AUS Tertiary Update
Green light for national salary bargaining in
universities
Members of the Association of University
Staff (AUS) and the other unions representing staff in New
Zealand’s universities have voted overwhelmingly to support
the negotiation of national collective employment agreements
in the next bargaining round.
The ballot, conducted on a
university-by-university basis, endorsed a recommendation by
the unions to move from enterprise-based bargaining at each
university campus to the negotiation of one national
collective agreement for academic staff and another for
general staff employed in the seven traditional
universities.
A total of 1827 (95.5 percent) of the 1914
academic staff who participated in the ballot voted in
support of the proposal, and 1697 (94.2 percent) of the 1801
general staff also voted to support national bargaining.
The result means that bargaining with the universities
will be initiated in March, and it is expected that formal
negotiations will commence in April. The unions’ bargaining
position, including the salary claim, will be finalised at a
meeting of the AUS Industrial Committee today. It will then
go to meetings of union members for endorsement.
Combined
unions’ spokesperson, Jeff Rowe, said he was pleased with
the result as, following last year’s negotiations, the
unions have been engaged in a tripartite process with
vice-chancellors and the Government to find solutions to
long-standing funding and salary problems in the university
sector. “The high number of union members voting in this
ballot, along with the high level of support for national
bargaining, has given us a very clear mandate to continue
this process with university employers,” he said. “It also
shows that university staff appreciate the link between
funding and salaries, and support the view that, while the
Government has a responsibility to increase sector funding
by a significant amount, the best means to improve salaries
is through a national collective bargaining process.”
Mr
Rowe said he expected university employers to support the
decision of union members and recognise that the salary
crisis in the sector was an issue that would only be
resolved on a national basis, and with the co-operation of
university employers, unions and the Government. “We are
providing the vice-chancellors with the mechanism, through
national collective employment agreements, to make this
happen,” he said
The unions involved in the national
bargaining process are the AUS, Public Service Association,
Association of Staff in Tertiary Education, Tertiary
Institutes’ Allied Staff Association, Engineering, Printing
and Manufacturing Union, Building Trades Union and the
Service and Food Workers Union.
Also in Tertiary Update
this week
1. Unitec staff take action
2. Wananga
maintains high profile
3. Adult and community education
vital, says TEC
4. Questions over some tertiary-education
courses
5. More money needed to stop university
decline
6. UK strike set to proceed
7. Ballarat gives
undertaking to clarify AWA conditions
8. Oxford head
begins web charm offensive
Unitec staff take
action
More than one hundred allied (administrative and
support) staff stopped work at the Auckland institute of
technology Unitec on Tuesday to picket the institution’s
Council meeting. They were protesting at an impasse in
collective employment agreement negotiations after union
members rejected a salary offer of 2.5 percent from Unitec
management. Their union, TIASA, has claimed a 4.5 percent
increase.
TIASA Chief Executive, Peter Joseph, said that
the aim of the stoppage and picket was to draw the Council’s
attention to the unreasonable and unrealistic approach taken
by Unitec. “It is an indictment on Unitec management that
allied staff have felt so insulted and undervalued, that
they are taking their first industrial action in Unitec’s
history,” he said.
Mr Joseph said the protest was good
natured, but Council members were left in no doubt that
staff are angry at the institute’s lack of recognition and
the low value placed on allied staff. “Staff are also
incensed that their willingness to accept a somewhat lower
settlement last year, to assist Unitec’s financial
situation, is now being exploited by the institution,” he
said. “A delegation of staff sought permission to address
the Council, but this request was rejected by the Chair. I
would have thought that the Chair would have at least let
Council decide if they wished to hear from staff, rather
than dictate from the Chair,” he said.
The parties are to
meet later this week with the assistance of a mediator, but
Mr Joseph warned that the action would be stepped up if
Unitec continues its “unreasonable and insulting
stance”.
