AUS Tertiary Update
University negotiations break down
Negotiations for new
national collective employment agreements between university
unions and vice-chancellors have broken down. Universities
will now, for the first time ever, face prolonged national
strike action.
The negotiations, which resumed in
Christchurch on Monday this week, broke down after all of
the university employers maintained their previous refusal
to agree to national collective agreements, insisting on
single-employer agreements with salary increases ranging
from 2.0 percent (Massey) to 4.5 percent (Auckland). Some of
the universities have also now initiated single-employer
bargaining in an attempt to force the unions to abandon
claims for national agreements.
Combined university
unions’ spokesperson, Jeff Rowe, said staff negotiators had
hoped that vice-chancellors would have taken a more
constructive approach following the decision by Minister of
Education Trevor Mallard, last week to establish a
Universities Salaries Group to investigate and resolve
long-recognised salary problems in the sector. “On that
basis, the unions put a proposal to employers that they
agree to the two national collective agreements, offer a
common national salary increase of 5 percent and participate
in the USG,” said Mr Rowe. “This was proposed as a means of
engaging in tripartite discussions, aimed at finding a
sustainable, long-term solution to the salary problems in
the sector.”
Mr Rowe said the rejection of the unions’
position, and the luke-warm support for the Government’s USG
proposal, led the unions to question the employers’
commitment to resolving salary and funding issues at
all.
Association of University Staff (AUS) General
Secretary, Helen Kelly, called on university councils to now
step into the dispute, saying it was an important governance
matter. “That the vice-chancellors are jeopardising a
significant opportunity to work constructively with the
Government and unions to find solutions should be of major
concern to councils,” she said. “Even if vice-chancellors
are prepared to risk the long-term quality and reputation of
New Zealand universities, their councils should
not.
National strike action is proposed for 20 July and 4
August, with rolling stoppages scheduled for the intervening
fortnight. The unions will also hold meetings over the next
fortnight to consider escalating that action.
In response
to the breakdown of negotiations, Green Party Education
spokesperson, Nandor Tanczos, said he supported the staff’s
call for a multi-employer agreement. “Staff salaries
continue to lag behind comparable countries and need to be
addressed with some urgency if we are to retain good
academics,” he said.
Also in Tertiary Update this
week
1. VC accused of jeopardising University Salaries
Group
2. Preliminary decision taken on
Wananga
3. Senior positions to go at
Waikato
4. Students lodge complaint with
Committee
5. Herstory
6. Plans for Australian
mega-university
7. Australia private university goes
under
8. Graduates rely on parents’ money
9. Mumbai VC
proposes dress code
VC accused of jeopardising University
Salaries Group
According to the University of Auckland
Branch of the AUS, it is of serious concern that Auckland’s
Vice-Chancellor wishes to broaden the agenda of the
University Salaries Group (USG) to include all university
funding issues.
The Minister of Education, Trevor
Mallard, announced last week that he is setting up the USG
to consider and resolve issues around salaries in the
university sector.
AUS Auckland Branch President,
Associate Professor Peter Wills, said that salaries make up
approximately 56% of that University’s expenditure, and
represent the most pressing issue for AUS members and the
Government. “It is disappointing, therefore, that the
Vice-Chancellor is publicly jeopardising the USG initiative
by attempting to change its focus,” he said.
“While the
Vice-Chancellor is critical of the unions for having a
narrow focus on improving salaries, it is the unions’ view
that salaries have suffered at the expense of other
priorities for the last 15 years, both here and at other
universities, and it is now time for university employers,
in cooperation with the Government, to formulate a proper,
long-term solution to the problem for the benefit of both
staff and fee-paying students,” said Associate Professor
Wills.
“The union has “won” the establishment of the
tripartite salaries group. In terms of the battle to
improve the position of university staff, it is the most
significant development for as long as many of us can
remember,” said Associate Professor Wills. “As a union we
are also keen to address issues such as staff/student
ratios, and improving the quality of teaching and research
facilities and equipment, but when the Government
acknowledges that university salaries are a major problem
and creates a forum to discuss and resolve the relevant
issues, then everything should be done to use that limited
opportunity to the maximum.”
