糖心Vlog

HE in Tasmania: devilishly difficult to get right

The Universities Accord has underlined the importance of Australian universities that cater to non-traditional students. But getting that provision right is not easy when your every move has major implications across the regional economy. John Ross reports from the island state

Published on
March 28, 2024
Last updated
October 7, 2024
Montage of a Tasmanian devil on the landscape of Mount Wellington in winter season of Hobart, Tasmania state of Australia to illustrate HE in Tasmania: devilishly difficult to get right
Source: Getty images/Alamy montage

The University of Tasmania may be small by Australian standards, but it seems to be omnipresent in the country鈥檚 southern island state. Turn any corner and you stand a good chance of bumping into the university鈥檚 red lion logo, not just in Hobart and Launceston, the island鈥檚 two largest cities, but also at outposts such as the northern maritime hub of Burnie, the faded western mining town of Zeehan and the industrial Hobart commuter town that goes by the unlikely name of Cambridge.

Turn on the radio and it is not long before UTas academics enlighten you on subjects ranging from state politics to the perils of artificial intelligence, the fortunes of a hand-reared brood of critically endangered red handfish and the industrial chemicals in the bloodstreams of the fairy penguins nesting outside Burnie鈥檚 new Cradle Coast campus.

UTas is a big fish in a small pond. Tasmania may be about the size of Sri Lanka, but that amounts to less than 1 per cent of Australia鈥檚 landmass, and it is home to little over half a million of Australia鈥檚 nearly 26 million people.

Outside the three main urban areas 鈥 the Derwent River estuary around Hobart, the Tamar Valley in the central north around Launceston and a string of north-western coastal towns, including Burnie 鈥 the state is, in essence, a scattering of fishing ports and rural hamlets separated by farms, mountains, forests and one of the world鈥檚 largest temperate wildernesses.

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For years, Tasmania has wrestled with Australia鈥檚 sparsely populated Northern Territory for the dubious honour of having the country鈥檚 weakest economy. It has the slowest population growth and second-highest unemployment rate of the eight Australian states and territories. Judged on a cocktail of factors 鈥 economic growth, retail spending, construction, equipment investment and so on 鈥 Tasmania .

Cradle Coast campus, UTas

And while the university (Cradle Coast campus, above) may be big in Tasmania 鈥 it employs more than one in every 100 Tasmanian workers, not counting casual academics 鈥 Tasmanians are not particularly big on higher education. Their island has the lowest proportion of degree-educated adults of any Australian state or territory, and the pipeline of future students does not look promising given that Tasmania has the nation鈥檚 fastest-falling population of school students and easily the lowest proportion of adults with completed high school qualifications.

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鈥淧eople I went to school with [tended to] get an apprenticeship or just go get a job,鈥 says Tony Beckett, a Launceston native who is now president of the university鈥檚 National Tertiary Education Union branch. 鈥淧eople who wanted to go to university went鈥o Melbourne [or] Sydney. I don鈥檛 know how much that鈥檚 changed. I suspect if students are wanting to go to university, Tassie [still] isn鈥檛 necessarily the place they鈥檙e thinking of.鈥

Placed alongside another four Australian institutions in the 251-300 range in 糖心Vlog鈥檚听World University Rankings聽2024, the University of Tasmania is far from the country鈥檚 lowest-ranked institution. Yet the institution鈥檚 leaders are all too aware of the lack of local demand for higher education and have responded by embracing a novel strategy. If the people will not come to the university, the idea is to take the university to the people: put it where Tasmanians go to work, shop, play and recuperate.

In Burnie, for instance, UTas鈥 suburban campus was abandoned and operations shifted three kilometres to the A$52 million (拢27 million) garden-roofed 聽right on the coast, a stone鈥檚 throw from the town鈥檚 main beach and shopping strip. The university has also spent A$4 million on the latest makeover of an adjacent former paper mill that it leases from the local council and uses as a . To maintain a welcoming air, the campus is open most days of the year and has a publicly accessible library and electric vehicle-charging facilities available for community use.

UTas鈥 deputy vice-chancellor Ian Anderson, a former deputy secretary of Indigenous affairs in the prime minister鈥檚 department, says he was uncertain about the need for regional campuses before joining the university in early 2023. He no longer harbours such doubts, noting that before Burnie had its new nursing clinic, the cost of undertaking compulsory placements alone would have rendered the discipline unaffordable for many locals.