Wananga maintains high profile
Although Te
Wananga o Aoteaora has largely been out of the political
limelight this year, it appears to be maintaining its
controversial reputation. The Te-Awamutu-based institution
has been recently reported as saying that a recent Waitangi
Tribunal decision, on a case taken last year by the Aotearoa
Institute (the Wananga’s parent body) means it is exempt
from growth limits imposed by the Government. According to
Education Review, the Wananga intends to enrol 1,000
equivalent full-time students (EFTS) more than it should in
a course called Mauri Ora, thereby testing a limit on growth
in diploma and certificate courses of 200 EFTS per year set
last year.
In response, the Minister for Tertiary
Education, Dr Michael Cullen, is reported as saying that the
Wananga is not exempt from the Government’s growth limits on
tertiary-education organisations, and would have to apply to
the Tertiary Education Commission (TEC) for an exemption if
it wanted government funding for the additional 1,000
EFTS.
Wananga Chief Operations Officer John Mote said the
institution had not yet applied for an exemption to the cap,
but had signalled its intention. “Our view is that the Mauri
Ora programme meets community needs and it is already a part
of the approved profile. Given this situation we would
expect any application to be successful,” he told Education
Review.
Meanwhile, TEC documents obtained under the
Official Information Act by Education Review show that the
Wananga agreed last year to phase out another course, Kiwi
Ora, by the start of 2008. Kiwi Ora is delivered as a
distance-education programme developed by Susan Cullen, the
daughter of former Wananga Chief Executive Rongo Wetere. The
documents show Kiwi Ora had 5232 equivalent full-time
students (EFTS) in 2004, 3415 last year and this year it is
projected to have 2250. The numbers are expected to fall to
1750 next year and zero in 2008.
This week, the Waikato
Times reports that the Wananga expects to enrol 25,000
students in 2006, 1500 fewer than last year.
Adult and
community education vital, says TEC
The Tertiary
Education Commission is currently working with schools,
polytechnics, universities and community organisations to
ensure a wider range of people have opportunities to learn
through adult and community education, according to its
Chief Executive, Janice Shiner. She says that a new funding
system, to be phased in over the next three years, will help
ensure that adult and community education is of the highest
possible standard, and that the Government gets value for
the money it invests.
To achieve this, $16.5 million
will be made available over the next four year and, at the
same time, the TEC will provide practical help and advice
through people in its offices throughout the country. “For
example, the TEC has helped set up thirty-seven networks of
adult and community groups across the country. These
networks encourage the groups to work together on how they
can best meet the needs of their community, and share the
passion that they have for adult and community education,”
Ms Shiner said.
“A key feature of adult and community
education is that it is provided by local organisations that
are best placed to have a good understanding of their
community. What we want to ensure is that adult and
community education groups are talking with community
leaders, and are steering their programmes of courses and
activities towards areas of greatest community need,” Ms
Shiner said. “Some adult and community education groups have
also asked us to help them develop their professional skills
so they can become better at managing themselves, and are
more able to find out what education and skills people in
their community need and how they can develop the courses to
match.” To assist with this work, the TEC is investing
$900,000 a year, starting from this year, and working
closely with groups to ensure the money is spent in areas of
greatest need.
Questions over some tertiary education
courses
Thousands of tertiary students are signing up for
courses that are on “probation” for not meeting government
standards, according to a report in the Sunday Star-Times.
Forty-six tertiary qualifications, most of them offered by
private institutions, are on notice this year to improve or
face having their funding cut or withdrawn.
More than
6000 equivalent full-time students were enrolled in the
qualifications in question, at a cost to the taxpayer of $35
million in 2004.
The criteria by which the value of
courses is measured include the need for the qualification,
either in the job market or to meet a social or community
need, the value of the qualification, either in terms of
work or social outcomes, or in terms of leading on to other
study, that the qualification has some point of difference
from other qualifications already available and that the
qualification performs well in terms of course-completion
and other measures.
The Sunday Star-Times says that the
Tertiary Education Commission is refusing to name either the
courses or the providers on the basis that issuing the
information could lead to a provider’s reputation being
compromised or that learners’ future educational or
employment opportunities could be affected. Some of the
information was withheld on the grounds of commercial
sensitivity.
