22 December 2008

Letter from Professors of Victoria University

We write as members of the professoriate at Victoria University to decry the threat of legal action for defamation against our respected colleague, Dr James Doughney, by the Chancellor, Justice Frank Vincent. (The Age, 18 and 19 December 2008.) The Chancellor’s decision to threaten Dr. Doughney with defamation action clearly undermines the ability of any staff member in the University to publicly raise criticisms or questions in relation to the governance of the University.

It is a sad day for freedom of speech when a person of Justice Vincent’s standing attempts to gag an elected staff representative on the university council for frankly and fearlessly speaking his mind. When John Cain, the father of the Solicitor-General charged with sending the letter to Jamie Doughney, co-authored a book entitled 'Off Course', no legal action followed. In that book he subjected the commercial transactions of the then Vice Chancellor of the University of Melbourne, Alan Gilbert, to rigorous scrutiny, and was far more critical of that VC's actions than in the current context. Cain's critique was understood to be fair comment. The same is true of Doughney's.

Dr Doughney, as an elected staff representative on the university council, has employed his considerable professional expertise to raise concerns about the justifications used by senior management in their attempt to slash jobs and courses at Victoria University. Concerns about the validity of the justifications given by the Vice Chancellor for the cuts, as well as the entire process, are shared by the majority of VU staff. The right of any staff member to make criticisms about University processes and the budget should be a basic right at any university in Australia. It is also a particularly important role for our staff representatives and the fact that the representative may simultaneously hold a position within the Union is irrelevant. The University is a public institution and controversial public comments should be debated in public.

A university is about argument and debate and this at times will be passionate. It is not about conformity and mediocrity, about turning VU into the kind of place where staff are too afraid to speak their minds. This threat of legal action should be immediately withdrawn. It is inconsistent with the principles of freedom of speech and open debate which have traditionally been at the heart of the University’s mission. There are times when to remain silent is to run the risk of becoming complicit. The attempted silencing of our colleague threatens the academic freedom of us all.

Professor Jill Astbury
Professor Dorothy Bruck
Professor Phillip Deery
A/Professor David McCallum
Professor Emeritus John McLaren
Professor Carolyn NobleProfessor and
Dean Laureate Robert Pascoe

School of Social Sciences and Psychology,
Victoria University

Professors turn on uni boss

http://www.theage.com.au/national/professors-turn-on-uni-boss-20081219-72fp.h

David Rood
December 20, 2008 - 1:23AM
The Age

A COALITION of Victoria University professors has criticised the university's chancellor over a threat to sue a senior academic for defamation, saying it undermines academics' ability to speak their minds.

In a letter published in today's Age, the professors "decry" chancellor Justice Frank Vincent's legal threat against academic James Doughney — a member of the university's governing council — for attacking university leaders over their plans to scrap hundreds of jobs.

The six professors, including the former dean of arts, Rob Pascoe, also accused the university of trying to silence Dr Doughney and demanded the legal threat be immediately withdrawn.

"It is a sad day for freedom of speech when a person of Justice Vincent's standing attempts to gag an elected staff representative on the university council for frankly and fearlessly speaking his mind," they wrote.

"A university is not about conformity and mediocrity, about turning Victoria University into the kind of place where staff are too afraid to speak their minds.

"Last week, State Government solicitor John Cain jnr sent a letter to Dr Doughney on behalf of Justice Vincent, demanding he withdraw and apologise for "false and defamatory allegations" regarding the job cuts.

In October, The Age revealed Dr Doughney had sent a six-page letter to state and federal MPs accusing vice-chancellor Professor Elizabeth Harman of using a "pea-and-thimble trick" to create a cash crisis to justify slashing 270 jobs.

In a second letter to The Age, another Victoria University academic said Dr Doughney had the overwhelming support of most academics."We didn't put him there to rubber-stamp decisions made in advance and in secret by a small group of senior managers and councillors who have made a mockery of the spirit of democratic university governance," the lecturer wrote.