He says that universities need to focus, both inside and outside the classroom, on how to better 鈥渃urate social mobility鈥, noting that 鈥減eople underestimate the cultural and emotional dissonance鈥 that a first-in-the-family student faces on contemplating higher education.

Vice-chancellor Rufus Black says that while UTas has few international comparators, Scotland鈥檚 University of the Highlands and Islands perhaps comes closest; both combine the lure of natural beauty with the challenges of remoteness, high social need and low economies of scale.

鈥淭here are so many people in鈥ur different communities who can鈥檛 afford to leave them because of their jobs, because of their care responsibilities, because of the financial challenges,鈥 Black says. 鈥淚f we鈥檙e not present, people can鈥檛 access higher education. We鈥ave to provide multiple locations, the full breadth of courses [and] research intensity for the state. Trying to make that work financially鈥s completely different to a metropolitan university model.鈥

Black says running the northern campuses sets the university back a net A$60 million a year. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 the cost, if you like, of being present: increasing lifespans in those communities, raising average incomes, providing them with doctors and nurses and social workers and psychologists they wouldn鈥檛 otherwise have,鈥 he says.

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General view of houses at Sandy Bay
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David Gray/AFP/Getty Images
Sandy Bay

The Australian Universities Accord鈥檚 final report, published in February, is very focused on widening participation and recommends strengthening financial support for regional universities educating non-traditional students, who typically need more help than traditional students. In many ways, UTas is the prime exemplar of such an institution, but observers predict that even with the political will to do so, it could take 20 years to fully implement the accord鈥檚 47 recommendations, many of which would be very costly.

In the meantime, UTas 鈥 like many other Australian institutions 鈥 hopes to generate finances by leveraging its existing estate as it moves to areas more accessible to locals.

In Launceston, for instance, parts of the university鈥檚 leafy campus in suburban are being sold off for housing, offices, an agricultural precinct and medical and defence facilities as university courses and services move to a budding educational and cultural quarter four kilometres away at , a stroll from the city centre. The area also features a museum, art gallery, theatre, cafes, student accommodation, a publicly available library and a community garden, nestled between a riverside walk and Tasmania鈥檚 second-biggest football stadium.

The A$260 million campus relocation and redevelopment is the centrepiece of the Launceston City Deal jointly bankrolled by the federal government, the university, the state government and the city council. 鈥淭his is the in Launceston鈥檚 history,鈥 brochures proclaim. 鈥淭he campus will become .鈥

According to Black, the move was masterminded by 鈥渁 coalition of people from all sectors of the city very committed to sitting around the table figuring out the best future for Launceston, with a clear vision of what that could be鈥.

Sign saying 'Respect the vote: stop the UTAS move'

Unfortunately, Black adds, there is 鈥渘o such thing鈥 as a clear vision in Hobart. And that, he says, is a big reason why the university鈥檚 plans to relinquish much of its existing campus there have proved, unlike in Launceston, to be so contentious.

Most of the scheme to relocate from Sandy Bay, a well-heeled riverside suburb, to a scattering of mostly heritage buildings three kilometres away in the city centre has already eventuated. Music, creative arts and media programmes have a high-tech home in the building, which also hosts Australia鈥檚 oldest continually operating theatre. A viewing window in the floor offers glimpses of the Hobart Rivulet flowing underneath, attesting to the technical difficulties of the building鈥檚 A$110 million restoration.

A block away, the university鈥檚 long-established medical sciences precinct sits across the road from Tasmania鈥檚 major teaching hospital. Nearby administration facilities occupy a heritage biscuit factory, while a fine arts hub on the waterfront shares a restored 19th-century jam factory with a and an arts supply store.

Nursing students practising on a dummy patient
厂辞耻谤肠别:听
UTAS

Back uptown, plans are afoot to restore the 1850 sandstone complex built for Hobart High School that operated from 1893 as before space limitations forced its 1950s move to , a wartime rifle range. Meanwhile, a A$131 million restoration project is converting the mid-19th-century 鈥 which has previously served as a timber factory, emergency services headquarters and wood products showcase centre 鈥 into a new home for teaching and research, possibly in legal and business disciplines.

