AUS Tertiary Update
Election green light for tripartite process
While the
final result of the General Election will not be known for
more than another week, the most likely outcome is the
re-election of the Labour-led Government. Implicit in that
is the continuing commitment of government to resolving
long-term funding and salary problems in the university
sector through the University Tripartite Forum. Without
exception, all of the political parties discussing coalition
or support arrangements with the Labour Party have told the
Association of University Staff (AUS) that they will support
the tripartite process. Aside from New Zealand First, all
support multi-employer bargaining.
In preparation for the
next meeting of the Tripartite Forum Working Group,
scheduled for 4 October, representatives of the combined
university unions and the New Zealand Vice-Chancellors’
Committee met in Auckland shortly before the General
Election to discuss the development of a joint paper on
university salaries and resourcing. The writing of the paper
will be shared between the two groups, with much of the work
on salaries having already been completed.
Meanwhile, in
the last of the negotiations for the renewal of university
collective employment agreements, Waikato University
management have amended their position on salaries. At
negotiations last Friday, Waikato management’s original
offer of a 3 percent increase from 1 June, which had been
rejected by staff, was supplemented by a further 1.5 percent
from 1 October. They have also agreed that any further
funding for salaries made available through the tripartite
process will be added as appropriate. This offer is being
being put to ratification, the outcome of which will be
known next Wednesday.
Salary offers of 3.7 percent at
Lincoln University and 4.5 percent, with a further payment
of $300 for union members, at the University of Auckland
have been put to ratification ballots. The Auckland result
will be known on Monday, with Lincoln to follow next
Friday.
Meanwhile, salary offers of 4 percent at Victoria
University and 5 percent at Otago University have now been
ratified.
Massey and Canterbury Universities have
previously settled their new collective agreements.
AUS
General Secretary Helen Kelly said the union’s priority is
now to ensure that sufficient progress is made in the
tripartite process in order that the salaries information
can assist funding decisions for the next Budget.
Also in
Tertiary Update this week
1. AUS releases IP
guide
2. Wananga files Waitangi claim against
Government
3. CPIT boss steps down
4. Universities
score well in funding grants
5. New ACE restrictions
announced
6. Student leader suspended in row over
Islamist debate
7. Monash University threatens to
withhold pay rises
8. Bitter pay disputes grip Argentina
and Peru
AUS releases IP guide
The Association of
University Staff today released a comprehensive guidebook
intended to inform members about common intellectual
property issues that arise in the employment context. The
web-based resource, A Guide to Intellectual Property Rights,
was written for AUS by Geoff McLay, a senior lecturer in the
Faculty of Law at Victoria University, and is based (with
permission) on a similar guide produced by the Association
of University Teachers in the United Kingdom.
The guide
examines intellectual property rights for active researchers
and teachers in the university environment, and is intended
to provide basic information to ensure that the rights of
AUS members are protected. The guide includes a checklist of
action points aimed at highlighting key aspects of
intellectual property matters which AUS members should
address. Topics include copyright; publishing; dispute
resolution; the public lending right scheme; performers’
rights; electronic and other non-print media; design and
registered design rights; patents, trade and service marks,
product logos and product names; facts, data and
confidential information; responsibilities of libraries; the
academic’s intellectual property and the employer:
copyright, patents, “trade secrets” and the duty of
fidelity; using other people’s copyright; and penalties
Launching the guide, AUS National President Professor
Nigel Haworth said its publication provided an outstanding
first point of reference which would assist both academic
and general staff to ensure that their rights are protected
in the university environment. “This is an exceptionally
well produced guide and will be particularly useful in what
is an increasingly complex and thorny area for many
university staff,” he said.
A Guide to Intellectual
Property Rights can be found at:
http://www.aus.ac.nz/publications/IP/IP05.pdf
Wananga
files Waitangi claim against Government
In what appears
to be a never-ending saga, a claim was filed in the Waitangi
Tribunal on Monday this week alleging that the Crown has
breached the Treaty of Waitangi in its dealings with Te
Wananga o Aotearoa (TWOA), primarily through its pursuit of
racially divisive policies. It says that the Crown’s
attempts to impose a quota of 80 percent Maori students on
the Wananga are both illegal and racially divisive.
