AUS Tertiary Update
Victoria University general
staff to strike
General staff at Victoria University of
Wellington (VUW) will strike next Monday in support of a
claim to increase their salaries by 4%. Last week they
rejected a salary offer of 2.2% and voted, at a series of
meetings, to take industrial and protest action in support
of the 4% claim.
Association of University Staff (AUS)
general staff spokesperson, Tony Quinn, said that the
current salary offer from VUW was the lowest offer made to
any group of university staff in the current wage round, and
was well below New Zealand national average wage and salary
increases.
Mr Quinn said that VUW posted an operational
surplus of $7.6 million dollars last year, and looked to be
heading for a record financial surplus this year with higher
than expected enrolments. “The money is there, but any
goodwill towards sharing the surplus with those staff that
helped create it is sadly lacking,” he said.
“General
staff are insulted by their salary offer from VUW
management,” said Mr Quinn. “They are being offered
significantly less than their academic counterparts, and
markedly less than what is being offered at other
universities.”
Mr Quinn said that without general staff
the university simply could not operate. “They are the
public face of the institution, and are the main point of
contact with students in their day-to-day campus life. They
ensure the smooth running of the entire University and
should be treated in a manner which reflects that,” he
said.
“General staff make up half the workforce at the
University, and come from a wide variety of specialist
trades and professions,” said Mr Quinn. “The core university
function of teaching and research is a team effort towards
which general staff make an essential and valuable
contribution. In making a differential pay offer between
general and academic staff, the VUW deliberately fails to
appreciate and reward general staff for their contribution
to the academic success of the institution. It also divides
one group of staff from the other.”
Academic staff at VUW
have accepted a 4% salary increase for 2004.
Negotiations
between University of Otago management and unions have
stalled after union negotiators rejected a salary offer of
3%, from 1 May, for general staff and academic staff below
the rank of lecturer, and a minimum of 3.5% for academic
staff ranked from lecturer and above. Otago staff have
claimed a 4% salary increase backdated to 1 February.
New
collective agreements have been settled at the University of
Auckland, where staff will receive a 3.5% salary increase,
and at Waikato University where staff will receive an
increase of 3%, 2% of which will be backdated to October
2003.
Also in Tertiary Update this week . . .
1. Pre-Budget briefing cancelled
2. Funding-scam
claim challenged
3. PBRF dispute resolved
4. Highest
student debt closes in on $250,000
5. Staff at risk in
RAE
6. Go8 expands base to Europe
Pre-Budget briefing
cancelled
Associate Minister of Education (Tertiary)
Steve Maharey cancelled a proposed pre-Budget briefing with
tertiary sector unions scheduled for Tuesday this week,
saying that he would not have been able to provide
comprehensive information so close to Budget day. Mr Maharey
also expressed concerns about recent leaks of confidential
information.
AUS representatives will attend a Budget
lock-up from mid-morning today and will report Budget
details relating to the tertiary education sector later in
the day.
The Budget is not expected to provide any major
surprises for the university sector, with indicative EFTS
and Performance-Based Research Funding having been
previously announced.
Funding-scam claim
challenged
Associate Education Minister (Tertiary) Steve
Maharey has challenged National MP Bill English to provide
evidence of potentially fraudulent community education
enrolments at polytechnics after Mr English claimed a
community education “scam” at Gisborne’s Tairawhiti
Polytechnic is “getting more outrageous by the week.”
Mr
English has claimed that community education students at
Tairawhiti were encouraged to enrol in a free course, in Te
Reo Maori, in order to secure further free funding for the
Polytechnic. He said the students, who originally enrolled
in a Maori spiritual healing course, were told that it was
up to them whether they completed the Te Reo course, and
they didn’t receive course materials as promised.
Mr
English said that the Polytechnic would have received
hundreds of dollars for each enrolment. “The students
estimate that the healing course may have produced up to
sixty enrolments in the Te Reo course. It’s quite possible
that none of these students even started in Te Reo,” he
said.
In a media release relating to Tairawhiti, Mr
English said that polytechnics were enrolling students in
bogus courses for funding purposes, potentially committing
fraud.
Responding to the allegation, the Tertiary
Education Commission TEC) has been assured by an independent
report that no claims for public money have been made by
Tairawhiti Polytechnic for learners who did not receive
materials for the course in which they enrolled.
A copy
of the report into the management and recording of community
education courses at the Tairawhiti Polytechnic, which has
been received by the TEC, gave assurances that no evidence
was found of any invalid enrolments being recorded and
claimed by the Polytechnic.
