AUS Tertiary Update
Legal challenge to Lincoln's promotion procedure
Legal
proceedings have been filed against Lincoln University by
the Association of University Staff (AUS) following the
failure of the University to conform to its own annual
salary-advancement and promotion guidelines for academic
staff. The proceedings, filed in the Employment Relations
Authority, also say that the University unlawfully
introduced new criteria to the promotions policy allowing it
to deny salary advancement on the basis of budgetary
constraints.
While the proceedings will centre on the
case of a senior lecturer denied salary progression over a
number of years, the outcome is expected to have an impact
on a number of other staff who have similarly been denied
promotion or salary progression.
The University's
salary-advancement guidelines provide that senior lecturers
can normally reach the top of a six-step salary scale in six
years, with the rate of progress of individuals to be
determined by “significant contribution” in specified
areas. A number of staff have been denied promotion or
salary progression despite satisfying the criteria and
having received positive recommendations from their
managers.
AUS General Secretary Helen Kelly says that the
University's reliance on financial resources to decline
advancement was not only in breach of its own guidelines but
ran completely counter to the principle of merit-based
promotion and salary-advancement procedures. “This matter
has been to mediation twice, but the University refuses to
acknowledge its responsibilities,” she said. “There is
no option but to take legal action.”
Earlier, the
University refused to provide information requested by AUS
under the Official Information Act seeking to know the
number of staff employed as senior lecturer below the bar
in the past ten years, the rate at which they have proceeded
through the steps between the bottom and the top of the
salary range and the number of instances where a positive
recommendation for advancement made by a manager had not
resulted in salary advancement.
The Employment Relations
Authority has been asked for a determination that the
Vice-Chancellor has breached the academic staff collective
employment agreement by unlawfully using budgetary
constraints to deny salary advancement, an order requiring
the Vice-Chancellor to reassess all affected AUS members in
accordance with the proper criteria and an order requiring
that the staff member identified in the proceedings be
promoted in accordance with the criteria.
A date is yet
to be set for the matter to be heard.
Also in Tertiary
Update this week
1. Canterbury to hide assets from
Crown
2. Medicine, Dentistry funding review
complete
3. Students pumped for fight over
fees
4. NZCER agreement settled
5. VCs plan to snub
RAE
6. Minister writes over “left-wing”
bias
7. Scholar deplores US ban
8. Email makes talks
redundant
Canterbury to hide assets from
Crown
Following statements reported last week that
vice-chancellors are “unconditionally opposed” to being
described as part of the wider state sector, it is now being
reported that the University of Canterbury is moving to hide
from Crown ownership the assets it will acquire from its
merger with the Christchurch College of Education. By doing
so, the University’s accounts will be tagged for the next
two years as not complying with general accounting practice.
A report in The Press says that about $50 million of net
assets from the College, including buildings and land, will
move into the University’s accounts, but the way the
University has chosen to incorporate those assets reflects
its determination not to be seen as Crown-owned. The
University Council was told that recording the soon-to-be
acquired assets as anything other than income revenue could
be seen as conceding that the institution was
Crown-owned.
Vice-Chancellor Professor Roy Sharp is
reported as saying that it was a “necessary evil” to tag
the assets as revenue, as “we should not concede to the
Government that they own the University”. He said the
issue had been discussed by the New Zealand
Vice-Chancellors’ Committee at length during the last two
years. “We operate on the principle that the Crown is not
the owner ... I don’t think there’s any downside risk,
other than from the way we handle communications,” he
said.
The Press also reports Council member, Judge Colin
Doherty, as saying that the starting point was to make sure
whatever the Council does will not “reflect any
implication of the Crown owning us or any part of us”.
AUS National President, Professor Nigel Haworth, said
that it seemed extraordinary that the University would have
its accounts tagged as non-compliant by the Auditor General
as a result of removing what are currently Crown-owned
assets from public ownership. “While it is important that
universities have statutory independence in terms of their
academic functions, it is equally important that they are
seen to be in public ownership,” he said. “Many
university staff have trouble understanding why
vice-chancellors have become so pre-occupied in trying to
ensure that universities are not seen as public
institutions.”
Medicine, Dentistry funding review
complete
A review of the funding for teaching Medicine
and Dentistry at the Universities of Auckland and Otago has
been completed, but its findings and any recommendations
remain under wraps.
While it is understood that the
Minister for Tertiary Education, Dr Michael Cullen, has
accepted the findings of the review, the Tertiary Education
Commission will advise the Minister of options on the way
forward when he returns from overseas.
Any
recommendations arising from the review were due to have
been considered by Cabinet by the end of September, with the
intention that any funding outcomes will be implemented by
the beginning of 2007.
Submissions to the review were
received from Auckland and Otago Universities, student
organisations, professional associations and the Association
of University Staff, and identified funding and the academic
workforce as among the main issues which need to be
addressed.
