AUS Tertiary Update
Agreement reached with vice-chancellors
University staff
unions and vice-chancellors agreed, last Friday, to an
historic national umbrella agreement, setting out the terms
for the parties to work together on a collaborative basis to
address major funding and salary issues facing the
university sector. It also provides an overarching context
for the settlement of local employment agreements,
negotiations for which are now underway.
Under the
national umbrella agreement, the parties will work actively
and co-operatively with each other through the University
Tripartite Forum, recently established by the Government, to
consider and resolve long-standing salary problems and, more
broadly, funding problems in the sector. The agreement
requires vice-chancellors and unions to work actively with
each other, to establish co-operative and open relationships
and to implement relevant agreed outcomes from the Forum
into collective agreements.
The umbrella agreement will
be signed by the vice-chancellors from all New Zealand
universities and the seven unions representing university
staff.
Speaking on behalf of the combined university
unions, Professor Nigel Haworth said the proposed national
umbrella agreement was potentially the most significant
bargaining development in the sector in fifteen years. “We
have long argued that our industrial campaign must have a
political solution as well as an industrial one, and the
Government recently recognised this with the establishment
of the University Tripartite Forum,” he said. “The proposed
umbrella agreement will provide a basis on which
vice-chancellors and unions are able to approach the Forum
with a common purpose, and ensure the best outcomes for the
sector.”
“We have agreed to a solution that provides the
benefits union members are seeking from a national
agreement,” said Professor Haworth. “We want a national
approach to resolving salary issues and this agreement,
together with the Tripartite Forum, meets this
expectation.”
The Forum is expected to meet soon after
the General Election, and both unions and vice-chancellors
want to see the work of the group reflected in the next
Budget.
Union members at the Auckland University of
Technology may also be included in this agreement although
their current industrial negotiations are separate from
those at the other seven universities.
The outcome of
negotiations at each of the universities will be reported to
union members over the next fortnight.
Also in Tertiary
Update this week
1. University salaries a priority - for
most
2. University profits up
3. AUT staff to escalate
industrial action
4. Massey to set tuition fees this
week
5. Anger at new Brunel recruits
6. Scramble for
places at top British universities
7. USQ to close Dubai
campus
University salaries a priority - for
most
Resolving long-standing problems with university
salary levels will be a priority for most political parties,
but not all. While Labour has said it is committed to
identifying and resolving salary problems through a
tripartite process, National will not give any commitment to
tripartism, adding that salary levels are an issue to be
determined at each institution. National’s possible
coalition partner, ACT, is more blunt: it says it would
disband the University Tripartite Forum.
The differences
were revealed in responses to questions from AUS to eight of
the major political parties about tertiary-education policy,
or during political forums held in universities in the
lead-up to the General Election to be held on 17
September.
All of the other parties questioned said they
supported the tripartite process to resolve the salary
issues, with most adding that it needs to be supported with
additional funding. Labour says it supports multi-employer
bargaining, as does the Green Party, Jim Anderton’s
Progressives and United Future. The Maori Party says
participation in multi-employer bargaining is a matter for
staff to decide to ensure their rangitiritanga is protected,
while National says that multi-employer collective
agreements are a matter between the negotiating parties, not
for government. Neither New Zealand First nor Act supports
multi-employer bargaining, with the latter adding that it
would cut taxes in order to retain skilled workers.
Among
the other policies being promoted, the Greens say they would
strengthen measures to prevent freeloading and support
measures to bring government back into the salary-setting
process; the Progressives would establish a small Tertiary
Education Staffing Unit to provide specialist advice to
government, benchmark academic salaries with other relevant
countries and introduce arbitration to resolve disputes in
the public sector.
Further tertiary-education policies
from the main political parties will be outlined in each
issue of Tertiary Update until the General Election, and a
detailed summary can be found in the current issue of AUS
Bulletin.
