AUS Tertiary Update
Mediation scheduled over Auckland’s behaviour in
bargaining
University of Auckland management and
Association of University Staff (AUS) representatives will
head to mediation tomorrow after the University failed to
properly engage in the bargaining process between university
unions and employers. AUS and other unions are seeking new
national multi-employer collective employment agreements for
the university sector. University of Auckland
representatives attended the two days of negotiations which
were held in Christchurch this week, but on the basis that
they would only “sit and listen” to the unions’ claims, so
as “not to inconvenience the parties”.
Auckland’s failure
to engage arose after the unions rejected a pre-condition of
bargaining from the University: that if it did not freely
agree to a multi-employer agreement, the parties would then
agree to revert to single employer bargaining. Auckland also
proposed that, where some or all of the employer parties
agreed to “park” the unions’ claim for multi-employer
agreements, they would continue to bargain, but on the basis
that discussions would be held physically separately from
the other university employers, and that any information
shared would be strictly confidential.
Earlier, the
Employment Court had ruled that the University must engage
in the bargaining process initiated by AUS and the other
unions, but stopped short of compelling the University to
bargain, saying it was too early to issue a compliance
order.
AUS General Secretary Helen Kelly said that,
despite the Employment Court’s decision, University
management continued to frustrate the process. “Agreement to
Auckland’s pre-condition for bargaining would have
effectively negated the Court’s ruling and allowed Auckland
to disengage from the process, simply because the
Vice-Chancellor didn’t want to be involved,” she said. “It
would also have prevented staff from taking industrial
action to support multi-employer bargaining involving
Auckland.”
Helen Kelly said that AUS is now considering
having the matter referred back to the Employment Court to
seek a compliance order against the
University.
Meanwhile, the parties will resume the
national negotiations with two further days scheduled in
Wellington on 25 and 26 May. It is expected that by then
salary offers will have been received and that there will be
further responses on whether individual universities will
freely enter the proposed national agreements. The unions
will also respond to the employers’ claims.
Meetings of
union members in the seven universities will be held in June
to discuss the employers’ positions.
Further information
on bargaining and the Auckland dispute can be found on the
AUS website:
http://www.aus.ac.nz/national_bargaining.htm
Also in
Tertiary Update this week
1. Cost of tertiary education
falls on grandparents?
2. Wananga rejects move to appoint
commissioner
3. Strike action averted at Christchurch
PTE
4. Interim Chair appointed to NZQA
5. UK pay offer
rejected
6. Strike, academic boycott at
LMU
7. Botswana professor goes on trial
Cost of
tertiary education falls on grandparents?
The Minister of
Education, Trevor, Mallard, told Parliament on Tuesday that
one of the potential benefits of a proposed tertiary
education savings scheme would be that grandparents will
have an opportunity to put something towards their grandkids
tertiary education. His statement followed an invitation
from the Government for expressions of interest from
commercial organisations interested in providing a scheme
based around individualised savings accounts from which
withdrawals could only be made for tertiary education costs.
Individuals with such accounts would only be able to access
student loans once they had withdrawn funds from their
tertiary education savings account.
The Government’s move
has drawn widespread criticism from students, staff and
groups from across the political spectrum. Only the New
Zealand Vice-Chancellors’ Committee appears to support the
proposal, saying the reality is that students and their
families will have to continue to share some of the costs of
tertiary education.
AUS General Secretary Helen Kelly
said the proposed savings scheme would be regressive and
serve to strengthen the view that tertiary education is a
private benefit which should be increasingly funded through
individual contribution. “It would not only favour those who
can afford to save, but also would discriminate against
low-income families and groups such as women who take time
out from paid employment to meet family responsibilities,”
she said. “It erodes the notion that tertiary education is a
public good.”
“The introduction of individualised savings
to fund tertiary education would expose New Zealand to the
risk of developing a two-tier tertiary education system: one
for those who are able to save privately and another,
inferior one, for those dependent on an under-funded public
system,” Ms Kelly said.
According to Ms Kelly, the
individual savings scheme would disguise the effects of the
controversial student loan scheme, but without reducing the
burden on individuals of paying for their tertiary
education. “Adequate resourcing is a state responsibility
and government’s priority should be to properly fund
tertiary education, she said.”
Helen Kelly said it
appeared to be pre-determined that the Government would
proceed with the scheme since expressions of interest had
been called for before there had been any consultation
within the sector about its desirability.
The Government
is expected to make a decision on whether to proceed with
such a scheme by August.
Details of the proposed scheme
and reaction can by found at
http://www.scoop.co.nz/news/education.html
Wananga rejects
move to appoint commissioner
Te Wananga o Aotearoa again
appears poised to test the will of the Government following
a decision by the Minister of Education, Trevor Mallard, to
dissolve its Council and appoint a commissioner to
administer the embattled institution. Earlier in the week,
Trevor Mallard announced that the Government was stepping in
because the Wananga was on the “brink of insolvency” and
unable to meet its commitments over the next fortnight,
including paying wages and creditors.
As well moving to
dissolve its Council, Cabinet has approved a short-term loan
of $20 million to allow the Wananga to meet immediate
cash-flow costs. Trevor Mallard said that the loan was
initiated following an investigation by the Crown Manager,
Brian Roche, which revealed that the financial position of
the Wananga was worse than initially thought.
Trevor
Mallard said that advice from the Crown Manager indicated
that the financial situation at the Wananga was so
precarious that he was obliged to take all action available
to him under the Education Act for the sake of the students,
staff and creditors. “To not do anything would be
irresponsible,” he said.