Four of the submissions referred to the
discrepancy between the salaries of Medical and Dental
specialists employed by the two Universities and those
employed by district health boards, with a gap of up to
$30,000 per year identified. Reference was also made to the
reliance of the Universities on an evaporating level of
“good will” from clinical teaching staff, the aging of
the workforce and the heavy workloads faced by those Medical
and Dental academic staff who are required not only to
engage in teaching and research but also to be up-to-date in
clinical practice.
Three of the submissions referred to a
“real” decline in funding, saying that the costs of
health training have risen at a faster rate than
inflation.
AUS National President, Professor Nigel
Haworth, said that the quality and sustainability of the
medical and dental teaching programmes in New Zealand would
be compromised unless immediate action is taken to resolve
funding and salary problems. “Unless Government addresses
these issues, then top-quality candidates will no longer be
interested in pursuing medical and dental academic careers
in New Zealand,” he said.
Students pumped for fight over
fees
The Auckland University Students’ Association
(AUSA) has signalled its opposition to predicted moves by
the University to increase domestic tuition fees for 2007
with the launch of a “Fight the Fees” campaign
yesterday.
While the University of Auckland Council is
due to set tuition fees for 2007 at its next meeting on
Monday16 October, the proposed fee levels will not be
revealed until then. It is widely expected, however, that
the University will try to increase tuition fees by 5
percent overall, the maximum permissible under the
Government’s current Fee Maxima policy.
Student
President Dan Bidois said that AUSA would be campaigning
solidly over the next two weeks to highlight the problems
with raising tuition fees as the solution to an increase in
University costs. “AUSA recognises that the University’s
costs are increasing at a rate higher than the Government is
funding them, however, students at Auckland already pay the
highest tuition fees in the country,” he said. “Students
are burdened with meeting those fees, along with the higher
costs associated with living in the Auckland region. All of
this results in greater levels of student hardship and
debt.”
Mr Bidois said that, while the University has
indicated that its costs will rise by more than 5 percent in
2007, the Government has only committed to a 2.5 percent
increase in funding for that same period. He said he did not
accept that students should be saddled with greater
financial problems because of the Government’s failure to
fund the university sector adequately.
AUSA Education
Vice-President Xavier Goldie urged the University Council
and the Vice-Chancellor, Stuart McCutcheon, to work more
closely with other tertiary-education-sector organisations
such as AUSA, the New Zealand Union of Students’
Associations and the Association of University Staff to
pressure the Government to increase its commitment to
quality university teaching and excellent research.
NZCER
agreement settled
AUS members at the New Zealand Council
for Educational Research, Te Runanga o Aotearoa mo te
Rangahau I te Matauranga, recently ratified the settlement
of their collective agreement for 2006-2007. A total package
of 3.85 percent was negotiated, with 3.6 percent being added
to salaries as well as an increase in the maximum employer
contribution to superannuation. A feature of this agreement
is that members with a student loan may opt to have the
employer contribution directed to that in preference to a
superannuation scheme.
Other matters subject to
discussion included support for study leave to obtain
further qualifications and an additional week’s annual
leave. New clauses in the agreement include a provision to
negotiate a return to work on reduced hours after parental
leave and supportive provisions for breastfeeding at work.
In a media release in early August to support
International Breastfeeding Week, NZCTU Secretary Carol
Beaumont said: “Breastfeeding is a workers’ rights issue
that sits alongside quality childcare provision, the right
to return part-time or full-time and longer and better paid
parental leave with better eligibility criteria.”
NZCER
is an independent, educational research organisation with a
bicultural focus and provides educators, students, parents,
policy makers and the public with innovative and independent
research, analysis and advice. Established in 1934 through
grants from the Carnegie Corporation, it became a statutory
body in 1945. NZCER is not formally attached to any
government department, university or other educational
organisation. It has an international reputation for
producing quality educational research and research-based
resources. The site is almost wholly unionised.
Salary
rates and collective agreements negotiated at the seven
universities as part of the AUS national bargaining process
are currently being updated on the AUS website. They can be
viewed by following the Pay and Conditions link at:
www.aus.ac.nz
Worldwatch
VCs plan to snub
RAE
Universities in the United Kingdom have delivered
what has been described as a crushing blow to the
Government's planned research assessment reforms, rejecting
all the key recommendations for replacing the Research
Assessment Exercise with a metrics-based system for
evaluating research and allocating grants.
The elite
research universities and the vice-chancellors’ body are
united in their opposition to Treasurer Gordon Brown’s
controversial plans to allocate general block grants to
universities, funding worth more than a billion pounds a
year, solely on the basis of the research income they have
earned. They have also rejected using statistics on journal
citations to decide which research teams should get the
available money.