Associate Professor Wills
said he urged the Vice-Chancellor and the University Council
not to squander the opportunity to address salary issues by
trying to change the Government’s mind on the term of
reference for the USG.
Preliminary decision taken on
Wananga
The Minister of Education, Trevor Mallard,
announced this week that he has taken further steps towards
the appointment of a commissioner to Te Wananga o Aotearoa.
In a letter to the Wananga Council Chair, Craig Coxhead, the
Minister says that he has formed a preliminary view that the
Council should be dissolved and a commissioner appointed in
its place.
The Wananga now has twenty-one days to make
submissions on why it considers the Minister’s preliminary
decision should not be confirmed. If the Council does not
provide convincing evidence or reasons for the Minister to
change his mind, a commissioner will be appointed in July.
Trevor Mallard’s letter gives the Council until 11 July to
respond.
In his letter, Trevor Mallard cites amongst his
concerns the failure of the Wananga to submit audited
financial statements for 2004, its approval of an
unauthorised loan to the Aotearoa Institute, the lack of a
business plan for 2004 and 2005, exposure to a likely
reduction in income and indications that, without assistance
from the Crown, the institution may not be able to pay its
bills.
Trevor Mallard said that the decision had not been
taken lightly. “The appointment of a commissioner is the
highest level of intervention available to the Government,
and requires a high threshold to be passed before a
commissioner is an option,” he said. “I have received advice
that indicated convincingly that there is a serious level of
financial risk, and risk to the operation or long-term
viability of the Wananga.”
“More fundamentally, the
Council has not been able to convince me that it will not
continue to struggle with the reality of the Wananga’s
situation, or provide necessary leadership or capability to
work proactively with the Crown Manager to reduce risk,”
Trevor Mallard said.
The Wananga is reported, however, as
remaining confident that it can mount a case to continue to
run the institution. “We are confident that our submission
and the restructuring plan we are already implementing will
give the Minister confidence in the quality of our
governance and avoid the dissolution of the Wananga’s
Council,” said Mr Coxhead.
Senior positions to go at
Waikato
Four senior positions are to be axed at Waikato
University, and two new positions created, as part of what
is described as the University’s new strategic management
and administrative structure. Going are the two current
Deputy Vice-Chancellors (academic and research), Chief
Financial Officer and Pro Vice-Chancellor (Tauranga). In
their place will be a new Deputy Vice-Chancellor and a new
Head of Corporate Services whose positions are described as
encompassing the full range of academic and operational
responsibilities. The new positions are described as
“significantly different” from any of the existing positions
and will be externally advertised. Those who have lost their
jobs have been told they are able to apply for the new
ones.
A new management structure sees the current Senior
Management Group cut from sixteen to ten, with the number of
managers reporting directly to the Vice-Chancellor being cut
from eighteen to thirteen.
In a letter to staff, the new
Vice-Chancellor, Professor Roy Crawford, said that the new
structure provides for streamlined and efficient
decision-making, and provides clear role responsibilities.
It also foreshadows an intention to review the
organisational structure of the University’s faculties,
schools and committees.
“What we’re doing makes the
Vice-Chancellor and Chief Executive less involved in
day-to-day management so we can provide leadership and
vision,” Professor Crawford told the Waikato Times. “This is
a very positive move for the University and [one] that most
large organisations do.”
Students lodge complaint with
Committee
The New Zealand University Students’
Association (NZUSA) has lodged a complaint with Parliament’s
Regulation Review Committee over the recent cuts to the
Independent Circumstances Allowance for students, saying the
changes to regulations were based on an incorrect
interpretation of the Bill of Rights Act. The changes,
announced in the 2004 Budget, resulted in around 6,000
students aged under 25, who are or were married, as well as
students who are financially independent of their parents,
losing their entitlement.
NZUSA Co-President Camilla
Belich said that a legal opinion found that the changes were
not a correct interpretation of the Bill of Rights Act. “It
is contrary to the purpose of the Bill of Rights Act to use
it to remove existing rights,” she said. “A living allowance
for all students would remove the age discrimination
students currently face when trying to access student
allowances. We want the Regulations Review Committee to
disallow the new regulations and immediately reinstate the
Independent Circumstances Allowance.”