Across the cove from the fine arts precinct, the headquarters of the university鈥檚 Institute for Marine and Antarctic Studies sits beside the Marine and Atmospheric Research division of Australia鈥檚 Science Agency, CSIRO, where the research vessel Investigator rests between voyages. Nearby, icebreakers share the dockside with cruise ships, ocean-going yachts and other pleasure craft.

A group of people in wet suits and life preservers in the water

鈥淗aving what is arguably the most coherent Antarctic and Southern Ocean research effort globally, sitting alongside other maritime infrastructure and the cruise ship scene 鈥 that synergy has been really powerful,鈥 says Nicholas Farrelly, pro vice-chancellor of the university鈥檚 southern region. 鈥淵ou鈥檝e got a medical science precinct that does some absolutely cutting-edge work right next to Tasmania鈥檚 most important set of hospital facilities. You鈥檝e got a really interesting heritage precinct around Battery Point, bars along the waterfront and other parts of the city that every visitor comes to. And what do they see? They see the university there in different pockets, clearly visible without overwhelming what is ultimately civic space. It鈥檚 something that we hope everybody in Tasmania can be proud of.鈥

Tim Winkler, director of higher education consultancy Twig Marketing, says the idea is reminiscent of how some land grant universities in the US operate. 鈥淵ou can see how being involved in the very heart of Hobart could unlock some really great opportunities,鈥 he says. 鈥淭he Hobart town centre is a beautiful and historic location that attracts many, many tourists and would undoubtedly be more desirable [than Sandy Bay] for international students, for example.鈥

Black says push as well as pull factors have forced the move into the city. He says many of the Sandy Bay facilities are now so tattered that modernising them is not financially viable.聽Australia鈥檚 university sector has no dedicated public funding stream for infrastructure, let alone maintenance, and Tasmania鈥檚 high needs and low economies of scale make educational provision particularly challenging, limiting the scope to meet capital expenses via surplus internal revenue. 鈥淭he way the university鈥as done it throughout its entire history has been, very understandably, to invest in present delivery of education and let its capital run down,鈥 Black says. 鈥淲hen the university moved from the original home鈥o Sandy Bay, that was because the facilities [as the former Hobart High School site] were completely run down鈥nd there was no money [to repair them]. Eventually, you hit a wall and you鈥檝e got to start renewal.鈥

Reaching Sandy Bay is another problem in a state with a 鈥渧ery poor public transport system鈥, Black says. Moreover, 鈥渢he jobs are in and around the centre of the city; they鈥檙e not out in Sandy Bay鈥. And that is an issue because most UTas students have jobs: 鈥淰ery few do a full-time four-unit kind of load because people need to be paying their way,鈥 Black explains.

But arguably the biggest push factor is sociocultural, Black says. 鈥淟arge communities鈥 of potential students have simply never been to Sandy Bay, an 鈥渆lite鈥 area so alien to the target population that some new recruits need individual attention simply to get them on to campus.

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鈥淲hen you鈥檙e a university wanting to say everybody is welcome, you need to be in a place where everybody is welcome,鈥 Black says, emphasising that this view is backed up by the university鈥檚 annual survey of about 1,000 Tasmanians on why they rejected offers of places. 鈥淭here are cultural barriers in Australia [that] people just do not鈥eal enough with when it comes to these access issues. I find it quite problematic, the degree to which we鈥檙e not ready to talk about some of those.鈥

The university鈥檚 move into central Hobart, however, has aroused fierce opposition from academics, students, businesses and Sandy Bay residents. In March 2022, Hobart City Council councillors demanded that the university conduct a community consultation process. In May, meanwhile, the state parliament鈥檚 upper house established a select committee to into the 聽stipulating the university's constitution, functions and powers,聽 an 鈥渙pportunity to constructively consider matters relating to the university鈥檚 governance and decision-making processes鈥. The inquiry attracted 151 submissions, many of them vitriolic, but was paused after parliament was prorogued ahead of the state election on 23 March.

In October 2022, with relocation already well progressed, Hobart residents were quizzed on their views about the move during council elections and almost three-quarters signalled their opposition. While the plebiscite is not binding on the university or any other authority, opponents have seized on it, and placards on the windows and fences of Sandy Bay residences call on everyone to 鈥淩espect the vote 鈥 stop UTas move鈥.

