AUS Tertiary Update
Wananga accused of nepotism, Minister not
surprised
The Minister of Education, Trevor Mallard, told
Parliament this week that he is not convinced the taxpayer
has received good value for money from the $239 million
public funding allocated to Te Wananga o Aotearoa in the
last financial year.
The Wananga has been under a
sustained attack from the ACT Party, including accusations
that it has siphoned off millions of dollars into shelf
companies to line the pockets of its chief executive, Rongo
Wetere, and his family, and those of other senior staff
members and their families. Amongst the accusations levelled
in Parliament yesterday by MP Ken Shirley was that the
Wananga runs a corporate fleet of 350 cars, including LTD
limos, which are exclusively groomed on a non-tendered
contract by a company called Gazza’s Groomers, owned and
operated by the partner of the Wananga’s Corporate Services
Manager.
The Wananga has also been accused of offering
inducements to students, including flights, accommodation
and apparel, in direct contravention of government
policy.
In an email provided to Tertiary Update, an
accountant appointed by the Government to the Wananga
Council told the Chair that there had been a serious
breakdown in financial management, that senior managers
accepted no responsibility to live within budgets and that
they have a culture of non-accountability and
extravagance.
“If this was private sector client of
mine,” the Council member writes, “the CEO would be history
and the shareholders would have voted to replace the
directors (or they would have resigned).”
“This is
serious and must be treated as such. I have offered to go to
the TWOA … to work through some of the issues. But I am not
going to put my reputation more on the line unless I have an
assurance that senior managers (including the CEO) will
cooperate and make some real changes.”
Mr Mallard told
Parliament that he was not very surprised at the latest
allegations and would add them to a list of things that the
Auditor-General is looking at. The Auditor-General is
currently investigating potential conflicts of interest at
the Wananga following disclosures last year that it
contracted the delivery of course programmes to a company
owned by the CEO’s daughter.
Mr Wetere has denied the
recent allegations and welcomed any investigation, saying he
is sure that the Wananga is above board and clean.
Also in
Tertiary Update this week . . .
1. Strike action likely
to disrupt Otago student orientation activities
2. CPIT
comes close to apology
3. Colleges of education to merge
with universities?
4. UK unions to merge
5. Millions
to sell fee reforms
6. Professors confront Harvard
President
Strike action likely to disrupt Otago student
orientation activities
Staff at the Otago University
Students’ Association (OUSA) are to embark on industrial
action following the breakdown of collective employment
agreement negotiations with their student employers.
OUSA
is currently offering staff a 3.5% pay increase for the 2
years from January 2004 to January 2006, with a further cost
of living increase from January 2006. The Association of
University Staff (AUS), which represents staff members, says
the offer fails to compensate adequately for increases in
the cost of living over the period, let alone recognise the
significantly increased workloads faced by staff.
The
AUS is claiming a 3.5% pay increase from January 2004, with
a further 3.2% from January 2005.
“OUSA staff are being
asked to accept another two years of sub-inflation pay
increases, after already having received an increase in 2003
which was lower than the rate of inflation,” said the AUS
Otago Branch Organiser Shaun Scott. “Adding insult to injury
is that the inadequate pay offer comes at a time when staff
members’ workloads have grown in tandem with burgeoning
student enrolments at the University.”
Mr Scott said
union members noted that, while OUSA has been calling on the
Government to ensure that student allowances keep pace with
the rising cost of living, it is not prepared to apply the
same principle to its own staff.
Mr Scott said that many
OUSA staff themselves are repaying student loans, as well as
facing increasing mortgages, childcare and other living
expenses.
AUS members believe that if OUSA is genuinely
concerned about the rising cost of living and the effects of
the student loan scheme, it should set an example by
treating its own employees fairly. “They should practice
what they preach,” said Mr Scott.
The parties attended
mediation last Thursday in an attempt to avert strike action
during Orientation, which is the Association’s busiest time
of the year. Mr Scott said while some mediation discussions
had been positive, not enough had changed to avert the
planned industrial action by union members. Provision of
OUSA services for Summer School students may also be
affected.
A programme of industrial action, including
striking, begins next week.
CPIT comes close to
apology
The beleaguered head of the Christchurch
Polytechnic Institute of Technology (CPIT), John Scott, has
come close to an apology over the Cool IT debacle. In an
open letter to the people of Christchurch, Mr Scott wrote:
“We know that our involvement last year in the Cool
e-learning programme has disappointed you and our community.
I am sorry this has happened, and I want to assure you that
we have listened to your concerns, and that we have acted on
them.”
The statement comes after repeated calls for Mr
Scott’s resignation from the National Party spokesman on
education, Bill English, and damning criticism from the then
Minister of Education (Tertiary), Steve Maharey. Mr Maharey,
in a letter to the Chair of CPIT’s Council, effectively said
that Mr Scott had failed to meet the expected standards of
judgement and decision-making expected of senior executives
leading public education institutions.
