AUS Tertiary Update
Ex-gratia, golden or simply
inappropriate?
Within days of denying that its former
Vice-Chancellor received a “golden handshake” following his
departure from the position last year, Lincoln University
has admitted paying Dr Wood an ex-gratia sum of $56,000. A
payment, equivalent to three months’ salary, was given in
“recognition of the valued service provided [by Dr Woods] to
the University” according to a written statement from the
University’s Chancellor, Margaret Austin. A further three
months salary was paid as a combination of sick leave and
notice.
Mrs Austin said that, under the terms of the
Vice-Chancellor’s contract, the Council was required to “act
as a good employer” and, as “a good employer, will treat its
employees fairly and properly in all aspects of their
employment.” She said that at the time of Dr Wood’s
resignation, legal advice was sought and the agreement
reached was regarded as “consistent with his contract” and
what was “fair to him”.
Dr Wood left Lincoln in October
2003 suffering from ill-health. He later admitted to a
sexual relationship with a Chinese student and lobbying
Government to get her permanent residency.
More details
emerged this week after the Minister of State Services,
Trevor Mallard, told Parliament that he thought the payment
to Dr Wood was inappropriate and regretted it was made. In
response to questions from National MP Bill English, Mr
Mallard said the payment had been made “at the discretion
of, and within the authority of, the Council of Lincoln
University after it had received legal advice.”
Earlier,
though, Lincoln’s Pro-Chancellor, Charlotte Williams, said
that references to a golden handshake were wrong, and that
the payment comprised salary paid for work undertaken and
other contractual obligations. While not specifying what
those obligations were, Ms Williams said that the final
arrangements were “fully compliant”, and were reported to
the State Services Commission.
Mr Mallard told
Parliament, however, that the Commission was not informed of
Dr Wood’s “inappropriate relationship” with the student when
it was consulted over the proposed ex-gratia payment. A
former Lincoln University Council member, Andrew Kirton,
also told Tertiary Update that as far as he was aware the
payment to Dr Wood was never discussed by the full Council.
The Association of University Staff National President,
Dr Bill Rosenberg, said that given the circumstances
surrounding Dr Wood’s departure, he should not have received
anything at all. “The University can dress it up however it
wants, but a $56,000 payment in recognition of “valued
service” is a golden handshake in anyone’s language,” he
said. “It will rankle with university staff, particularly
given that many do not share the Chancellor’s assessment of
Dr Wood’s contribution as Vice-Chancellor.”
Also in
Tertiary Update this week
1. TEC structure to
change
2. Canterbury, AUT fees rise
3. Fee increases
will force medical graduates overseas
4. Aviation
industry asked to contribute to pilot training
5. New
Chancellor for Auckland
6. UK universities headhunt
academics
7. European support for UK boycott
TEC
structure to change
The Tertiary Education Commission
will face a major change in structure in the New Year, a
reflection, according its Minister, Steve Maharey, of the
good progress that has been made in the reform of tertiary
education. From early next year, the full-time positions of
chair and deputy-chair will be replaced with part-time
equivalents, and the general manager’s position will be
replaced with that of a chief executive.
Steve Maharey
said that when the TEC was established, the interim
governance arrangement of a full-time chair and deputy-chair
was intended to last until the end of 2005. He said that the
departure of the former TEC Chair, Dr Andy West, had allowed
a move towards a more conventional governance structure
earlier than expected. The chair’s position will be
advertised this week, with a three-year appointment expected
to be made early in the New Year.
“The TEC’s
Deputy-Chair, Kaye Turner, who has been Acting Chair since
Dr West’s departure in April, will remain in that role until
about March,” he said. “She will then resume her role as
Deputy-Chair, this time on a part-time basis, and Acting
Deputy-Chair, Shona Butterfield, will return to her
commissioner role.”
In turn, Kaye Turner and General
Manager Ann Clark said that the role of general manager will
be configured into that of a chief executive. “This is
earlier than originally envisaged, and is an indication of
just how well the TEC has progressed,” they said.
Ann
Clark says that the TEC now has a committed leadership team,
keen to build on the knowledge and skills developed over the
past two years. “A recent stakeholder survey showed high
levels of overall satisfaction with the TEC, and this was
particularly pleasing given the dynamics of the environment
in which the TEC operates, and the organisation’s age,” she
said.
Ann Clark has decided not to apply for the chief
executive position.
Canterbury, AUT fees rise
The
University of Canterbury and the Auckland University of
Technology (AUT) announced increases to student tuition fees
for 2005, at their respective Council meetings this week.
All fees at AUT will rise by 4.7 percent, while at
Canterbury most will increase by 3.2 percent. Fees for
Communication Disorders, Information Systems and Ecology and
Conservation courses will increase by 5 percent.
AUT
Vice-Chancellor, Derek McCormack said the increase of $171
per student was necessary to help ensure that the University
continued to meet the needs of students. “Our fees are still
among the lowest in the country,” he said. “While the
Council would prefer not to have to increase tuition fees,
it is in no-one’s interest for the University to cut-back on
growth or reduce standards.”
Elliot Roberts, President of
the AUT Student Movement, said that the Government must stop
institutions from constantly raising student fees well
beyond what student sand their families can
afford.
