AUS Tertiary Update
University pay deal to go to ratification
Union members
at New Zealand universities have voted to send proposed new
pay deals to ratification which, if accepted, will see
salary increases of between 4 and 5.5 percent for general
staff and between 6 and 7.5 percent for academic staff this
year. The proposed increases come as a result of tripartite
discussions among vice-chancellors, university staff unions
and the Government, resulting in a $26 million funding boost
for universities targeted at salaries. If accepted, most
university staff will receive their biggest across-the-board
salary movement in twenty years.
Meetings held with union
members at seven universities over the last fortnight
resulted in a vote of 1237 to 42 in support of a
recommendation from the combined unions’ bargaining team
that enterprise-based collective employment agreements
incorporating the current salary offers be renewed. It has
also been proposed that, once those agreements are settled,
further discussions will take place at each of the
universities to discuss “local” issues, including
proposals to review general staff salary structures.
If
ratified, the renewed collective agreements will all run
until 31 May 2007, allowing the unions to again initiate
bargaining for national multi-employer collective agreements
next year.
Association of University Staff General
Secretary, Helen Kelly, said that an umbrella agreement
between the unions and vice-chancellors had been renewed,
requiring the parties to work actively and constructively
through the tripartite process to ensure that the issue of
competitive and fair salaries maintains a high priority. The
agreement also requires the parties to use their best
endeavours to develop, agree and implement sustainable
solutions to providing competitive and fair salaries for
staff; to implement, as appropriate, agreed outcomes from
the Universities Tripartite Forum in collective agreements;
and to develop solutions to other funding and resourcing
issues facing universities.
Ms Kelly said that the
negotiations had been a significant advance in the way
bargaining was conducted in the university sector, and was
the direct result of the efforts of union members over the
past few years. She also said she expects that the next
stages of the tripartite process will be more complex than
the initial round, as a result of the Government’s plans
for a new funding system and further differentiation within
the tertiary education sector.
It is expected that
ratification ballots to renew the current collective
agreements will be under way by early August.
Also in
Tertiary Update this week
1. New Secretary for Education
2. Wananga to lay off staff
3. New appointments to
FoRST Board
4. It just ain’t right, say PTEs
5. UK
staff accept pay deal
6. Universities close in face of
Middle-Eastern conflict
7. Bishop (Minister?) calls for
less to be spent on administration
8. Arnie docked
New
Secretary for Education announced
It was announced this
week that Karen Sewell has been appointed as the new
Secretary for Education and Chief Executive of the Ministry
of Education. She will take up the new posts in November,
replacing Howard Fancy, who notified his resignation earlier
in the year.
In announcing Ms Sewell’s appointment,
the State Services Commissioner, Mark Prebble, said that she
has a proven record as Chief Executive of the Education
Review Office, a position which she has held since 2001, and
in various management, leadership and teaching roles in a
State Services career devoted to education. Mr Prebble says
that Ms Sewell has a good understanding of the issues facing
the Ministry of Education and the wider education sector
that will enable her to quickly understand its strategic
issues and the education-policy agenda. “She is deeply
committed to the value of education and to improving
education outcomes for New Zealand children. She will
continue the work under way at the Ministry to strengthen
its performance, systems and future capability. Ms Sewell is
widely known and respected in the sector, and by her
colleagues in the Public Service.”
In June 2005 Ms
Sewell was asked by the Board of the New Zealand
Qualifications Authority (NZQA) to act as its Chief
Executive, and performed this role on leave from the
Education Review Office for almost a full year. Mr Prebble
said that, as Acting NZQA Chief Executive, Ms Sewell
demonstrated the ability to step into an organisation in
crisis and to take firm control, and then rapidly devised a
strategy for recovery and led its implementation. She
managed the delivery of consistent results for the national
examinations in 2005 and has established the planning for
ongoing improvement in future examinations.
Ms Sewell
has previously taught at schools in the United Kingdom and
in New Zealand, has been the holder of a teaching fellowship
at Victoria University Wellington, a recipient of a Nuffield
Bursary at the University of London and has also been an
Inspector of Secondary Schools for the Department of
Education.
Wananga to lay off staff
Hard on the heels
of a reported loss of $4.9 million last year, it has been
reported that Te Whare Wananga o Awanuiarangi is expected to
lay off as many as sixty of its 240 staff. Last year’s
financial loss, equivalent to 30 percent of the Wananga’s
income, is understood to be one of the worst ever recorded
by a tertiary-education institution.