Herstory
The
University of Auckland’s Vice-Chancellor, Stuart McCutcheon,
earned passing reference at the memorial service for trade
unionist Sonja Davies last Sunday. A photo was shown of
Sonja on parade after a graduation ceremony at Victoria
University, where she was awarded an honorary doctorate.
Parade day was extremely hot, and a person walking next to
Sonja lent her his sunglasses. It turned out the kind person
was Stuart McCutcheon, then Victoria’s Vice-Chancellor.
The story told at the memorial service was that, after
reading newspaper reports from recent court cases between
the AUS and University of Auckland, Sonja retracted her view
of the kind Vice-Chancellor, and became very disapproving.
She quipped to the storyteller that she should not have
given him back his glasses that day!
Worldwatch
Plans
for Australian mega-university
Three West-Australian
universities are considering joining to form Australia’s
first mega-University. The proposed University of Perth,
which would result from a merger of Edith Cowan, Murdoch and
Curtin Universities, would have more than 70,000 students
across twelve campuses, a combined budget of $A750 million
and assets worth more than $A1 billion.
The merger is
reported as being pushed by Edith Cowan University
Vice-Chancellor, Millicent Poole, who argues that the
proposal is being driven by the Federal Government’s higher
education reforms.
The National Tertiary Education Union
(NTEU), which represents academic and general staff, says
that preserving the quality of education offered to
students, the career opportunities and conditions of staff
and the broader public interest must be the central features
of any merger. NTEU spokesperson Mick Campion said that any
proposal would need to be able to demonstrate clearly how it
will improve the quality of provisions for students and how
it will benefit the West-Australian community in terms of
its implications for research.
Australia private
university goes under
Australia’s first private
university set up by a public institution is to close after
eight years and losses of at least $A20 million. Melbourne
University Private, which is also registered as a company in
New Zealand, was set up in 1997 by the University of
Melbourne with predictions that it would attract 10,000
students and generate $A250 million a year in
revenue.
From the outset, the private arm of the
University struggled. By 2001 it has lost $3 million and
leaked business reports revealed that it was at risk of
insolvency. It also came under political pressure when the
Government threatened to withdraw its accreditation because
it didn’t carry out research.
Current students will be
absorbed into the public arm of the University.
Sourced
from Education Guardian
Graduates rely on parents’
money
Almost 60 percent of university graduates in the
United Kingdom rely on their parents for financial support
three years after they graduate, according to a survey
carried out by the Royal Bank of Scotland (RBS) of 1200
people who graduated in 2002.
Head of Graduate Banking
at RBS, Donna Ewing, said the research reveals that over
half of graduates were surprised by how much they still
relied on their parents for financial support after
graduation.
The average debt of graduates this year will
be £13, 501 according to some estimates, and the National
Union of Students (NUS) say this could rise to nearly
£34,000 under the new system of top-up fees when most
students will pay £3,000 a year in fees.
Hanna Essex,
NUS Vice-President, said that forcing students into such
ridiculous levels of debt is ultimately going to put young
people off higher education.
Sourced from Education
Guardian
Mumbai VC proposes dress code
The
Vice-Chancellor of Mumbai University has come out with a
controversial proposal to impose a dress code on women and
men. He wants the student community to dress modestly.
“We are planning to advise the principals of all
colleges to come up with a dress code so that boys and girls
dress modestly. This does not mean that we are prescribing
any guidelines or rules,” said Vijay Khole, Vice-Chancellor
of Mumbai University.
The Vice-Chancellor claims this is
not an attempt to impose moral dictates.
But for a city
that revels in its free spiritedness, any such move is an
unwelcome intrusion. “We are above 18. A dress code may not
necessarily result in good performances,” said one student.
“There's a limit to everything. Okay, if you ban short
skirts, but then you should not ban t-shirts,” said
another.
Next on the cards, says the Vice Chancellor, is
a formal meeting with college principals in August to
discuss how colleges can come up with their own dress
code.
NDTV
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AUS
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marty.braithwaite@aus.ac.nz