糖心Vlog

Australian universities redraw casual employment as law comes in

Changes will ensure compliance with new legislation, according to administrators, but unions say it is about cutting costs

Published on
November 5, 2024
Last updated
November 6, 2024
Eddie Irvine of Northern Ireland jumps from a IRB rescue boat onto Bondi Beach, Sydney to illustrate Australian universities redraw casual employment as law comes in
Source: Nick Wilson/ALLSPORT/Getty Images

Australian universities are overhauling their casual staffing amid legislation that entitles workers to apply for permanent jobs after six months of insecure employment.

University administrators say the new arrangements will ensure compliance with the law while reducing their reliance on precariously employed academics. Union representatives claim executives are cutting costs by foisting more teaching work on to permanent staff under cover of legislative change.

Macquarie, Monash and Newcastle universities are among the institutions reviewing their casual staffing. Macquarie鈥檚 Faculty of Arts will only allow casual appointments 鈥渂y exception鈥 for people with specialist industry expertise or externally funded jobs.

Macquarie University is implementing measures to more closely regulate the engagement of casual academic staff from 2025 and create opportunities for more secure鈥mployment,鈥 a spokeswoman said.

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Monash has replaced its 鈥減eriodic academic employment鈥 category with 鈥渃ontinuing (defined period) academic employment鈥 (CDPAE) 鈥 a new work mode offering 鈥渃ontinuing part-time employment鈥 where staff are needed for 鈥渄iscrete teaching periods鈥 and perform at least 60 per cent of a full-time workload 鈥渄uring defined work periods鈥, according to Monash鈥檚 enterprise agreement.

Ben Eltham, Monash branch president of the National Tertiary Education Union (NTEU), said the university had massive capital works commitments and planned to save money by scrapping casual contracts. 鈥淭hey鈥檙e going to try and make all the ongoing academics teach more,鈥 he said. 鈥淭hey鈥檒l try and fill the gaps with鈥︹榓d hoc鈥 casuals who might only do marking.鈥

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A Monash spokesman said the university had recently renewed hundreds of casual contracts. Casual engagement would continue where it was 鈥渃ompliant with employment legislation and the most appropriate mode鈥, he said. CDPAE 鈥渨ill not be used to reduce the proportion of other forms of continuing teaching and research employment鈥.

But Dr Eltham said CDPAE arrangements were limited to 40 weeks a year with no obligations to allocate work. 鈥淲hat they look like, in my view, is a聽zero-hours contract聽from the UK. It would presumably be within the university鈥檚 remit to say, 鈥榃e don鈥檛 have any teaching for you this semester.鈥 It鈥檚 not a good faith solution to鈥he [job] security issue.鈥

The row has emerged as universities brace for applications under the 鈥employee choice鈥 provision of the Fair Work Act. From late February, casual staff can request permanent employment after six months of reasonably regular work of a type that their employers are likely to continue to need.

Macquarie鈥檚 NTEU branch president, Nick Harrigan, said the new employment law had little to do with the arts faculty鈥檚 changes. He said management was trying to shift more work on to permanently employed academics by increasing their teaching allocation to 50 per cent of their hours.

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Macquarie was also cutting costs by discontinuing subjects with low enrolments and limiting majors to eight units. 鈥淭hey鈥檙e literally trying to reduce their staffing costs in arts to make鈥 bigger surplus.鈥

Macquarie鈥檚 spokeswoman said the changes would support 鈥渉igh-quality teaching鈥 and 鈥渁 more impactful learning experience. There are currently no changes to units, courses or majors as a result of these measures.鈥

Southern Cross University, which is聽discontinuing its stand-alone arts courses, said the new employment law had not driven the decision but had contributed to funding problems. 鈥淭he legislation鈥as caused us to have to do an enormous amount of work on systems and processes,鈥 said vice-chancellor Tyrone Carlin. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 dollars that we never get back.鈥

john.ross@timeshighereducation.com

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