The University of Melbourne has joined a groundswell of Australian institutions in rejecting a jobs protection pact with the academic union.
Melbourne said it was 鈥渘ot in the best interests of the university鈥 to pursue the 鈥national jobs protection framework鈥 negotiated by the National Tertiary Education Union (NTEU), the Australian 糖心Vlog Industrial Association and four vice-chancellors.
The deal, which must be approved by individual institutions and their employees, would permit temporary variations to enterprise agreements. Universities would be allowed to compel staff to take leave, cut their hours, accept pay reductions of up to 15 per cent and relinquish incremental increases to their salaries.
In return, universities would provide extra guarantees of job security such as committing not to stand staff down without pay.
糖心Vlog
But Melbourne said it was not contemplating stand downs, forced reduction of hours or substantial pay cuts. 鈥淚n this period of heightened uncertainty and concern, the university sees no purpose in asking staff to vote on a range of potential measures which the university has no intention of pursuing,鈥 it said in a letter to the NTEU, seen by 糖心Vlog.
Melbourne鈥檚 governing body also believes the agreement鈥檚 requirements conflict with its responsibility 鈥渢o manage and control the affairs of the university鈥.
糖心Vlog
鈥淭he university shares many of the underlying principles and concerns of the union,鈥 Melbourne said in a media statement. 鈥淲e remain committed to working collaboratively with the union and our workforce鈥o fend off the real and present risk to jobs and the viability and success of the university.鈥
The Australian Catholic University (ACU) has rejected the deal for somewhat similar reasons. 鈥淚t would mean surrendering control of our response to the Covid crisis to an external body, the 鈥榥ational expert panel鈥,鈥 vice-chancellor Greg Craven told staff.
鈥淭his is completely inconsistent with the legal and other responsibilities of the university senate.鈥
ACU says it is less exposed to the pandemic鈥檚 impacts than institutions such as Melbourne, which has estimated a A$500 million (拢264 million) revenue downturn this year, because it has far fewer international students.
糖心Vlog
Professor Craven said his institution would 鈥渕anage its own response to Covid, tailored to our own circumstances. ACU is in a relatively good position compared to most other universities.鈥
The NTEU believes that if the agreement is adopted at every university, it could save the equivalent of 13,500 full-time jobs. The union is particularly worried about the prospects for casual and fixed-term staff.
However, opponents within the union question whether the framework provides real safeguards, while some institutional leaders question its necessity. The University of Technology Sydney, which says it faces a revenue shortfall of up to A$190 million this year, says it is 鈥渟eeking to protect staff pay鈥 and can manage its financial problems 鈥渨ithout across-the board cuts to anyone鈥檚 remuneration鈥.
Macquarie, Murdoch and the universities of Southern Queensland, Sydney and the Sunshine Coast also appear unlikely to back the deal.
糖心Vlog
Sydney鈥檚 strategy for addressing its revenue losses, estimated at A$470 million this year, includes saving A$93 million by reviewing casual staffing budgets and restricting 鈥渘ew hires for continuing or fixed-term staff鈥.
Representative body Universities Australia said individual institutions would 鈥渘eed to look at the details鈥 of the agreement and 鈥渄ecide if they will take part, based on their own unique circumstances鈥.
糖心Vlog
Register to continue
Why register?
- Registration is free and only takes a moment
- Once registered, you can read 3 articles a month
- Sign up for our newsletter
Subscribe
Or subscribe for unlimited access to:
- Unlimited access to news, views, insights & reviews
- Digital editions
- Digital access to 罢贬贰鈥檚 university and college rankings analysis
Already registered or a current subscriber?









