AUS Tertiary Update
Canterbury agreements settled
Union members at the
University of Canterbury yesterday ratified the settlement
of their four main collective agreements, bringing to an end
several months of industrial disruption. Union members will
receive a salary increase of 5 percent from 1 August, with
2.75 percent backdated to 1 May.
Canterbury is the first
of the universities to settle local agreements following the
achievement of a national umbrella agreement between
vice-chancellors and the combined university unions the
previous week. Under that agreement, which becomes effective
when all local collective agreements are finalised, the
parties will work actively and constructively with each
other through the University Tripartite Forum to consider
and resolve long-standing salary and funding problems in the
university sector and to implement these outcomes in
collective agreements.
The Association of University
Staff (AUS) Canterbury Branch President, Dr David Small,
said that, through their collective efforts including
successful strike action, staff had shifted the University
from its original offer of 3.25 percent, and into agreeing
to a national process for future salary discussions. Union
members had also been successful in putting the issue of
salaries on the political agenda. “It has always been our
view that the resolution of the salary problems facing the
sector would be through a political as well as industrial
process. The agreement we have reached places an enforceable
obligation on the vice-chancellors collectively to give the
salary issue a high priority in the tripartite process; use
their best endeavours to develop, agree and implement
sustainable solutions to providing fair and competitive
salaries; and to implement, as appropriate, agreed outcomes
into collective agreements.”
Staff at Victoria, Auckland,
Otago, Massey and Lincoln Universities will vote, over the
next week, on the ratification of local agreements.
Negotiations are resuming at the University of Waikato where
the salary offer, at 3 percent, remains the lowest in the
country.
The Tripartite Forum Working Group is currently
preparing background papers on salaries and funding, with
the Forum to meet in October.
AUS General Secretary
Helen Kelly said it is the unions’ intention and expectation
that quick progress will be made on the salaries issue and
that the Government will be in a position to provide funding
through the next Budget.
Also in Tertiary Update this
week
1. Research policies revealed
2. Students react
to Massey’s planned fee hike
3. Speculation mounts over
Wananga
4. Top researchers receive $4.2
million
5. Some Australian universities plan to cancel
existing collectives
6. UK lecturers accept 3 percent pay
deal
7. USQ staff and students demand
compensation
Research policies revealed
Labour says it
will invest $160 million more for research between 2005 and
2008 and lift the total value of the Performance-Based
Research Fund (PBRF) to $250 million per year by 2010 if it
regains the government benches in the General Election on 17
September.
Announcing Labour’s policy late last week,
the Minister of Education, Trevor Mallard, said that new
projections of degree and post-graduate student numbers
show that the existing PBRF pool will grow to over $112
million in 2006, $188.7 million in 2007 and $200.5 million
in 2008. He says that increased support would be given to
the Centres for Research Excellence beyond 2008/09, when
funding for the seven centres will be reviewed, and $8
million in new funding would be provided to strengthen areas
of university research deemed important to New Zealand’s
society and economy.
On its website, the National Party
says it will focus on high-value research and supports
further growth and development of high-quality blue-skies
and strategic research in tertiary institutions. It will
continue with the existing rules and funding for the PBRF
and ensure all institutions offering degrees can meet the
statutory requirement for related research capacity.
National’s possible coalition partner, ACT, says it would
not alter the PBRF.
In response to questions from the
Association of University Staff, the Greens provided the
most comprehensive response to questions on research: They
support moving the PBRF unit of assessment to groups rather
than individuals, say that research funding should take into
account public good and expressed concern about the
commercialisation of research and the discriminatory nature
of the PBRF for women.
United Future says it supports the
PBRF, but would make it easier to administer, New Zealand
First would broaden the definition of research and the
Progressives says they strongly support investment in
research. The Maori Party says it is concerned about the
exclusion of some research from PBRF, especially for Maori
researchers, and believes publicly-funded research should be
accountable to people, not governments.
All parties,
with the exception of ACT, support the current requirement
for degrees to be taught by people engaged in
research.