Dr Doughney, who is also president of the state tertiary union, has accused Justice Vincent of trying to prevent him from expressing legitimate views about how the university is run.But Justice Vincent has defended his decision to engage the Government's solicitor, saying the legal letter was sent on advice from senior counsel that Dr Doughney's statements were defamatory.

19 December 2008

BRADLEY RECOMMENDS $6BILLION UNIVERSITY INVESTMENT

http://www.nteu.org.au/news/current/bradley_recommends_6billion_un

17 December 2009

The National Tertiary Education Union today welcomed the release by the Minister for Education Julia Gillard, of the final report of the Review of Australian Higher Education.

“The report’s recommendations for significantly increased public investment for both teaching and research in higher education are strongly supported by NTEU. The proposed injection of nearly $6 billion over 4 years will go a long way to improving the quality and accessibility of universities after 15 years of neglect. The importance of regionally based and outer metropolitan universities is recognised and the report’s specific recommendations will help promote the future viability of regional Australia.”

“NTEU is encouraged that the Minister has indicated that the Government’s response to the Report will be based on the core principles of opportunity for all, access based on merit and not ability to pay and maintenance of academic freedom and institutional autonomy,” Dr Carolyn Allport, NTEU National President, said today.

“The Union strongly supports recommendations for improved student income and scholarship support. Increased educational opportunity is critical to improving workforce participation and productivity, especially among those who are seeking a second chance education. Indigenous education and participation is an important example”, said Dr Allport.
One of the important issues identified in the report is that of recruitment and retention of academic staff within universities.

“We look forward to working with both Government and individual universities to help develop strategies to overcome impending staffing shortages including policies aimed at increasing the number of home-grown academics, training more postgraduate students, improving the relative attractiveness of working conditions, and providing greater job security and flexibility in working arrangements.”

“The proposed student demand driven model needs further consideration. The introduction of such a model may undermine the viability of the provision of less popular, high cost and nationally important education programs in science, mathematics and languages”, said Dr Allport.

NTEU strongly opposes any re-introduction of full-fees for domestic undergraduate students as proposed in the Report, which runs contrary to the Minister’s decision earlier in 2008 to phase out such full fee places.

“Public universities must serve the public good, and should not be given the choice of admitting some of their students on a full-fee basis and others as government-supported students”, said Dr Allport.

The new funding arrangements have the potential to disadvantage universities compared to private, non university providers who do not have the same research and community service obligations. A good case has not been made to subsidise these private providers.

Contact: Dr Carolyn Allport, President NTEU 0419 349 064
Paul Kniest 0418 170 622

http://www.nteu.org.au/news/current/bradley_recommends_6billion_un

18 December 2008

Judge accused of attacking freedom of speech

The Age
http://www.theage.com.au/national/judge-accused-of-attacking-freedom-of-speech-20081217-70sp.html?page=-1
by Paul Austin
December 18, 2008

THE chancellor of Victoria University has been accused of undermining free speech after using the State Government solicitor to threaten to sue a senior academic for defamation.

Government solicitor John Cain jnr has sent a letter on behalf of the chancellor, Supreme Court judge Frank Vincent, to James Doughney, a member of the university's governing council, demanding he withdraw and apologise for an attack on Victoria University chiefs over their plan to slash hundreds of jobs.

Justice Vincent last night defended his decision to engage the government solicitor, and dismissed Dr Doughney's assertion that his academic freedom was under attack.

The Age revealed in October that Dr Doughney, an economist and state president of the National Tertiary Education Union, had sent a six-page paper to state and federal MPs accusing the university's vice-chancellor, Professor Elizabeth Harman, of manufacturing a cash crisis to justify cutting about 270 jobs. Mr Cain's three-page letter to Dr Doughney, dated December 12, says his statements were false and defamatory.

He accuses Dr Doughney of breaching the council's code of conduct, which requires members to "desist from intimidation in any form in connection with the role of the council".
"My instructions are to require you to publish an apology and withdrawal of the false and defamatory allegations that you have made, directed particularly against the vice-chancellor," Mr Cain writes.

