AUS Tertiary Update
Auckland staff get 4.5% as national negotiations
resume
Negotiations for new national collective
employment agreements for university staff resumed in
Wellington yesterday afternoon, getting off to a late start
after again being disrupted by airport closures. They are
continuing today. The unions are responding to claims which
have been made by the various university employers, and it
is hoped that the universities will table their initial
salary offers and advise their position on inclusion in the
proposed national agreements.
Meanwhile, the University
of Auckland has agreed to extend to union members the same
4.5 percent salary increase it paid to non-union staff from
1 May, and it will continue to engage in national
bargaining. This follows mediation after a
previously-reported Employment Court decision which held
that Auckland must join with the other universities in the
multi-employer bargaining process, and that its offer to
non-union staff alone “…should not have been in a manner
which could be seen to undermine the union’s position in the
bargaining or the bargaining itself”.
University of
Auckland representatives had previously attended and
observed the national negotiations, but had refused to
formally participate.
In a further twist, Auckland’s
Vice-Chancellor, Stuart McCutcheon, initiated bargaining
with the Association of University Staff (AUS) and other
unions for a single-employer collective agreement for
general staff at the University. This was believed to be a
tactical attempt by the University to counter its
involvement in national bargaining and force the unions into
concurrent single-employer bargaining. As a part of that
process, the unions were required, under the provisions of
the Employment Relations Act, to ballot union members to
determine their willingness to participate. The ballot,
which concluded last week, resulted in 91.4 percent of the
385 staff who took part voting against bargaining for a
single-employer collective agreement.
The AUS General
Secretary, Helen Kelly, said the decisive result showed that
general staff members at Auckland resoundingly rejected
local bargaining as proposed by the Vice-Chancellor. “The
Vice-Chancellor’s interim payment of a 4.5 percent salary
increase for Auckland staff is a good start, we now need to
get on with the national bargaining process and together
find positive national solutions to salary and funding
problems,” she said.
Meetings will be held to report
progress to union members at all universities in the first
fortnight in June. Negotiations will continue following
those meetings, on 14 and 15 June.
Also in Tertiary Update
this week
1. University staff call for more investment in
tertiary education
2. Unitec claims support in bid for
university status
3. Waikato, Otago announce
scholarships
4. National says Labour plans to override
TEC
5. Academics to consider withdrawing Israeli
boycott
6. Universities on alert over animal
terrorism
7. Monash loses more on South African
university
University staff call for more investment in
tertiary education
University staff are calling on the
Government for further resourcing in high-quality tertiary
education, saying that last week’s Budget has provided
little real additional new investment for the university
sector.
Funding for tertiary education announced in the
Budget which will have a direct benefit to universities
included an additional $75 million over the next four years
for the Performance-Based Research Fund (PBRF) and an
increase of 2.6 percent to student component funding, at a
cost of $165.7 million, over each of the next four years.
A further $132 million from this and previous budgets
will be used to increase funding rates for
strategically-relevant subject areas, including natural and
physical sciences.
Approximately $54 million will be
spent over the next four years improving access and
affordability for students, and a further $20 million will
support international education and international PhD
scholarships. An additional $46 million will be spent over
the four years strengthening ability, quality and capability
in a range of initiatives centered mainly on industry
training.
AUS National President, Professor Nigel
Haworth, said that, while the $75 million increase to the
PBRF would be welcomed by staff, there was little else for
universities in the Budget, other than an inflation-related
catch-up in funding rates.
“The Government shares our
concern that university salaries have not kept pace with
international rates, but it still needs to address this
issue,” said Professor Haworth. “Government needs to work
with unions and vice-chancellors to implement mechanisms to
fix this problem and ensure the recruitment and retention of
the highest-quality staff in our universities.”
Professor
Haworth went on to say that university staff welcomed recent
announcements that the Government would be looking closely
at a re-allocation of funding in the tertiary education
sector, the details of which are expected to be released in
the next few months. He said that if the Government’s
indications are relied upon, significant levels of funding
will be shifted away from low-quality, low-cost courses and
into the types of high-quality courses run by universities.
“Trevor Mallard has made it clear that he wants to move
funding away from low-quality providers and qualifications.
If the high quality of our university degrees and research
is to be protected, he must move that funding into
universities,” said Professor Haworth.
An AUS summary of
the main points for the tertiary education sector in the
Budget can be found at:
http://www.aus.ac.nz/news/2005/Budget.pdf
Unitec
claims support in bid for university status
Auckland
tertiary education institution Unitec says it has received a
boost from the business sector and local government as its
fight to gain university status enters its final stages.
Submissions on whether Unitec’s application for
reclassification as a university is in the national interest
closed last week, with the institution claiming that the
majority supported its bid. Only eighteen of the seventy
submissions received opposed Unitec’s application.
Those
in support included the Employers’ and Manufacturers’
Association (EMA) and the Waitakere and Auckland City
Councils. A recent Colmar Brunton poll also showed that 87
percent of residents in West Auckland and Waitakere believed
their area would benefit from a locally-based university of
technology, with 75 percent specifically supporting Unitec’s
application.