University of Canterbury Vice-Chancellor,
Professor Roy Sharp, said the increases are need to ensure
the University meets the targets of a financial recovery
plan which requires it to have an operating surplus of more
than $6 million by 2006.
Fee increases will force medical
graduates overseas
A move by the University of Auckland
to dramatically increase tuition fees for medical students
will lead to workforce shortages and force more graduates to
head overseas, according to the New Zealand Medical
Students’ Association (NZMSA). Last week, the University
announced that it would be seeking an exemption from the
Government’s fee-maxima policy in an attempt to increase
fees by 10 percent for medicine and health sciences. The
fee-maxima policy restricts increases in tuition fees to no
more than 5 percent unless an exemption is granted.
NZMSA
President Jess Allen said a 10 percent increase would result
in fees for medical students rising by $1,000 per year, or
at least $5,000 over the course of a medical degree. “We are
reaching new heights in medical student debt, and the full
consequences of this will take years to unfold,” she said.
“Evidence collected in a 2001 survey of medical students,
published in the New Zealand Medical Journal, showed a
correlation between increasing student debt and students’
intention to practice medicine overseas and choose
specialities other than general practice,” she said.
“Increasing the burden of medical students’ debt is likely
to exacerbate these alarming trends and create more medical
workforce shortages.”
Ms Allen said that as medical
schools operate within a system where government controls
the intake of students, and then sets funding levels, it
should meet any financial shortfalls rather than
transferring them on to future doctors.
The average debt
for medical students is currently three times that of other
university graduates, with over half of medical students now
having a loan debt of more than $70,000 by the time they
graduate.
Aviation industry asked to contribute to pilot
training
The Government is asking the aviation industry
to contribute more to the cost of pilot training, and to
ensure that training is better linked to commercial aviation
pilot jobs available in New Zealand. The Associate Minister
of Education (Tertiary), Steve Maharey, said fees for
aviation, currently between $30,000 and $70,000 per year,
are far higher than for any other courses, including
dentistry and medicine.
“Students are ending up with huge
debts, and in past years graduates have had difficulty
finding jobs in New Zealand,” said Mr Maharey. “It is a very
volatile labour market and trainee numbers have not always
been well-aligned to demand. In the period up to 2003 there
was an over-supply of commercial pilots, while at present
there seems to be a shortage.”
Mr Maharey said that the
Government will reduce the current aviation funding cap by
10 percent in 2005 to 700 students, and is consulting with
the industry about a co-funding arrangement. “The Government
wishes to look at how industry contributions can be used to
reduce students’ fees, which in turn would lead to lower
levels of indebtedness,” he said.
New Chancellor for
Auckland
The University of Auckland has elected Hugh
Fletcher as its new Chancellor. The former Chief Executive
of Fletcher Challenge was made a Distinguished Alumnus of
the University in 1966 and appointed to the Council in 1999.
Former Chancellor John Graham, who has held the position
for the last five years, will remain on the Council until
the end of 2005. Acting Vice-Chancellor Raewyn Dalziel said
that Mr Graham’s dedication to his role and his passion for
quality teaching and research at the University had been
invaluable to the institution.
The Council has also
elected a new Pro-Chancellor, Jenny Gibbs, who served on the
Council from 1975 until 1995, and again from 1999. It will
be the third time Mrs Gibbs has served in the
role.
Worldwatch
UK universities headhunt
academics
Universities in the United Kingdom are calling
in professional agencies to help recruit senior academic
staff as the competition to secure top-calibre staff heats
up in an increasingly competitive market, according to the
Times Higher. Universities are reported to be chasing
“high-impact” professors to strengthen their research
profiles, and deans with leadership skills to drive through
change in their departments and to develop funding models to
secure cash from external sources.
Recruitment agencies
say that the Research Assessment Exercise, scheduled for
2008, is forcing universities to think about the structure
of their institutions and the quality of their academic
staff. A specialist in higher-education recruitment said the
trend for placing chairs and deans through recruitment firms
could lead to whole research teams being poached by
headhunters.
European support for UK boycott
In an
unprecedented show of solidarity, teaching unions from
across Europe have backed the Association of University
Teacher (AUT) boycott of Nottingham University. Twenty-one
unions, representing hundreds of thousands of
higher-education staff in France, Spain, Germany, Finland
and Sweden, issued a joint statement this week expressing
dismay over Nottingham’s action in refusing to re-open
negotiations with the AUT over a new pay and grading
structure.
The boycott began just over a month ago after
Nottingham management backed out of a national agreement on
the introduction of a new salary framework across higher
education in the UK.
In a statement to Nottingham
management, the European unions say they are dismayed at the
actions of the University in refusing to talk to the AUT.
“We will be advising our members across universities in
Europe to respect and participate in the boycott of your
institution,” the statement reads. “We will also advise the
rectors of European universities that we are supporting this
boycott until such time as you agree to enter into talks
without pre-conditions with AUT.”
More information on the
Nottingham boycott can be found at
http://www.aut.org.uk/index.cfm?articleid=879
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AUS
Tertiary Update is compiled weekly on Thursdays and
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made to Marty Braithwaite, AUS Communications Officer,
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