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
at:
http://www.aus.ac.nz/publications/bulletin/2005/Sept/SeptPolicies.pdf
Students
react to Massey’s planned fee hike
The New Zealand
University Students’ Association (NZUSA) has condemned a
move by Massey University to try to increase undergraduate
tuition fees by 10 percent for 2006. At its meeting last
Friday, the University Council adopted a recommendation from
senior management, by ten votes to five, to increase fees by
the 10 percent, in part a consequence of the decision of the
previous year not to increase fees for 2005.
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 authorisation.
NZUSA Co-President
Andrew Kirton described the move by Massey as reckless,
irresponsible and showing contempt for current students and
future Massey graduates. “Students at the three Massey
campuses in Albany, Palmerston North and Wellington will
suffer hundreds of dollars in fee hikes next year,” he said.
“We just hope the TEC has more sense than the majority of
the current Massey Council, and rejects Massey’s claim for a
further 5 percent [over the maxima] increase.”
This week,
the Massey University Students’ Association (MUSA) called on
all political parties to be honest about fee setting. MUSA
President Iain Galloway said that, following the decision by
the Massey Council to seek a 10 percent fee increase,
students and the public have the right to know if the
massive annual fee hikes of the 1990’s were coming back into
fashion. “Whilst the main political parties opened their
campaigns promising laudable adjustments to the student-loan
scheme, the menace of rocketing fees appears to be a case of
giving with one hand and taking away with the other,” he
said. “Students need to know for sure what policies they
will be voting for this election. I think it’s time everyone
came clean on this issue.”
Massey University Chancellor,
Nigel Gould, said the Council endeavoured to keep fees down
last year, but could only do that for a certain amount of
time if the University were to continue to invest in its
facilities, the staff and the quality of its teaching and
research.
It is not known at this time when TEC will
consider Massey’s application.
Speculation mounts over
Wananga
Speculation is mounting over the future
governance of Te Wananga o Aotearoa, with a television
report that the Minister of Education is intending to back
down on his threat to replace the institution’s Council with
a commissioner and the circulation of a consultation report
on the Wananga from the Auditor-General.
On 20 June the
Minister, Trevor Mallard, advised the Wananga’s Council that
he had made a preliminary decision to replace it with a
commissioner following his investigation into repeated
allegations of nepotism and financial mismanagement. In
turn, the Council had twenty-one days to respond, following
which the Minister was able to make a final decision on what
action he would take.
While nothing further has been
announced publicly, last week TVNZ News ran a story to the
effect that the Minister was in the process of striking a
deal that the Council could stay on condition that the
Wananga’s Chief Executive, Rongo Wetere, went. The story
added, however, that Dr Wetere intended to resist any moves
to facilitate his departure.
The Minister has declined to
comment, saying that the issue was an important one and that
he had no intention of rushing a decision.
Meanwhile, in
a press statement yesterday, ACT MP Ken Shirley says that
the circulation to interested parties of a consultation
report into the Wananga from the Auditor-General points to a
gross wastage of substantial amounts of public money. He
said that, while the New Zealand Qualifications Authority
and the Tertiary Education Commission carry most of the
direct flak, “it is clear that those bodies were
implementing political directives to shower the Wananga with
enormous amounts of taxpayer’s money”.
“Regrettably, the
terms of reference establishing the Auditor-General’s
enquiry specifically excluded the examination and integrity
of enrolments and the content and the output of the
courses,” Mr Shirley said. “What we saw was tens of
thousands of students enrolled in highly spurious courses
all designed to maximize the capture of taxpayers.
The
report is not yet publicly available.
Top researchers
receive $4.2 million
Forty research grants were announced
this week by the Minister of Education, Trevor Mallard, in
the latest round of Top Achiever Doctoral Scholarships.
These scholarships are available to students enrolling in or
applying for a programme of PhD study, and provide support
for up to three years’ full-time study. Recipients are paid
an annual stipend of $25,000, $3,000 per annum towards
attendance at conferences and annual course fees.
The
latest round of scholarships, worth more than $4.2 million
over the next three years, included research projects from a
variety of disciplines.