The
claim, which was lodged by lawyers Chen Palmer acting for
the Aotearoa Institute, the parent body of TWOA, also says
that the Crown has failed to honour a promise to pay the
Wananga $20 million due under a suspensory loan intended to
provide adequate capital for the institution to operate,
significantly contributing to TWOA’s financial difficulties
and allowing the Crown to take steps to gain control over
the governance and management of the institution.
Harold
Maniapoto and Dr Tui John Adams, on behalf of the Aotearoa
Institute, say they have been forced to bring the claim
because the Wananga has been the victim of a calculated plan
of action by the Crown to gain control over the Wananga and
turn it into a significantly smaller institution for Maori
only. “The Crown has made a mockery of the Treaty of
Waitangi and is squarely to blame for the financial
predicament and negative publicity that has hounded the
Wananga this year. It should have paid most of the loan by
now as required by the Deed of Settlement,” they said.
“Instead, the Crown has reneged on its promise to provide
adequate capital funding to TWOA, appointed a Crown Manager
and tried to sack the Council. It has pursued a relentless
and ruthless campaign to downsize the Wananga in election
year. These are not the actions of a Treaty partner acting
in good faith.”
They continued: “To make matters worse,
the Crown’s efforts to impose an illegal quota of 80 percent
Maori on the Wananga, which has always been a racially
inclusive institution as required by the law, was the real
reason why the suspensory loan was not paid. There is
absolutely no place for racially divisive policies in New
Zealand education, and there is no way we could stand by and
allow that to continue.”
The Minister of Education,
Trevor Mallard, has declined to comment.
CPIT boss steps
down
Perhaps closing a chapter on another long-running
saga, John Scott, the Chief Executive of the Christchurch
Polytechnic Institute of Technology, announced his
resignation yesterday. According to The Press, Scott told a
staff meeting, called to hear about progress on the
institution’s sustainability review, that he would be
leaving after eleven years at the helm.
Scott and CPIT
were embroiled in controversy last year when it was revealed
that the institution had received more than $13 million in
public funding for its Cool IT computer programme which
involved little more than handing out CD-Roms to members of
the public. Students, who were recruited at random, were not
required to attend classes or complete course work, and had
no contact with teachers.
Following a damning report
from the Auditor-General, the Tertiary Education Commission
ordered the institution to repay $3.5 million of its
funding.
But it did not end there. Scott came in for
strong personal criticism from the then Minister of
Education, Steve Maharey, who said that at no stage during
the investigation into the Cool-IT scandal did he see any
public acknowledgement from Scott of his need to meet the
standards of judgement and decision-making expected of
senior executives leading public-education institutions.
More recently, the relationship between Scott and the
CPIT Council is understood to have soured after an annual
review of Scott’s performance, reports that the relationship
between Scott and some senior management had become
“untenable”, industrial tension resulting in staff taking
strike action and poor financial performance.
Universities
score well in funding grants
In the last funding releases
announced before the General Election, the Minister of
Education, Trevor Mallard, announced a total of more than
$15 million in grants from the e-Learning Collaborative
Development Fund (eCDF) and the Innovation Development Fund
(IDF).
Universities feature in nine of the fifteen
successful eCDF grants, aimed at building the use of
computer and on-line technology in tertiary education.
According to Trevor Mallard, the projects that will be
funded by these grants are diverse and range from workplace
e-learning projects involving polytechnics and industry
training organisations to the development of on-line
professional development resources for people who teach
adult literacy. “A Massey University-led project involves
designing a web-based system for students to get together
from different tertiary institutions and join study groups
and receive expert advice,” he said. “Otago University is
undertaking a project that aims to address a lack of any
centrally maintained and managed on-line information
literacy resources that can be used across the New Zealand
tertiary sector.”
Similarly, universities are associated
with six of the twelve successful grants, worth $8.4 million
overall, for projects aimed at increasing innovation in the
economy and helping key industries through the IDF.
According to Trevor Mallard, the IDF is intended to help
tertiary education organisations develop capacity in areas
that are strategically relevant to growing the economy and
lifting New Zealand’s skill base. Many of the projects are
initiatives being funded jointly between public and
private-sector organisations.
Among the recipients, the
University of Auckland received almost $1 million towards a
project entitled “Establishment of Teaching and Research
Capabilities and Systems to Support Regulatory Compliance
with New and Existing Medicines”, which focuses on
establishing capabilities and facilities complying with
internationally acceptable GLP (Good Laboratory Practices)
standards.