In a 61-page to the select committee, lobby group Save UTAS Campus outlined its main objections. It said UTas had not provided any 鈥渟ubstantive research鈥 showing that largely relinquishing the Sandy Bay campus 鈥 which is slated for more than 2,000 dwellings as well as retail, offices and other developments 鈥 would boost higher education access for young Tasmanians.

The group鈥檚 co-chair Angela Bird says Sandy Bay is just 10 minutes鈥 drive from the central business district (known as Hobart CBD), and shuttle people between the university鈥檚 Hobart sites. 鈥淭here are lots of鈥easons why students don鈥檛 go to university. It鈥檚 not about access or transport into Sandy Bay. Moving [the university] 10 minutes closer is not going to change this. People have been going to this university forever [and the transport situation] has never been brought up before. There鈥檚 free parking at the university. There is nowhere for anyone to park in the CBD for long periods. Where are people going to park?鈥

As for the concerns about Sandy Bay鈥檚 off-putting elitism, these are 鈥渞idiculous鈥, Bird says. 鈥淚 came from the other end of the state in [northern port city] Devonport and I did not even consider the status of the suburb as an issue.鈥

The group also questions the university鈥檚 assertions about the environmental sustainability of a move that potentially involves demolishing buildings and destroying parkland. And Bird questions claims that the move will stimulate small city businesses. 鈥淚nner-city business [operators] believe [the area] would be much better used for housing, retail and offices,鈥 she says. 鈥淪tudents are only there for 24 weeks a year. They don鈥檛 have much disposable income anyway. Permanent residents in inner-city apartments have a lot of disposable income and are there 52 weeks a year. The coffee shops around the current [student] accommodation in the CBD say that their customers are not students: they鈥檙e city workers.鈥

Save UTAS Campus says the university鈥檚 statements about stimulating local economies suggest it has lost sight of its primary educational mission. But Black says social and economic stimulus is part of the primary educational mission.

鈥淲e don鈥檛 do a good job鈥nless we are very attentive to ensuring that the nurses [we educate] have the skills that Tasmanian health needs; that people we鈥檙e educating for businesses have the skills Tasmanian businesses need. These [arguments are] often framed as a kind of simplistic either-or. Higher education today is absolutely about the ability to do both.鈥

As the island鈥檚 sole university, UTas has been able to strike some unique arrangements with key public sector employers. Police recruits undertake the bulk of a bachelor鈥檚 degree as part of their mandatory training under a between Tasmania Police and the university. 鈥淭asmania has the most educated police force in the country, and outcomes to match,鈥 Black says.

The nursing simulation suite at the new Burnie campus recently produced its first cohort of graduates, largely local recruits now filling local jobs in Tasmania鈥檚 notoriously underserviced north-west.

Meanwhile, the university鈥檚 building spree has given impetus to fledgling local industries. Determined to line Hobart鈥檚 refurbished, glass-domed with an alternative to high-carbon plasterboard, for instance, the university chose , a material made from lime, hemp and water. It undertook fire testing certification for a local hemp business, helping to drive its commercial expansion. And the Inveresk project at Launceston featured extensive use of , helping to generate a new product line for a struggling local sawmilling industry previously dedicated to woodchips. 鈥淲e鈥im to be a positive force for building industry capability,鈥 Black says.

Rufus Black
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Evolucion Media

Yet the Hobart move is only one reason why Black (above) is one of the most embattled vice-chancellors in Australia. He is also criticised for perceived failings common to most Australian university leaders 鈥 heavy-handedness, standoffishness, unwillingness to genuinely consult and inability to rein in pervasive bullying, job insecurity and underpayment of casual staff.

Union branch president Beckett says vice-chancellors are paid 鈥渂ig bucks鈥 to solve difficult problems but often fall short and move on. 鈥淭hey use terms [like] good faith, but there鈥檚 not a lot of good faith,鈥 he says. 鈥淭hese people are put into these positions with all this expertise, seven-figure salaries, but...but we never ever see [changes] through and into operation. New change comes on top, or someone else comes in and says, 鈥業鈥檝e got another way of doing it鈥. We鈥檝e often said, 鈥榃e just reinvented the wheel鈥 because we鈥檝e come a full 360 and we鈥檙e back where we started.鈥

But staff demographics offer an implicit endorsement of UTas, which is proving a magnet for young recruits 鈥 unlike most Australian universities, where the staff profile is getting older. UTas says its proportion of academics aged over 55 has declined in recent years, while younger academics have become more numerous 鈥 particularly 25-34-year-olds, whose share of positions has increased by 35 per cent.