University profits up
In its annual summary
of tertiary institution performance, Education Review this
week reveals that university sector profitability increased
in 2004, while the polytechnic sector experienced more
deficits and a greater overall decline than in 2003. Heading
the university rich-list was the University of Otago, with a
surplus of more than $29 million (or 7.8 as a percentage of
income), followed by the University of Auckland with a
surplus of $19 million (or 3.3% of income). Waikato trailed
the field, with a surplus of $1.3 million (or 0.8 percent of
income). It is the second year running in which all
universities have turned a surplus for the year and, aside
from Waikato, all universities have increased their
surpluses from 2003.
Amongst the polytechnics, the
highest surplus of $6.5 million was achieved at Whitireia
(14.9 percent of income) with Aoraki second at $5 million
(20 percent of income). Amongst those running a deficit were
the Nelson-Marlborough Institute of Technology (0.25
million), Tairawhiti Polytechnic ($3.4 million) and the
Western Institute of Technology ($2.6 million). University
aspirant Unitec turned a loss of $1.5 million, well short of
its $4.5 million surplus in 2003. Figures from the troubled
Wananga o Aotearoa were unavailable at the time Education
Review went to print.
Among them, universities generated
income of $2.14 billion, up from $1.94 billion in 2003, and
polytechnics earned $864 million, up from $828 million in
2003.
Using annual report information compiled by the
Ministry of Education, Education Review reports that
universities’ working capital, that is, current assets over
current liabilities, improved by $27 million (to a negative
balance of $50 million), while polytechnics’ working capital
improved by $1 million (to a negative balance of $49
million).
Student numbers also continued to grow.
Universities had 126,658 equivalent full-time students
(EFTS) last year, of which 24,162 were international
students, while polytechnics had 96,706 EFTS of which 9,425
were international students.
Overall, universities
employed more than 17,000 full-time equivalent staff and
polytechnics employed more than 8,000. Perhaps to their
credit, the institutions with the poorest overall financial
performances spent the highest proportion of their income on
staff.
Interestingly, Education Review apologises for the
late publication of its annual analysis due, it reports, to
the refusal of some institutions to provide information
before publication of their annual reports.
AUT staff to
escalate industrial action
Union members at the Auckland
University of Technology (AUT) have promised more industrial
disruption following strike action which brought the
institution to a standstill on Tuesday. More than 550
members of the Association of Staff in Tertiary Education
(ASTE) marched down Auckland’s Queen Street during Tuesday’s
strike, leaving the AUT’s campuses virtually empty of staff
and students.
The action follows the breakdown of
collective employment agreement negotiations, during which
AUT’s Vice-Chancellor, Derek McCormack, offered a salary
increase of 3.5 percent for this year and a further 3.5
percent for next year in response to a salary claim from
staff of a 6.5 percent per year increase in each of the next
two years.
Irena Brorens, ASTE Assistant Secretary, said
that classes at AUT would be further disrupted by lightning
strikes over the coming weeks if the Vice-Chancellor does
not make an improved pay offer, adding that a withdrawal of
goodwill, which began last week, would now begin to affect
the University’s recruitment, marketing and promotional
activities.
Ms Brorens said that staff would not accept
salary rates falling further and further behind the rest of
the university sector, and that they had no option but to
strike given the Vice-Chancellor’s position. “The effect on
students will be much greater if the salaries’ issue for
academics is not addressed,” she said.
Ministry of
Education figures, revealed in the Education Review analysis
reported above, show that personnel costs per equivalent
full-time staff member at AUT are the lowest of all the
country’s universities at $57,389 against a university
average of $69,142. Overall wage costs at AUT, as a
proportion of expenditure, were 55.4 percent against a
university-average of 58.5 percent.
Massey to set tuition
fees this week
Massey University plans to set tuition
fees for 2006 at its Council meeting tomorrow, with a
recommendation from senior management that one of the
options for consideration will be to increase undergraduate
fees by 10 percent. The recommendation will be considered in
the closed session of the Council meeting, meaning the
public and media will be excluded from the debate. If the
proposal is adopted, the Council will need to apply to the
Tertiary Education Commission (TEC) for an exemption from
the Government’s fee-maxima policy, which limits increases
to a maximum of 5 percent without specific exemption. It
would be the first time ever an application has been made by
a university for a blanket exemption; usually they have been
restricted to individual courses, such as for
medicine.