Unitec Chief Executive, Dr John Webster,
said that business organisations had a clear understanding
of Unitec’s university of technology profile, and strongly
supported the institution’s direction. He said that the EMA
recognized the need for a new type of university to support
business growth, and that Unitec is well placed to meet that
need. Similarly, the Waitakere City Council has said that
Unitec’s status as a university of technology is vital to
its long-term strategies.
The Minister is due to make a
decision on whether the awarding of university status to
Unitec is in the national interest by 1 July.
Unitec says
it will proceed with High Court action seeking $3.5 million
in damages against the Minister of Education and the New
Zealand Qualifications Authority (NZQA) over the five-year
delay in determining its application for university status.
In a hearing which begins in 2 July, the Court will also be
asked to determine whether its application for university
status has been unlawfully suspended, and whether there has
been a breach of the New Zealand Bill of Rights
Act.
Waikato, Otago announce scholarships
More than 450
students at Waikato University have been awarded Tearaway
Waikato University Scholarships, each worth $3,000, in what
is the single-biggest university scholarship scheme in the
country. To receive a scholarship, students need sixty
credits or more at NCEA level 3 or 4 in no more than 4 New
Zealand Qualifications Authority subjects, and to gain
university entrance. Students must also be a New Zealand
citizen or permanent resident and enrol in a full-time
programme of study at Waikato University. Recipients may use
the $3,000 towards their course fees or accommodation at the
University’s halls of residence.
Meanwhile, the
University of Otago has announced that all secondary school
duxes will be eligible for first-year undergraduate
scholarships in 2006. The scholarships, worth $3,500 each,
can be used towards the cost of accommodation in a
residential college or hall and/or fees.
Announcing the
scholarships, Vice-Chancellor Professor David Skegg said
that Otago, as a national university, wanted to ensure that,
with the dux scholarships, at least one outstanding student
from every school in the country had the opportunity to
study at Otago. “No matter the size of the school or its
academic reputation, this gives high-achieving students a
chance to attend New Zealand’s finest university,” he
said.
National says Labour plans to override
TEC
National Party Education spokesperson Bill English
says that confidential plans for changes in tertiary
education funding show that the Tertiary Education
Commission has been a “huge waste of taxpayer dollars”. Mr
English says that the Minister of Education, Trevor Mallard,
has plans to cut polytechnic funding by scrapping community
education over the next few years and dropping all short
courses unless they are paid for by industry.
A request
for details of the confidential plan referred to by Mr
English is yet to receive a response.
In a press release,
Mr English says that, while publicly defending education
bureaucrats, behind closed doors the Government is looking
at plans to bypass the TEC because it has become so
ineffective. “[Trevor Mallard] is trying to wriggle out of
the embarrassment of Steve Maharey’s grand but failed plans
for tertiary education,” he said.
At the same time, a
report in the Dominion Post says that the TEC has been
singled out for cuts if National wins the General Election.
The TEC, it says, has come under regular attack from
National’s Bill English who says that taxpayers have had no
return on the $210 million spent on the “dysfunctional
bureaucracy and its nutty plans”.
Worldwatch
Academics
to consider withdrawing Israeli boycott
The Association
of University Teachers (AUT) in the United Kingdom will meet
today in a special conference after pressure to overturn its
controversial decision to boycott Israeli Universities. AUT
members voted, at its annual conference last month, to cut
links with Haifa and Bar Ilan universities, claiming they
were complicit with the abuse of Palestinians in the West
Bank and Gaza.
The decision is reported to have led to
an angry backlash within AUT, with some members mobilising
the international academic community to protest at the
decision. Haifa University also announced it would take
legal action against the AUT.
The Times Higher reports
that Labour peer Lord Mitchell has stepped into the row,
appealing to the lecturers to overturn their “misguided”
decision to cut ties with the Israeli
universities.
Universities on alert over animal
terrorism
The British Government is warning universities
to be on high alert for attacks by animal rights extremists
after it was revealed that Oxford University is proceeding
with its new £18 million animal research facility on a
secret site. The Times Higher reports that Lord Sainsbury,
the Science Minister, called a meeting with vice-chancellors
from key research universities to offer to help improve
security to prevent activists targeting other
institutions.
Building contractors stopped work on
Oxford’s new animal research facility in July last year
after being threatened by activists.
It is understood
that the new Oxford facility is now being pre-fabricated
off-site and, once pre-fabrication has been completed, a
large team of contractors will be brought in to erect it in
a “military-style” operation.
Lord Sainsbury is expected
to reassure vice-chancellors that the Government and police
are committed to protecting the universities, and will
invite them to seek assistance on legal and security issues
at an early stage.
Monash loses more on South African
university
Australia’s largest university, Monash, has
reported a 2004 loss of $A12.3 million at its offshore
university, Monash University South Africa, located just
outside Johannesburg. It follows previous losses which have
increased from $2.7 million in 2001 to $8.6 million in 2003.
More than $55 million has been ploughed into the University
to date.
The losses have prompted a warning from the
Victorian Auditor-General, Wayne Cameron, about high-risk
overseas investments. He predicts that big losses will
continue despite Monash calling in consultants to try and
stop the flow of cash. “Off shore campuses, research
developments and commercial activities by universities are
inherently high-risk ventures,” he has written. The
financial risks were compounded by problems such as the
potential changes of government, greatly fluctuating
exchange rates and the fact that universities may not be
able to sell overseas campuses if they hit trouble.
The
Australian
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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