"Otherwise, I am instructed that the chancellor and the vice-chancellor reserve their rights."
Dr Doughney, the elected academic staff representative on the council, said yesterday it was extraordinary that the chancellor had engaged the government solicitor in a bid to "gag" an academic expressing legitimate views about university governance.

"This action is at odds with any concept of critical inquiry, debate, argument, logic and freedom of speech that you would think is associated with places of learning like universities," he told The Age.

"If you disagree with each other, argue the toss - don't throw attempted legal gags at your critics."

Dr Doughney said it was critical that debates about community institutions such as universities be conducted in public.

"They are not private corporations and they are not personal fiefdoms," he said. "They are public assets."

He said Justice Vincent needed to recognise the university was not a court of law, but a "learning community where you are going to get arguments and different interpretations".
"My view is simple: get used to it," he said.

Asked whether he would withdraw and apologise, as demanded by the university chiefs, Dr Doughney replied: "They have got to be joking. I stand by my criticisms and I'm prepared to fight this all the way."

Justice Vincent said last night the legal letter was sent on advice from senior counsel that Dr Doughney's statements were defamatory.

"The action that was taken reflects the concern occasioned by the nature of the attack made upon the vice-chancellor by Dr Doughney and the responsibility of council members," he said.

"Victoria University unequivocally supports and upholds the fundamentally important principle of academic freedom. However, it is patently clear from Dr Doughney's comments themselves and the context in which they were made that no question of the restriction of its expression arises in the present situation."

Dr Doughney's attack on Professor Harman was prompted by her announcement in October of a six-month program of forced and voluntary redundancies to "rebalance" the budget and "future-proof" the university.

http://www.theage.com.au/national/judge-accused-of-attacking-freedom-of-speech-20081217-70sp.html?page=-1

12 December 2008

A Message From the VC



Dear Colleagues,

Today’s update from the VC will address two important Government announcements:

1. New Capital Funds for VU and
2. Update on Bradley Report


1. New Capital Funds for VU
The Prime Minister today has announced major infrastructure investments over the next year. These involve major investment of $1.58 billion in tertiary sector infrastructure, including $10.5 million (and more) specifically for Victoria University.

Firstly, $580 million has been allocated to eleven projects from the Higher Education Investment Fund. VU did not submit for this round but is looking to put the St Albans development into the second round next year.

Secondly, a further $500 million will be allocated to Universities based on their proportion of domestic higher education student load. VU will receive $10.5 million through this to spend on teaching and learning infrastructure.

Thirdly, a further $500 million will be allocated for infrastructure for vocational education and community education providers, including an element specifically targeting TAFEs for maintenance backlog expenses and competitive applications for additional capital funds for emerging training needs or to address green skills requirements.

These additional amounts are a further valuable investment from the Government which will help us renew the buildings we work in and the teaching facilities we use. It is important to realise these funds are provided to support capital projects and as such do not reduce our Budget challenge to bring our annual underlying expenditure into line with our annual revenue and produce reasonable surpluses.


2. Update on Bradley

We have also been told that the report of the Review of Higher Education (Bradley Report) will not be released until next week. This is despite the briefing provided to The Australian as reported in today’s paper. I need to see the full report before responding in depth to the proposals so far outlined so we can understand the full context in which they have been made.

As reported we will have to compete even more intensely for HE students, as well as VE and FE students. This is because the number of HECS funded places will no longer be “capped” for each University. An important element as reported, however, is that student charges will remain capped so we compete on a fairly even basis with the other Universities – in terms of the “price” of HECS places.

The option of mergers has been raised by an announcement by Charles Sturt University and Southern Cross University, with more mergers expected. We know the challenges of providing multi campus education. If there are options for integration we will have to look at them on their merits for the capacity to improve the education and training provided to the west of Melbourne and Victoria more broadly.