New ACE restrictions announced
No tertiary
education institutions will be allowed more than 700
equivalent full-time students (EFTS) in adult and community
education next year, and self-directed community education
will be limited under new Tertiary Education Commission
(TEC) rules. A minimum of thirty EFTS will be allowed at any
single institution.
Education Review reports that TEC has
allocated each polytechnic and wananga a maximum number of
adult and community education EFTS for next year comprising
the lesser of this year’s EFTS minus 15 percent or whatever
remains of a three-year allocation they were given when
community education was first “cracked down on” last
year.
Universities and colleges of education will be
allowed to enrol up to the same number of community
education EFTS as they did last year.
The new rules limit
enrolments in self-directed community education to no more
than thirty EFTS, except where there is prior agreement by
the TEC.
Worldwatch
Student leader suspended in row
over Islamist debate
Middlesex University has suspended
the President of its Student Union and revoked his
studentship until further notice after he refused to cancel
a debate with the controversial Islamist group Hizb
ut-Tahrir.
The Union was ordered to cancel the debate at
the end of last week but refused, with the Student Union
President, Keith Shilson, arguing that it should be allowed
on the grounds of freedom of speech.
Mr Shilson was
escorted from the campus by university security in what is
believed to be the first disciplinary action to be taken
against a student over the issue of extremism.
Hizb
ut-Tahrir has been banned by the National Union of Students
(NUS) because, according to NUS policy, the group is
“responsible for supporting terrorism and publishing
material that incites racial hatred”.
Last term,
however, the Middlesex Students’ Union overturned the NUS
ban and Mr Shilson invited representatives of Hizb ut-Tahrir
to give a question-and-answer session scheduled for 28
September at the Union’s Hendon campus, which has the
highest population of Muslim students.
University
management stepped in at the end of last week to order the
cancellation of the debate, following a speech by the
Education Secretary, Ruth Kelly, in which she said that
vice-chancellors would have to crackdown on extremism on
campuses.
The Union is expected to meet this week to
decide what action it will take.
Education
Guardian
Monash University threatens to withhold pay
rises
Australia’s Monash University has told staff it
will not be able to pay salary increases worth $A27 million,
due next year, if an agreement on salary and conditions is
not reached before the Federal Government’s November 30
deadline for higher-education workplace reform requirements.
Monash staff received an agreed 3.5 per cent pay
increase last week, but Deputy Vice-Chancellor Stephen
Parker has warned staff that the University would not be
able to meet a 6.5 per cent increase in 2006 if it loses
Commonwealth funding. Universities may miss out on millions
of dollars if their new enterprise agreements fail to comply
with the Government’s reforms.
National Tertiary
Education Union Branch President Carol Williams said next
year’s increases were agreed to in February, well before the
Government’s rules for funding were released in late April.
She told The Australian she couldn't understand why the
University could no longer stick to its original pay deal,
suggesting it is possibly to cover losses in the
international-student base.
From The Australian
Bitter
pay disputes grip Argentina and Peru
University
lecturers in two South American countries are embroiled in
deep-rooted disputes with their governments. In Argentina,
strikes have paralysed the higher education system while, in
Peru, a national strike over pay has brought the
public-university system to a virtual halt.
For more
than two months, a total of thirty-two institutions across
Peru have refused to open their doors to more than 300,000
students. In response to a claim from the Peruvian National
Federation of University Teachers for annual salary
increases of 30 per cent until 2008, the Government has
offered 10 per cent. Anger has been heightened by the
Government’s failure to deliver on a commitment, made in
July by Peru’s President, that professors’ earnings would
match those of judicial professionals. That would require a
threefold increase in their salaries and would cost an
estimated 452 million soles ($NZ196 million).
Meanwhile,
Argentinian trade unions are pushing for pay increases of up
to 70 per cent to return academics to their standard of
living before the 2002 economic crisis. University teachers
have been taking increasingly militant action this year to
try to force the Government’s hand. Students at the National
University of Cordoba, one of the most important in
Argentina, have had no classes for five weeks. Recently,
20,000 students and lecturers marched through the city
demanding better pay for academics. There have also been
one-day strikes and sit-ins at state universities, including
the University of Buenos Aires and the National University
of La Plata.
Times Higher Education
Supplement
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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