Worldwatch
More money needed to stop
university decline
Europe is condemning itself to decline
by failing to spend enough on higher education, according to
Lord Patten, the former European Commissioner and current
Chancellor of Oxford and Newcastle Universities. European
universities are falling behind American institutions and
would soon see their best researchers “going east as well as
west” with the growth of China and India, he is reported as
saying in a speech to the Academie des Technologies in
Paris.
Lord Patten said that Britain spends only half as
much on knowledge as the United States, and that other
European countries are even further behind. In the
international league tables drawn up by Shanghai Jiao Tong
University, there are two European universities in the top
ten (Oxford and Cambridge) and nine in the top fifty. “Is it
not a paradox that, during a period in Europe of
unparalleled prosperity and stability, we have allowed the
priority given to our universities in, for example, the
allocation of public resources to sag so pitifully?” he
said. “We are allowing our culture to wither on the
vine.”
Meanwhile, the leaders of Canada’s provinces and
territories emerged from an unprecedented summit on higher
education last Friday, saying that the country needs a
vision that will create a culture of higher learning if
Canadians want to maintain their standard of living and
compete internationally. They also called on the country’s
new Government to spend billions of additional dollars on
higher education.
From the Times Higher Education
Supplement and Chronicle of Higher Education
UK strike set
to proceed
Next week’s planned strike by university staff
across the United Kingdom seems destined to go ahead as the
employers’ body, the University and Colleges Employers’
Association, continues to refuse to make a salary offer to
staff.
The General Secretary of the Association of
University Teachers, Sally Hunt, said that, although the
employers say they want to talk about the pay dispute, they
are yet to make a pay offer and are currently refusing to
join unconditional negotiations.
Union members are
claiming a 23 percent pay increase over the next three
years, and say that the introduction of £3,000 tuition fees
will give universities the money to restore salaries to
comparable international levels.
The planned strike
action by AUT and Natfhe members, scheduled for next
Tuesday, will be followed by an assessment boycott beginning
the following day. Lecturers, researchers and academic
related staff will refuse to cover colleagues’ work, mark
students’ work or take part in the exam process as part of
an ongoing boycott.
“There is absolutely no need for
students’ work to be disrupted and it is the last thing we
want to happen,” said Ms Hunt. “If the employers are
prepared at last to agree to serious unconditional
negotiations, AUT will meet them as soon as
possible.”
Ballarat gives undertaking to clarify AWA
conditions
The University of Ballarat has given an
undertaking to the Australian Federal Court that it will
issue a Clarifying Statement to its entire staff, explaining
the employment conditions that staff will lose if they sign
an individual Australian Workplace Agreement (AWA). The
University will also be prohibited from offering any further
AWAs until 6 March while the Statement is circulated among
staff.
The decision follows the lodging of a class
action against the University by staff and the National
Tertiary Education Union (NTEU), claiming that it had issued
false and misleading information about the content of the
agreements in an attempt to induce staff to accept them.
The NTEU Victorian Division Secretary, Matthew McGowan,
said that the Federal Court proceedings revealed that the
University has a significant case to answer over the
misinformation that was circulated to staff. “This is an
enormous victory for the staff at the University of
Ballarat,” he said. “The University is now obliged to tell
the truth about what signing an AWA will mean, which is that
staff will lose important employment conditions.”
It has
also been revealed that the University of Ballarat has
missed out on up to $1.4 million of funding by failing to
have a new collective agreement that complies with the
Government’s requirements in place by 30 November last year.
Ballarat is the only Victorian university that will not
receive an additional 5 percent in Commonwealth funding for
2006.
Oxford head begins web charm offensive
Oxford
University’s Kiwi Vice-Chancellor, Dr John Hood, has made an
historic webcast as he seeks to win over staff and students
to his controversial reform proposals. He gives regular
email briefings and has held consultations with staff over
governance reform, but it is the first time the head of the
900-year-old University has addressed the scholars via a
webcast. The webcast is believed to be in direct response to
vociferous opposition to his plans to streamline the running
of the University and bring in outsiders to a ruling
council, and to his leadership style.
The University
said Dr Hood is keen to promote internal
communications.
From The
Guardian
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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