“The role of a commissioner
would be to deliver the overall governance capability
required to assist the Crown Manager, staff and stakeholders
to rebuild the institution,” Trevor Mallard said. “If I
decide to proceed with this appointment, I also intend to
appoint an advisory group who would work alongside the
commissioner.”
In a written statement from the Wananga,
Council Chair Craig Coxhead said that prior to dissolving
the Council and appointing a commissioner, the Minister must
consult with the Council in two successive stages. “The
first response to the Minister must be received by him on 14
May,” he said. “There is then a further 21 days in which the
Council can make submissions to the Minister prior to a
final decision by him.”
Mr Coxhead said the Council
resolved on Tuesday night to set out its views on why the
Council should continue in its present form and the process
of appointing a commissioner should be halted. “The Council
acknowledges short-term financial pressures but believes
that, with goodwill from all parties, they are resolvable
under the present governance arrangements,” he
said.
Strike action averted at Christchurch
PTE
Indefinite strike action by union members at the
Design and Arts College, a private training establishment in
Christchurch, has been averted by an agreement between the
parties to resume bargaining and engage in mediation.
Academic and general staff at the College took two
half-day’s of strike action more than a week ago, and began
indefinite strike action on Tuesday morning this week.
Talks, in which the union claimed a 5 percent salary
increase, broke down after staff unanimously rejected an
offer of a 2 percent increase. Association of Staff in
Tertiary Education National President, Lloyd Woods, said the
offer was unacceptable and failed to recognise either the
increased productivity of staff or the increased cost of
living. “Accepting the offer would have meant a further
erosion of salaries against the accepted standards in the
sector,” he said.
The agreement by the College management
to resume bargaining came only hours before striking staff
were due to start picketing, and has resulted in staff
returning to work.
Interim Chair appointed to NZQA
An
interim Chair has been appointed to the New Zealand
Qualifications Authority following the resignation of Graeme
Fraser last week in the wake of a damning report into the
organisation’s handling of 2004 scholarship examinations.
Catherine Gibson, a current Board member, has been appointed
interim Chair for the next three months.
Also under
increasing pressure to resign is NZQA Chief Executive Karen
Van Rooyen who has been blamed for the deficiency in the
implementation of the new National Certificate in
Educational Achievement and the scholarship debacle.
Associate Minister of Education David Benson-Pope is
reported to have described Mr Fraser’s resignation as the
“honourable course of action”, and to have said that he
expected the Board to take further action over NZQA
management’s role. He declined to express confidence in Ms
Van Rooyen.
Worldwatch
UK pay offer rejected
Leaders
of three university unions in the United Kingdom have
rejected a pay offer of 5 percent over two years by their
employers in negotiations this week. The University and
College Lecturers' Union (NATFHE), the Association of
University Teachers (AUT) and the Educational Institute of
Scotland are seeking an 11.2 percent across-the-board
increase to current pay scales reflecting, they say, the
need for an increase that takes account of the cost of
living and the need to catch up some of the ground lost due
to low settlements in recent years.
The unions also
sought a minimum hourly rate of £35.34, saying that many
hourly lecturers are paid only for lecturing time, not
preparation or marking, meaning that an hour’s pay is
usually an inadequate reward for several hours of work.
The unions are also concerned that the employers have
failed to address equality issues, including the opportunity
to undertake work recognised for career advancement and
promotion, measures to support working parents and the
achievement of effective work-life balance.
In a joint
statement, AUT General Secretary Sally Hunt and NATFHE
General Secretary Paul Mackney said that the offer failed to
address the continuing problem of low pay, and was simply
unacceptable. “The unions will work closely together this
year to ensure that the employers hear that message loud and
clear from across the sector, and we are determined to
secure a better deal on behalf of members,” they
said.
The pay talks are scheduled to continue until 23
June.
Strike, academic boycott at LMU
Union members at
the London Metropolitan University will strike for the whole
of next week and will reinstate an academic boycott as they
step up protest action in a long-running and increasingly
bitter industrial dispute at the institution. It centres on
the University’s threat to sack 387 academic staff if they
refuse to accept new, inferior employment agreements
following the merger of the University of North London and
London Guildhall University to create LMU. In April last
year, the University told staff they had until 31 August to
accept the new agreements or be dismissed.
Since then,
low level industrial action, mediation and court
intervention have failed to resolve matters, and the strike
proposed for next week will coincide with a visit to LMU by
the Quality Assurance Agency.
NATFHE General Secretary
Paul Mackney said that the strike would be accompanied by
the re-imposition of an academic boycott which would include
a ban on external examining, peer review, joint research,
joint teaching and applying for academic posts. He said
there would also be a withdrawal from exam invigilation and
a ban on marking.
More information on this dispute can be
found at: http://www.natfhe-london.org.uk/
Botswana
professor goes on trial
A seventy-two-year-old Australian
academic went on trial in Botswana this week in a case which
is considered to be a test of academic freedom in that
country. Professor Kenneth Good, of the Department of
Political and Administrative Studies at the University of
Botswana, was detained on the orders of the country’s
President in February after it was learned he was to give a
seminar critiquing the growing autocracy in that country and
criticising the President of the southern African
country.
Botswana’s Attorney General told the Court that
the President considered Mr Good a threat to national
security and has the right, under immigration law, to expel
him from the country. Mr Good’s lawyers are arguing that he
has not broken any immigration laws and that freedom of
speech is protected under Botswana’s
Constitution.
Professor Good’s colleagues at the
University of Botswana say his deportation is an assault on
academic freedom and an affront to the fundamental values of
democracy. The Academic and Senior Support Staff Union said
the action taken against Professor Good undermined academic
integrity, and it vowed to support him to the very
end.
The judges are scheduled to give their decision on
31 May.
Additional information from the Chronicle of
Higher
Education
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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