Incentives for Universities to enrol more students from low socio-economic backgrounds remains firmly on the agenda, and we will keep you informed as information comes to hand as to how this may benefit VU and our students.

Liz Harman
Vice Chancellor
Professor Elizabeth Harman
Vice-Chancellor and President Victoria University
emailto:elizabeth.harman@vu.edu.au
Web http://www.vu.edu.au/

Universities to merge in major overhaul as Bradley review recommends vouchers

Luke Slattery and Andrew Trounson December 12, 2008
Article from: The Australian
http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au/story/0,25197,24788101-12332,00.html

UNIVERSITIES will be merged, a national voucher system introduced and incentives given to enrol students from low socio-economic backgrounds under recommendations being considered by the Rudd Government.

The reforms, which are understood to be contained in a 200-page report to Education Minister Julia Gillard by former University of South Australia vice-chancellor Denise Bradley, would consolidate the prestige metropolitan universities while leaving the future of several outer suburban, regional and remote campuses in doubt.

In anticipation of Bradley's recommendations, two NSW institutions, Charles Sturt University and Southern Cross University, yesterday announced they would merge to form a new national university based in regional Australia.

The two regional universities said they would be the foundation partners in a new national venture triggered by consultations for the Bradley review.

In a prepared release, the two said: "With an expanded course profile and increased investment in digital technology, the new university would improve the accessibility of professional education in its regions and nationally. Consolidation of its research programs will bring increased innovation of particular relevance to regional Australia."

The Bradley review, commissioned in March, is understood to recommend new measures to integrate the vocational training and higher education sectors in order to boost participation among lower socio-economic groups.

Vouchers - or student learning entitlements - represent a radical shift to a student-centred funding system that no government of either political persuasion has been ready to accept. Students could take vouchers to any university that would admit them.

A voucher scheme would introduce flexibility and a potentially better match of courses to students' first choices, but it would also draw students away from less popular universities.

A student-centred approach could also potentially allow more widespread provision of public funding to recognise private providers, as occurs in the vocational education and training and schools sectors.

However, it is understood that the voucher scheme recommended by the Bradley review would not extend to price deregulation.

The reforms are understood to include measures to protect the $13 billion export education program - Australia's third-biggest earner after iron ore and coal and potentially its biggest if the resources boom goes bust.

A new national accreditation agency is also believed to be among Bradley's recommendations. It would challenge some universities to prove they were worthy of the name.

Education Minister Julia Gillard yesterday would not be drawn on the implications of the budgetary stresses on the Government's response to the Bradley review, which she said would be made in February.

"Everybody is aware that these are difficult days as a result of the global financial crisis," Ms Gillard told reporters.

But she said fast-tracked infrastructure funding for the sector was on its way as part of the Government's overall infrastructure spending plans.

"The Government is intending to fast-track an infrastructure announcement - the Prime Minister has made that clear - and that infrastructure announcement will include infrastructure in higher education."

The sector is awaiting the results of the first $304 million funding round from the newly created $8.7 billion Education Investment Fund.

Victoria has been pushing for a more student-driven demand model for universities, in line with its controversial TAFE reforms under which both public TAFEs and private providers are eligible for public funding.

Southern Cross University vice-chancellor Paul Clark told The Australian yesterday that his merger with Charles Sturt was aimed at boosting flagging higher education enrolments in regional Australia, and Professor Bradley was "personally quite supportive of the way in which we want to go".

Professor Clark said Ms Gillard had already asked the pair to submit a commonwealth grant application for a feasibility study to advance the initiative to the next stage.

"They have dentistry and pharmacy and veterinary science; we have law and forestry so there's complementarities," he said.

Professor Clark "pretty much" ruled out forced redundancies as a result of the merger, saying the plan was about growth.

