration according to a New Zealand Qualifications
Authority report. The report, based on an audit carried out
last year, recommended the Wananga tighten contracts with
other education providers, improve document control,
internal audits and quality management, and improve the
enrolment process.
Wananga Academic Quality Manager
Neville Withers is reported saying there were no surprises
in the audit report. “We were expecting the audit to take
place in November last year, but it came in July while we
were still putting systems in place,” he said. “An audit is
a timing thing and is really only a snapshot of a moment, so
it doesn't take into account many of the processes that we
were putting in place to ensure resources were being
provided and staff were being appraised”.
The audit
praised the Wananga for presentation of resources, its focus
on research and response to community needs. It also
highlighted the emphasis it placed on providing further
qualifications for staff.
The Authority acknowledged the
Wananga had made improvements, and noted its provision for
its staff to learn Te Reo Maori was unique.
Worldwatch
US Government withdraws subpoena on
university anti-war meeting
The United States Attorney's
office in Des Moines has backed down from using a subpoena
to get information about an antiwar conference held at Drake
University late last year. In what may be the first subpoena
of its kind in decades, a federal judge recently ordered the
University to turn over records about a gathering of
anti-war activists, including the identities of those who
participated and any campus-security records that would
describe what was discussed at the conference. Subpoenas
were also served on four of the activists who attended the
forum, ordering them to appear before a grand
jury.
Following a request by the U.S. Attorney, the
subpoena’s were withdrawn this week, along with an order
which had prevented the University from disclosing what was
in the subpoena or commenting on it.
The turnaround by
the U.S. Attorney's office surprised and pleased University
officials and their lawyers. “Whatever one's views of the
political positions articulated at that meeting, the
University cherishes and protects the right to express those
views without fear of reprisal or recrimination,” said David
Maxwell, Drake's President. “The university in America is,
by definition, a ‘free speech' zone in which dissent,
disagreement and multiplicity of views are not only
tolerated, but encouraged”.
Italy faces huge fines for
academic discrimination
The Italian Government is facing
massive daily European Court of Justice fines for failing to
end discrimination against foreign language lecturers in its
universities. The European Commission said it was seeking an
unprecedented fine of €310,000 (£210,000) a day until the
matter was resolved. The demand from Brussels is the latest
move in an eighteen-year campaign to force Italian
universities to give foreign language teachers the same
rights as Italian lecturers. The Italian Ministry of
Education has declined to comment on the decision. The
Italian legislature is currently discussing a bill to
address the issue. But representatives of the foreign
teachers have rejected its provisions as inadequate. Around
1,000 foreign lecturers are involved in legal action against
the
universities.
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AUS
Tertiary Update is compiled weekly on Thursdays and
distributed freely to members of the union and others. Back
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http://www.aus.ac.nz. Direct enquires to Marty Braithwaite,
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marty.braithwaite@aus.ac.nz