According to a
report in Education Review, the Government is confident that
the Whakatane-based institution can manage its way back to
good health and that, while the situation is being
monitored, more formal intervention will not be pursued as
the Wananga has substantial reserves and is putting in place
corrective action to ensure its long-term viability. A
spokesperson for the Minister for Tertiary Education, Dr
Michael Cullen, is reported as saying that the Crown does
not expect the Wananga to request financial assistance to
fund the deficit.
Council Chair, Dr Hirini Mead, said
that the Wananga’s Council had approved a restructuring
plan which included a reorganisation of academic delivery to
streamline administration and eliminate duplication across
the sector. Dr Mead told Education Review that the new
structure would require between fifty and sixty fewer staff,
with those affected given the opportunity of taking
voluntary redundancy or seeking positions in the new
structure. He said the staff positions to be cut would
comprise both administrative and teaching staff.
National
President of the Association of Staff in Tertiary Education,
Lloyd Woods, said that job losses at both Te Whare Wananga o
Awanuiarangi and Te Wananga o Aotearoa continue to be
heartbreaking for staff, including those who will be left
behind to try and “salvage the wreckage” in some areas.
“We have been very involved trying to minimise the numbers
whose jobs are to be made redundant, and to ensure that the
institutions do not cut any more staff positions than they
must,” he said. “It is vital that they are not left with
insufficient high-quality staff to ensure high-quality
provision.”
New appointments to FoRST Board
The
Minister for Research, Science and Technology, Steve
Maharey, has announced three new appointments to the Board
of the Foundation for Research, Science and Technology, the
main government funding body for science and technology.
They are Paul Tocker, Chief Executive of Crop and Food, Dr
Diana Hill, Chief Executive and Director of the quality
assurance company, Global Technologies, and Dr Bronwen
Connor, Head of the Neural Repair and Neurogenesis
Laboratory and a senior lecturer at the University of
Auckland.
The new appointees replace retiring Board
members Dr Andy Pearce, Professor Tom Barnes and Dr Grant
Ryan. The appointments are for three year terms effective
from 13 July.
According to Mr Maharey, the new Board
members bring a strong mix of governance and business skills
and specialist research experience, including emerging areas
of science. They also bring experience in the public sector
and strong links with the global science community.
The
other members of the FoRST Board are Dame Margaret Bazely
(Chair), Professor Judith Kinnear, Jim McLean, Associate
Professor Pare Keiha, Professor Gary Hook and Craig Norgate.
It just ain’t right, say PTEs
In a series of rather
curious media releases this week, entitled 10 reasons why
student loan rules just ain’t right, an otherwise unknown
organisation calling itself the PTE Budget Policy Awareness
Group appears to have launched something of a campaign in
protest at the decision of the Government to limit access to
student loans and allowances to those students enrolled in
publicly funded tertiary-education courses.
The releases
say that more than 100 private training establishments
provide courses not funded by the Tertiary Education (TEC),
up to half of which receive no TEC funding at all. They add
that many of those PTEs will be forced to close at the end
of the year.
The first media release from the group says
that dozens of PTEs face a period of at least twelve months
during which students enrolled in their courses will not be
eligible for student loans. “Students will flee these
courses on mass [sic], PTEs will go under, hundreds of
teaching staff and students will be left stranded,” the
release says.
“We have been left way up the proverbial
creek – left to sink – left without any lifeline, let
alone a boat or even a miserable oar,” said Brijeshi
Sethi, PTE Budget Policy Awareness Group spokesperson and
Managing Director of a West Auckland PTE, the New Zealand
College of Education.
Association of University Staff
National President, Professor Nigel Haworth, said that he
was surprised at the outcry from the affected PTEs. “The
AUS has never thought it appropriate that public funding
should go to private tertiary-education institutions which
are not publicly accountable for either the quality or
usefulness of their courses,” he said. “Students are
better advised to enrol in public institutions offering
assured quality and qualifications which are consistent with
the nation’s tertiary-education strategy and
needs.”
Worldwatch
UK staff accept pay
deal
University staff in the United Kingdom have voted to
accept a pay deal that will increase salaries by 10.37
percent over the next two years. The third year of the deal,
subject to negotiations after the results of an independent
review of university finances, will provide a minimum
increase of a further 2.5 percent.
More than 24,500
members of the new University and Colleges Union (UCU), or
70 percent of those participating in the ballot, voted in
favour of the deal which followed months of industrial
activity culminating in strike action earlier this
year.