In a separate development, the Government yesterday released $111.5 million to fund specific programs at universities under the annual disbursement of the Diversity and Structural Adjustment Fund. About $206 million has now been disbursed from the fund, reducing it to about $75million.

http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au/story/0,25197,24788101-12332,00.html

Universities ready to spend $1bn

Andrew Trounson December 12, 2008
Article from: The Australian
http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au/story/0,25197,24789948-12332,00.html

UNIVERSIITES are vowing to start spending almost immediately some $1 billion in fast-tracked infrastructure funding from Canberra.

After months of intensive lobbying, the sector has received an early Christmas present from the Rudd Government with $500 million in one-off funding for teaching and learning infrastructure, of which much will go into refurbishing facilities built during the 1960s and 1970s.

"This will be a significant boost for the construction industry and it will have a real impact on the economy," said Paul Johnson, vice-chancellor at La Trobe University and an expert on economic and social development.

The higher education infrastructure funds are part of a nation-building exercise as the Government attempts to head off a severe economic downturn.

Canberra has also increased by $276 million the amount of funding for new projects under the Education Investment Fund, and will now fund 11 of the 14 short-listed projects at a total cost of $580 million.

There is a one-off injection of $500 million for vocational education and training infrastructure, of which $400 million will be made available to public TAFEs and a further $100 million for other not-for-profit providers of adult and community education. With most of the additional funding coming outside the $8.7 billion EIF, universities hope there will be significant ongoing money for infrastructure.

The sector believes it is facing a total backlog in infrastructure spending of $10 billion-$15 billion.

“These funds will have a tangible and almost immediate impact on our universities,” RMIT vice chancellor Margaret Gardner said in a statement on behalf of the Australian Technology Network of universities.

“It's welcome, it's unexpected and it can be put to good use immediately,” Professor Gardner said. The funds will be available from 1 July. The $500 million one-off funding for universities will be allocated according to student load, while research intensive national university ANU will receive an additional $10 million top-up.

The funding comes on top of the $500 million Better Universities Renewal Fund distributed earlier this year. Of the 14 short listed projects under the EIF, the three that missed out were Murdoch University's "pedagopolis" education facility, ANU's giant Magellan telescope and Ballarat's innovation and enterprise centre.

The biggest winner was Sydney University's new Centre for Obesity, Diabetes and Cardiovascular Disease, which was awarded $95 million. Next in line were $90 million for Melbourne's Peter Doherty Institute for Immunity and Infection and $89.9 million for Monash's New Horizons Centre for science and engineering.

Friends of Victoria University Website

Friends of Victoria University has their own website with lots of good and up-to-date information.

Please put the website on your favourite page and check it regularly for updates.

http://friendsofvu.org.au/

NTEU end-of-year party

NTEU end-of-year party

Date: Monday 15 December
Time: 1.00 pm
Place: Riverview Function Centre, Footscray Rowing Club.

Community members and members of Friends of Victoria University are welcome.

Come and have a great end-of-year party with your friends on the banks of the Maribrynong at the NTEU and Friends of VU Christmas party: dancing, food, great conversations.

Victoria University offers voluntary redundancies

Andrew Trounson December 11, 2008
Article from: The Australian
http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au/story/0,24897,24784840-12332,00.html

VICTORIA University has delayed any forced redundancies into next year, instead launching a voluntary redundancy program.

Vice-chancellor Elizabeth Harman has suggested that total job losses could be less than first anticipated as management looks to cut sessional and contracting staff while seeking other savings beyond staff cuts.

The National Tertiary Education Union is now claiming a partial victory for its campaign against VU's plans to cull up to 270 people, claiming that the university hasn't been able to find the redundant staff it had been expecting.

“They went searching for a tail of short courses and units and found that the dog didn't have a tail,” NTEU branch president Richard Gough told The Australian.

But Professor Harman said forced job losses were still a possibility next year, with management's work with consultants Ernst & Young to identify non-viable courses and surplus staff simply taking longer than expected to complete.

“This isn't the end of the story,” Professor Harman told The Australian.

“We are still going to end up with staffing changes.”