Students have reacted with predictable anger to
the proposal, saying that the Council has abandoned its
usual practice of setting fees at its October meeting and
holding the discussion in the public session. Massey
University Students’ Association President, Iain Galloway,
said there was an element of under-handedness about the
process, and he described the September consideration of fee
levels as a “massive error of judgment”. “In an election
year, Massey could be facing policy changes that could have
a substantial effect on its income. The Council could make a
far more informed decision knowing who will be in government
for the next three years,” he said. “The TEC is in the
process of changing its policy regarding exemptions for
fee-maxima, but nothing has been finalised. Why should the
Council be forced to fly blind on such an important
issue?”
Chancellor Nigel Gould is reported as confirming
that the proposed 10 percent fee increase will be discussed
in the “public-excluded” session of the Council meeting,
adding that Massey’s fees did not increase last year and are
currently around 10 percent less than the average of New
Zealand universities.
Worldwatch
Anger at new Brunel
recruits
Staff have reacted angrily to the news that
Britain’s Brunel University has appointed as lecturers two
close relatives of senior staff soon after making forty-five
academics redundant. The Times Higher reports that the
daughter of a pro vice-chancellor and the niece of a senior
professor in Education have been appointed to fixed-term
positions in the University’s School of Sport and
Education.
Brunel University is currently under a
“greylisted” sanction called by the Association of
University Teachers (AUT) after the sacking of two academics
for so-called “over-teaching”, and the redundancy of
forty-three others. The University has decided to replace
non-research-active staff in an effort to boost its research
status ahead of the next Research Assessment Exercise.
AUT spokesperson Justine Stephens said that, at the same
time AUT members had been thrown on the scrapheap, it could
appear that the two recruits had been appointed on their
family tree rather than their research.
Brunel management
has announced that its programme “to reduce the number of
non-research-active staff” has finished.
Scramble for
places at top British universities
A record number of
British universities are closing their doors to applicants
after an unprecedented scramble for places by students
desperate to avoid higher tuition fees. Admissions tutors at
dozens of institutions say that they are full only days
after the start of the “clearing” exercise to match students
to available vacancies. Some universities reported that they
were full by the end of the first day. Tens of thousands of
candidates who are still searching for places because they
failed to get the A-level grades for their chosen courses
face disappointment as a growing number of universities pull
out of clearing.
Meanwhile, universities in Australia and
New Zealand are to offer thousands of pounds of scholarships
to British students who have failed to gain a place in
clearing and wish to study abroad. Prompted by reports that
up to 60,000 school-leavers may fail to gain a university
place in Britain this year because of the rush to avoid
£3,000 top-up fees, seven universities from Queensland to
Canterbury have pledged financial assistance. Annual
undergraduate fees usually range between £4,100 and £5,400.
With a lower cost of living, however, academics say that it
is now academically and financially worthwhile for British
students to study in the southern hemisphere.
The
Times
USQ to close Dubai campus
The Toowoomba-based
University of Southern Queensland (USQ) has decided to
abandon its controversial campus in Dubai’s Knowledge
Village less than a year after its opening, leaving stranded
more than three hundred students in business administration,
information technology and mass communication.
Last year,
three senior USQ staff were suspended after it was
discovered the campus was being set up in Dubai and had
enrolled more than one hundred students without the
knowledge of the Vice-Chancellor or the University Council.
Despite referring the matter to Queensland’s Crime and
Misconduct Commission, the Vice-Chancellor decided to press
ahead, saying the planned campus should proceed.
Now, in
announcing the decision to shut up shop, the Vice-Chancellor
has cited unacceptable changes imposed by its landlord,
Knowledge Village, which “shifts all the financial risk of
the campus to USQ.”
Local news reports say that the 300
affected students, who were about to start their third
semester of study, are considering legal action against the
University if fees are not
refunded.
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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