Mr Maharey told Parliament
this week that he was not about to begin any type of “stupid
witch-hunt” on the basis of Mr English’s statements in the
House, but that he would act where there was evidence of
scams. He said that if Mr English had any evidence he should
give it to the Minister, or the TEC. “I would regard any
evidence of anything which was a conflict of interest or
potentially fraudulent at any of our tertiary education
providers as grounds for swift investigation,” he said. “If
a fraud is either proven or one that needs to be prosecuted
we would do exactly that.”
Tairawhiti enrolled 47,000
students and received $21.6 million in community education
funding last year.
PBRF dispute resolved
In a joint
statement, the Tertiary Education Commission, University of
Auckland, and Victoria University of Wellington have
announced that they have “substantially resolved” their
legal dispute over the release of international comparisons
as a part of the TEC's Performance-Based Research Fund
report.
Earlier the Universities had blocked the release
of the international comparisons, saying they were unlawful,
irrational, based on mistaken fact, and in breach of natural
justice and the legitimate expectation of the Universities.
They had argued that the adverse consequences of the
comparison were so considerable that its publication was in
breach of good faith and the obligation of the TEC to act
with reasonable care, diligence, and skill. The main report
was released last month without the international
comparisons.
The University of Auckland Vice-Chancellor
Dr John Hood says that the Universities have now agreed with
the TEC that if it wishes to proceed with an international
comparison, there should be a full consultative process with
institutions over whether such a comparison should be done
and, if so, how it should be done.
The TEC’s Acting
Chairperson, Kaye Turner, welcomed the decision. “We are
pleased to have this episode behind us,” she said. “We look
forward to a constructive and collaborative approach with
the tertiary institutions on this and the many other
significant issues facing the tertiary education
sector.”
Highest student debt closes in on $250,000
New
Zealand’s highest individual student loan is now $230,000,
according to the latest student loan scheme quarterly report
released by the Inland Revenue Department. The number of
borrowers who have student debts through the scheme is
425,575, with more than half of all loans being over
$10,000.
New Zealand University Students’ Association
Co-President Fleur Fitzsimons said the figures showed a
“massive increase” with the biggest individual debt rising
by $50,000 in the last quarter. The total number of
borrowers increased by more than 46,000, from 379,023 to
425,575.
The report shows that the proportion of
borrowers with bigger debts was continuing to grow, with the
number of people with debts of over $99,000 having doubled,
and with nearly a quarter of all debts now over $20,000.
The average loan balance of borrowers is now $14,169,
but Ms Fitzsimons said she believed the average debt for a
graduating student is around $20,000. She said the average
loan figure includes those people who were already paying
off their debt.
Ms Fitzsimons said that the Government
needed to contain the spiralling levels of student debt by
introducing a living allowance for all students in today’s
Budget, and by reducing student tuition fees.
Staff at
risk in RAE
Evidence has emerged in the United Kingdom
that universities are threatening to transfer weak
researchers into teaching-only positions, or to make them
redundant, as preparations begin for the next Research
Assessment Exercise (RAE) in 2008. A growing number of
universities are conducting “dummy runs” to calculate how
they will fare in the exercise.
The Association of
University Teachers (AUT) has discovered that preparations
are already in progress to remove or transfer some staff in
at least three institutions in an attempt to improve RAE
scores and the resulting funding allocations from the
funding councils. The institutions named are Imperial
College, King’s College and Queen Mary.
The AUT has been
advised that meetings are taking place at Imperial with
individual academic staff who will be offered redundancy if
they fail to improve their research performance. Similar
processes are understood to be underway at Kings College and
Queen Mary.
The British Medical Council is quoted saying
that academics at Imperial’s medical school had received
letters threatening disciplinary procedures if they did not
generate external research grants of at least £75,000 a year
and have at least three papers accepted for publication in
peer-reviewed journals.
The Times Higher Education
Supplement quotes a faculty head at a “major research
university” saying “We have a list of people we might
approach to take early retirement or transfer. Everyone is
doing it. The difference is we aren’t all doing it very
publicly.”
Go8 expands base to Europe
Members of the
Australian Group of Eight (Go8) universities are raising
their profile in Europe with a new centre in the Australian
Embassy office in Berlin. The Australian Centre Europe, to
be opened in July, is expected to promote business links
between the research-intensive universities, their European
counterparts, governments, and business.
The new centre
would promote exchange of staff and researchers, be a focal
point for meetings and enable the universities to branch out
in Europe.
Go8 Chairman and Australian National
University Vice-Chancellor, Ian Chubb, said it was an
important presence for the universities to have. “As
Australia’s leading universities we think it particularly
important that we do something as a group and Europe is a
good place to start that,” he
said.
********************************************************************************
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