University of South Australia human resources professor Carol Kulik says this partly reflects Tasmania鈥檚 image as an outdoorsy place with low crime rates. 鈥淧eople are very attracted to living in Tasmania when they have young families,鈥 she notes.

But Black says the university also deserves credit. 鈥淧eople are keen to join us. [They] want to be part of this mission. It鈥檚 quite a big thing to move to Tasmania: that鈥檚 a big life commitment.鈥

And that mission remains primarily local, even as the university, like all Australian universities, does what it can to recruit international students to fill funding gaps. The arrangements with intermediaries that less well-known universities have to enter into present their own sets of ethical challenges, of course, and UTas was mentioned in a 2019 Australian Broadcasting Corporation expos茅 of unethical international student recruitment.聽Yet while the main subject of the broadcast, Perth鈥檚 Murdoch University, endured a聽regulatory and reputational battering聽until its public image was rehabilitated under new leadership, UTas won plaudits for its handling of the situation, hiring governance expert Hilary Winchester to investigate the allegations and聽.

鈥淭hey said,聽鈥榃e think we鈥檝e got a problem here; let鈥檚 get someone to really have a good look and see how we can improve,鈥欌 Winchester says. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 the way to go, rather than saying 鈥榥othing to see here鈥. I think that put them in good standing.鈥澛

However, UTas鈥 handling of the Hobart move remains contentious despite its having published its masterplan and consulted residents on it. So much so, in fact, that Tasmania鈥檚 governing Liberal Party promised to introduce legislation prohibiting the sale of the Sandy Bay land without 鈥渢he explicit support of both Houses of the Parliament鈥 if it won a clear majority in the 23 March state election. While votes were still being counted after THE went to press, the party had little prospect of winning a majority of seats.

Marketing consultant Winkler says UTas鈥 鈥渢ourist brochure鈥 approach to promoting its attributes is inadequate. 鈥淵ou have to tell a true story, but also you have to tell the story well. That means being engaging and understanding where your pain points are. It鈥檚 like a political campaign. It鈥檚 not what we say: it鈥檚 what everybody else says about us. If you鈥檝e only got a couple of people in the community speaking up for you, then you need to look at why.鈥

For his part, Black is still of the view that the lack of a wider agreed city plan for Hobart is part of the reason for the volume of contention: 鈥淚f you don鈥檛 know what the future is, then you don鈥檛 want to lose what鈥檚 been good about the past,鈥 he says. However, 鈥渨e know that鈥檚 not a good recipe for the future of cities 鈥 to be nostalgic about the past when the world has changed鈥.

In the absence of a wider plan, Black says that the university has, in some senses, 鈥渂ecome the plan鈥, resulting in its attracting 鈥渁ll the attention [for] a whole bunch of issues which need to be part of a bigger plan, [such as] parking and transport鈥.

It is also fair to say that while Tasmania鈥檚 climate may be the country鈥檚 most temperate, its current affairs are a different story.聽Tasmanians seem to love a good stoush, with the university鈥檚 move far from the only bone of popular contention. Other proposals draw no shortage of impassioned advocates on both sides and surprisingly few fence-sitters. Examples include a in remote Robbin Island; an in Storm Bay near Hobart; a up Hobart鈥檚 mountain backdrop; and a on the waterfront.

And as well as flak, UTas can draw fierce proprietary protectiveness from ordinary Tasmanians, including many that have never attended it. And the contention all speaks to the importance of regional institutions such as UTas to their local populations, as recognised in the Universities Accord, with many individuals feeling they have much more to gain or lose from 鈥渢heir鈥 university鈥檚 decisions than big-city dwellers do.

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鈥淚t鈥檚 a unique relationship,鈥 Black concedes. 鈥淎nd as with any close relationship, it has challenges.鈥

john.ross@timeshighereducation.com

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