Instead, Universities UK and both the
Russell and 1994 groups of research-led universities are
urging a full investigation into applying a full “basket
of metrics”, incorporating measures of research income as
well as research outputs and quality and employing panels of
academic experts to guide the use of metrics in different
disciplines.
The universities’ responses crystallise a
growing unease across the higher-education sector that the
Treasury-driven proposals represented a crude and
ill-thought-through attempt to reform the future allocation
of general research grants to universities. The highly
volatile outcomes of potential allocation schemes caused
widespread alarm when unveiled three months ago by the
Higher Education Funding Council for England.
From the
Times Higher Education Supplement
Minister writes over
“left-wing” bias
In what has been described as an
“extraordinary intervention”, the Australian Minister of
Defence and former Minister of Education, Brendan Nelson,
has written to Macquarie Vice-Chancellor, Steven Schwartz,
after one of his constituents complained of “left-wing”
bias in a history subject.
Although a spokesman for Dr
Nelson said that the Minister was just passing on a
complaint from a constituent, a copy of the letter obtained
by The Weekend Australian shows that Dr Nelson penned a note
at the bottom of the letter that reads: “I am very
concerned about this and would appreciate your personal
attention to these issues which I find disturbing.”
The initial complaint came from a postgraduate student,
Douglas Brown, enrolled in the Master of Arts subject Rights
and the Evolution of Australian Citizenship, who demanded
that the University rewrite the unit guide and delete half
the articles because the readings were so left-wing the
course was an attempt at “indoctrination”. Senior
academics who investigated the complaint rejected the claim.
Professor Schwartz would not comment on the Nelson
incident but moved to quell growing fears in universities
about the erosion of academic freedom in the post-September
11 environment. “It’s absolutely fundamental ... that
we safeguard academic freedom ... if we're going to have a
lively and effective university sector and if we're going to
have a fair and lively society as well,” he said.
The
latest incident comes after another senior minister,
Attorney-General Philip Ruddock, recently warned a South
Australian academic that his research could breach new
terrorism laws.
From The Weekend (?)
Australian
Scholar deplores US ban
Muslim scholar
Tariq Ramadan has attacked the United States Government for
being “afraid of ideas” after it denied him a visa
despite dropping earlier allegations that he had “endorsed
terrorism”.
Professor Ramadan, a research fellow at
Oxford University’s Centre for Middle East Studies, was
prevented from taking up a post at Notre Dame University in
2004 after the US Government invoked provisions of the US
Patriots Act to revoke his work visa. Last week, the
Government confirmed that Ramadan would not be allowed entry
to the US.
Professor Ramadan wrote on his website that,
while he was glad that the State Department had abandoned
its allegation that he endorses terrorism, it had found a
new reason to deny his visa application. “I think it is
clear from the history of this case that the US
Government’s real fear is of my ideas,” he wrote. “I
am excluded not because the Government truly believes me to
be a national security threat, but because of my criticisms
of American foreign policies ... I am saddened ... that the
United States Government has become afraid of ideas and that
it reacts to its critics not by engaging them but by
suppressing, stigmatising and excluding
them.”
Meanwhile, a leading scholar says the British
Government’s fear of terrorism and illegal immigration is
damaging international academic research, after five
Moroccan colleagues were refused entry to the UK.
The
Director of the Ferguson Centre for African and Asian
Studies at the Open University (OU) spoke out after being
forced to cancel a five-day international workshop when his
North African collaborators were prevented from entering the
country despite full sponsorship by the OU and impassioned
pleas to visa officials from the Vice-Chancellor.
From
the Education Guardian
Email makes talks redundant
An
email letter to five academics at Nottingham Trent
University warning them that they were facing the threat of
redundancy contained more information than the University
was bargaining on. The letter, inviting the five to discuss
their futures, mistakenly displayed “deleted” paragraphs
giving notice of their dismissals and setting a date for
departure.
Sent by the Human Resources Manager, the
letter stressed that it was not notice of dismissal, adding
that a meeting would provide an opportunity to “make any
alternative suggestions as to how redundancy might be
avoided”. But the email also displayed edits, including
one saying that their employment will be terminated by
reason of redundancy.
The University and College Union
(UCU), which described the error as a “massive clanger”,
is now warning that the mistake could cost the University
more than embarrassment and could lead to a major legal
battle. “Under the law, employers must give the employee a
genuine opportunity to put forward suggestions for avoiding
dismissal before the final decision is made,” said UCU
official Andy Pike. “For a human resources practitioner to
send a letter that seems to make clear that this procedure
is not being followed is amazing. We often suspect that
employers just go through the motions when it comes to
this.”
A spokesperson for Nottingham Trent said that
“every opportunity” had been taken to redeploy staff and
that it was unfortunate that the draft had been
visible.
From the Chronicle of Higher
Education
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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