Trevor Mallard said that the
scholarships ensure that PhD students have the support they
need to undertake research that New Zealand needs to
underpin New Zealand’s ongoing social and economic
development. “These scholarships confirm the Labour-led
Government’s commitment to increasing the numbers of
highly-trained researchers and highly-skilled graduates in a
variety of disciplines,” he said. “Our Government is very
committed to supporting and strengthening research. As a
country New Zealand needs top researchers – they are an
important part of our work in growing the economy and
lifting the level of innovation, and they also help us with
our understanding of social needs.”
Some of the students
are undertaking research at an overseas university but, on
completion of the scholarships, they must return to New
Zealand for a period equal to that of the
scholarship.
Worldwatch
Some Australian universities
plan to cancel existing collectives
Australia’s National
Tertiary Education Union (NTEU) has condemned a “secret”
plan by some university employers to unilaterally cancel
existing collective employment agreements if they do not
meet the Federal Government’s new industrial-relations
plans.
Under changes which are to be introduced into
Federal Parliament this week, universities are being
required to incorporate harsh new conditions into employment
agreements or risk losing access to around $A280 million in
new funding. The new conditions include forcing staff from
collective employment agreements onto individual ones, known
as Australian Workplace Agreements, and eliminating all caps
on casual employment.
In a leaked letter reported in the
Australian Financial Times, the Australian Higher Education
Industry Association has requested the Federal Government to
allow universities to simply cancel their existing
agreements.
NTEU General Secretary Grahame McCulloch said
that such a course of action would see university staff
conditions slashed, including reductions in the minimum
salary rates and in areas such as job security, academic
freedom, workloads and parental leave. “The cancellation of
any agreement would also be certain to provoke major
opposition from staff at any university that went down this
path,” he said.
Meanwhile, a report in The Australian
says that a group of universities is also pushing to have
provisions for instant dismissal included in their workplace
rules, going well behind the requirements of the Federal
Government for workplace reform.
UK lecturers accept 3
percent pay deal
Lecturers in the United Kingdom’s
“post-92” new universities have accepted a pay offer of 3
percent for 2005, but have vowed to campaign for a
significant pay increase in 2006, demanding that a third of
top-up fees and other new university income is spent on
pay.
Members of NATFHE, the UK university and colleges’
lecturers’ union, which represents 20,000 staff in “new”
universities and higher education colleges, voted this week
by a margin of seven to one to accept the new pay deal and
mount the campaign.
NATFHE Higher Education Head, Roger
Kline, says that lecturers have received salary increases of
only half that of other public-sector employees in recent
years and trail badly behind equivalent professionals in the
UK and internationally. He said NATFHE believes unions must
challenge the current funding arrangements and seek a
commitment from employers to allocate funding to improve
pay. “When trying to justify the introduction of top-up
fees, ministers led university lecturers, MPs and the public
to believe that a third of this income would be used to
improve pay,” he said. “We are going to test their
commitment to that. We cannot continue to let lecturers’ pay
slide down the national and international league tables,
losing purchasing power and damaging recruitment to the
profession. The high quality of higher education must be
maintained by rewarding lecturers accordingly.”
USQ staff
and students demand compensation
Staff and students at
the University of Southern Queensland’s failed Dubai campus
are demanding compensation for closure of the campus, but
USQ Vice-Chancellor, Bill Lovegrove, says the matters are
the responsibility of USQ's former Dubai partner, the
International Academic Corporation.
Last week, the
Toowoomba-based University 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.
A joint letter to USQ
from MBA students who have had their courses cut short makes
several demands, including that all their remaining units be
offered by distance education at no cost and with no
completion dates. They are also seeking free education for
those who choose to come to Australia to complete their
programmes.
This week USQ expanded an offer of four free
units to eight for students who want to continue their
studies by distance education or on campus in Australia.
Staff have called for the same redundancy payouts as
Australian academics, saying the closure has left many of
them unemployed. “Not only did the University fail to
officially notify the staff of the closure, there has been
no mention of satisfactory compensation for the loss of
working hours, jobs, cover for outstanding marking, and
September classes,” an unsigned staff letter says.
Professor Lovegrove said that USQ had approached IAC
about meeting its employer obligations and had sought help
from Knowledge Village, the Dubai landlord.
From The
Australian
********************************************************************************
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