UCU General Secretary, Sally Hunt, said that the
ballot turnout showed the high level of engagement that
union members have had during the dispute. “The final
settlement provides a solid first step towards restoring pay
levels in our universities to those of comparable
professions, but our employers must realise that there
remains a long way to go,” she said. “Recent studies
have confirmed UCU’s view that there is extra money
available for pay in the future, and we expect this to be
confirmed by the independent review of university finances.
Ms Hunt said that during the pay dispute the union had
to negotiate with an employers’ organisation which lacked
unity and was often shambolic. “If we are to avoid further
prolonged industrial action in the future, the national
bargaining structures and University and Colleges
Employers’ Association itself require urgent reform,”
she said. “In the meantime this dispute has shown that the
days when universities could hold salaries down and take our
members’ goodwill for granted are over for
good.”
Universities close in face of Middle Eastern
conflict
Several Lebanese universities and two Israeli
campuses have cancelled classes as fighting between Israel
and the Lebanese militia, Hezbollah, entered its second
week. A spokesperson for the American University of Beirut,
one of the region’s elite higher-education institutions,
said that administrators had reluctantly decided to close
two summer programmes for American and European students
because the situation had become too dangerous for many
professors to report for work.
Notre Dame University
Louaize, a private, English-language university near Beirut,
announced on Monday that it was closing until further
notice, while the Université Saint Joseph, a private,
French-language university in Beirut, announced last week
that it was cancelling classes, examinations and diploma
ceremonies. The University of Balamand, in northern Lebanon,
announced that it was suspending its summer semester until
further notice.
In Israel, the University of Haifa and
the Technion-Israel Institute of Technology announced on
Sunday that their campuses were closing until further
notice. University of Haifa President, Aaron Ben-Ze’ev,
said that American and other foreign students who were
enrolled in the University's summer programmes had been
transferred to the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. The
campus, he said, is empty except for emergency crews and
researchers who come to feed and care for laboratory
animals.
Meanwhile, the Gaza University Teachers’
Association has called for an academic and cultural boycott
of Israel, and for Israel to withdraw all occupation forces
from Gaza, ending the occupation of Palestinian
land.
From the Chronicle of Higher Education
Bishop
(Minister?) calls for less to be spent on
administration
The Australian Minister of Education,
Julie Bishop, is reported in The Australian as saying she
wants universities to spend less on administration and more
on teaching, adding that savings from economies of scale,
joint purchasing arrangements and more collaboration across
courses and institutions are among the ways they could
achieve this.
It is reported that, while her comments
will find favour with academics who have long complained
about inflated university bureaucracies, they are likely to
be viewed with cynicism by administrations “groaning under
the weight of red tape” created by the Howard
Government’s university reforms.
An overhaul of
administration at Curtin University of Technology is said to
have attracted the Minister’s attention, with
Vice-Chancellor Jeanette Hacket saying Curtin had switched
to strategic procurement, centralised purchasing and
standardised information-technology services, saving the
University $A1 million on its first contract for stationery
and business machines alone. The savings would be spent on
teaching and research.
Outlining her first-term agenda,
Ms Bishop signalled that she would visit the vexed issue of
how to allocate base grants according to teaching costs, and
push for a greater range of institutions in Australia from
liberal arts colleges to specialist universities. She will
also continue the fight to have some universities
teaching-only, despite state education ministers signing off
recently on new national protocols that specify universities
must have a research component.
Arnie docked
Those
concerned at the ease with which universities hand out
honorary degrees will be pleased at news that an Austrian
court has ordered the country’s first private university
to revoke an honorary degree it awarded to California
Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger. The Imadec University in
Vienna gave the honorary doctorate of business
administration to the former actor in a special ceremony in
October 2001, citing his lifetime work, in particular with
children in US ghettos, and his services to the Austrian
economy. Almost five years on, however, Vienna’s
Administrative Tribunal ruled that the University was not in
a position to award honorary degrees, not only because it
could give titles only to people who had studied there, but
also because it could only confer the degrees of executive
MBA, international MLE and LLM. The court described the
University’s actions as a “breach of administration”
and fined it an undisclosed amount.
Meanwhile, former
world champion racing driver Sir Jackie Stewart received an
honorary degree from Edinburgh University yesterday, and UK
television presenter, Chris Tarrant, is to receive an
honorary doctorate from Aston University. The host of hit TV
series Who wants to be a millionaire will be presented with
a degree celebrating his services to the entertainment
industry during a ceremony tomorrow at the University in
Birmingham.
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AUS
Tertiary Update is compiled weekly on Thursdays and
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made to Marty Braithwaite, AUS Communications Officer,
email:
marty.braithwaite@aus.ac.nz