The Press, in an
editorial, described Mr Scott as having spent months
doggedly defending the indefensible, adding that the CPIT
had not been well served by the expenditure of vast amounts
of Board and management time in resisting the obvious,
rather than facing up to it.
In his open letter, Mr
Scott continued: “At CPIT, we believe it is very important
to ensure that nothing like this happens again with our
e-learning programmes to affect our proud reputation as an
excellent learning provider. . . . In response to [an
internal review], CPIT is immediately adopting a set of
e-learning procedures, with CPIT’s performance being audited
by the independent academic auditor.
The Christchurch
Polytechnic Students’ Association President (CPSA), Davitt
Joslen, has called for the “continuous media attention” over
the Cool IT issue to stop, saying it appears to be a witch
hunt by The Press, “directed by a despondent former
opposition leader [Bill English].”
“This unwarranted and
untruthful attack has to stop,” said Mr Joslen. “The CPSA
believes that CPIT has acted in a responsible, fair and
appropriate way in relation to the Cool
issue.”
Meanwhile, the CPIT has said that it will repay
$3.47 million of public funding to the Tertiary Education
Commission over the next three years as a result of the Cool
It problems.
Colleges of education to merge with
universities?
The two remaining stand-alone colleges of
education, at Otago and Canterbury, appear poised to merge
with their local universities following the mergers of the
Wellington and Auckland colleges with their respective
universities last year.
The Christchurch College of
Education Principal, Graham Stoop, is reported saying that
its continued independence is unsustainable and he sees
benefits in a university’s capacity for research and
professional development. According to The Press, the
College Council has put forward a proposal to seek a merger,
with the University of Canterbury named as the preferred
partner.
Similarly, the Principal of the Dunedin College,
Roger Green, told The Otago Daily Times that the writing was
on the wall for the College, and his Council would consider
the institution’s future at its next meeting later this
month. Dr Green said there was considerable goodwill among
College and University of Otago staff, and in Dunedin
generally, for change.
The University of Canterbury
Vice-Chancellor, Professor Roy Sharp, said that the
Canterbury merger would only be approved only if it
benefited the University. This is not expected to be a
problem, however, as the two institutions had been working
closely at both academic and services levels for the past
few years.
If approved, the merger could take effect from
the beginning of 2006.
In another move, it has been
reported that Massey University’s College of Education is
accepting fewer primary school teaching students this year,
saying that it wants to improve the standard of its
graduates. It has reduced its first-year intake from 244
last year to 121 this year.
Worldwatch
UK unions to
merge
Amalgamation talks being held between the
Association of University Teachers (AUT) and the National
Association of Teachers in Further and Higher Education
(NATFHE) in the United Kingdom to form a single union in the
tertiary education sector have moved up a gear following
further discussions between the organisations. Agreement has
been reached on the key principles, including the industrial
strategy, which will drive the new union.
The General
Secretaries of AUT and NATFHE, Sally Hunt and Paul Mackney,
said sufficient progress had been made for a positive
recommendation on amalgamation to be made to their
respective governing bodies by May. If endorsed, a full
membership ballot on the proposed amalgamation would be held
later in the year.
Millions to sell fee reforms
The
Australian Government will spend $A3 million to promote the
new reforms to lift student fees and introduce a new
fees-help loan scheme, according to The Australian. $A1.4
million of that will be spent on advertising alone. Figures
provided to the Senate by the Department of Education show
that around $A150,000 will be spent on market research,
$A400,000 on designing the advertisements, $A750,000 on
printing posters and brochures and providing information to
careers advisers and teachers and almost $A1 million on a
new website.
Opposition education spokesperson Jenny
Macklin said it was outrageous that the Howard Government
has spent $A3 million on propaganda for its [fees] hike.
Professors confront Harvard President
Some of the most
influential professors at Harvard have confronted its
President, Lawrence Summers, saying that they are
dissatisfied with his leadership, and that it is damaging
the institution. He was told that many faculty members were
dismayed, alienated and demoralised, and that there was a
crisis concerning his style of leadership and governance,
according to The New York Times.
The comments came at the
first full meeting of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences for
the year, where it was reported that speakers criticised Dr
Summers for an autocratic management style “that stifled the
open debate that is at the core of the University’s
values.”
The meeting ended with a unanimous vote to hold
an emergency meeting of the Faculty next week so that
professors could continue discussing their lack of
confidence in Dr Summer’s
leadership.
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AUS
Tertiary Update is compiled weekly on Thursdays and
distributed freely to members of the Association of
University Staff and others. Back issues are available on
the AUS website: www.aus.ac.nz . Direct enquires should be
made to Marty Braithwaite, AUS Communications Officer,
email:
marty.braithwaite@aus.ac.nz