12 March, 2010

Strikes

Just got this oh-so-wonderful email from Uni.

Dear students

You may have seen material distributed around the University by the
National Tertiary Education Union (NTEU) indicating that its members
intend to take industrial action at UNSW in the form of 24 hour
stoppages on Thursday 18 March, Wednesday 31 March and Tuesday 20 April.

It is deeply disappointing that the NTEU has decided to take this
action, despite the potential impact on students. However we are
confident that the great majority of staff will be working as usual
and that there will be minimal disruption. The University will
continue to operate normally and we are hopeful that most classes
will go ahead.

In order to minimise inconvenience to students, lecturers will be
asked to advise their Heads of School and their students if they are
not intending to take classes. If you have a query about any of your
classes scheduled for these dates, I encourage you to contact your
lecturer or course/program coordinator.

The University has a legal obligation not to pay any staff member who
takes industrial action. We have decided that salary costs saved as
a result of the stoppages will be allocated directly to student
services on campus.

I reiterate my disappointment that the industrial action is occurring
during term time, which will certainly inconvenience some of you. I
take this opportunity to wish all of you the very best for the
upcoming academic year.


Yours sincerely

Professor Richard Henry AM
Deputy Vice-Chancellor (Academic)
Tel: (+61 2 9385 2800)
Fax: (+61 2 9385 1385)

This isn't really student politics per se, but it is university politics. The NTEU's been in negotiations with the uni over the group certificate for well over a semester now, and nothing looks like it's going anywhere. There was a strike last semester, and now it's looking like going into rolling strikes. Which sucks majorly.

This sort of situation can put students in a very difficult position. Do you cross the picket line and attend classes while other staff are striking? Or do you risk being penalised for not going to classes? Where do you draw the line?

To add more confusion to the mix, Arc's holding a Volunteer Expo on Thursday. It was meant to be a big way of showing students the many and varied ways you can become involved with volunteering at uni. The last I heard, the Expo was still going ahead. But if students don't turn up to uni, then it's a wasted opportunity to let them know what's going on. And if they do turn up (including the Volunteer Program Coordinators and the volunteers themselves), they're crossing a picket line.

Even more fuel in the fire! One Women's Week event has had to be cancelled, because the speaker doesn't want to cross the picket line.

So yeah. A single event snowballs, and takes up more and more.

Then of course there's that wonderful line, "
We have decided that salary costs saved as
a result of the stoppages will be allocated directly to student
services on campus." Those 'salary costs' are drawn from students - either now, or from HECS. And wouldn't it be better for students for the uni to simply sit down with the NTEU and negotiate, instead of farting around like this and making everyone's life a misery?

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