But Professor Harman said management had identified more than $10 million worth of annual savings from expected voluntary departures, cuts to sessional staff and other savings in higher education. However, that is still short of her total savings target for higher education of $16.5 million.

Mr Gough said any compulsory sackings next year would spark industrial action under the current enterprise bargaining talks.

VU has identified 140 higher education courses and 500 units that it will discontinue or phase out next year, reducing the total offering to around 200 courses and 1,700 units. Mr Gough said many of these course were already being taught out or had fallen into disuse, which is why management had failed to find significant redundancies from them.

VU is looking for further course cuts, including shedding the teaching of languages other than English, with the exception Vietnamese, for which VU is the only provider nationally.

Professor Harman said the cuts would allow VU to redeploy resources into high demand areas like teaching, business, accounting, and nursing.

In October, Professor Harman shocked staff with plans cut up to 150 higher education academic staff to secure $16.5 million in savings. A further $8.5 million in savings has been targeted from up to 100 job losses in administration, and a further $2 million in savings from about 20 job losses in TAFE.

The announcement, which had been formulated without consulting the union, angered the NTEU and worried local politicians. But while Professor Harman admitted that the communication strategy could've been better, she said the announcement had “focused minds” and there was now a renewed focus among deans and school heads to find savings while minimising job losses.

“Minds are now very focused,” Professor Harman said.

“The savings actions now being proposed by higher education faculties are deeper and wider than throughout 2008 when the budget depended on higher education productivity gains that didn't materialise.”

She said “the last few months have been a hard process at VU and I wouldn't be the only person disappointed in that we haven't succeeded in making sure all our staff fully understand what we want to do.”

“I'd have preferred to have had better communication strategies out there.”

Indeed management and the union still remain at loggerheads over the need for staffing cuts. Professor Harman says the cuts are needed to stave off looming deficits and in the wake of the failure of past productivity drives. But the NTEU believes VU is overstating the urgency, which it says is being exacerbated by the cost of the redundancies themselves and the university's construction plans as it reconfigures its spread of campuses.

The NTEU has called for an independent party to give a view on the university's situation and Professor Harman has agreed to consider it in further talks with the NTEU.

Mr Gough said the union wanted to “look for solutions that don't require targeted redundancies but still leave the university in a sustainable position”.

http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au/story/0,24897,24784840-12332,00.html

24 HOUR STRIKE ON MONDAY 15 DECEMBER

NTEU members vote to take strike action!

24 HOUR STRIKE ON MONDAY 15 DECEMBER

The meeting of NTEU Members on 8 December voted unanimously for "A 24 hour strike commencing on Monday 15 December, to involve pickets on higher education campuses and a boycott of the Vice‐Chancellor’s end of year party to coincide with a rank‐and‐file end‐of‐year staff party — come and celebrate the end of the year with your friends and colleagues at Footscray Rowing Club!"

All members of NTEU are encouraged to participate in the picket lines and to join us at the alternative staff party on 15 December.

http://www.nteu.org.au//bd/vu#a34197



Stopwork Meeting 8 December 2008

Stopwork Meeting 8 December 2008
The NTEU Stopwork Meeting passed the following motions:


1. That this meeting condemn:
• The unnecessary decision of the Vice‐Chancellor to continue to proceed with her program of forced redundancies;
• The ongoing failure of VU Council and senior management to consult with staff before implementing major decisions and failure of senior management to manage the University properly;
• The complete lack of respect shown by senior management for the hard working staff of Victoria University; and
• The complete disloyalty shown by management to the University in seeking to destroy Victoria University and education in the western region.

Carried unanimously

2. That this meeting endorse the NTEU’s Enterprise Bargaining log of claims, particularly its claim for job security with no forced retrenchments.

Carried unanimously

3. That this meeting endorse the following actions by NTEU Members in pursuit of a new Collective Agreement at Victoria University. Unless and until such an Agreement is reached, the Union should implement these actions over the coming weeks:

• Comprehensive bans on Making VU, including all course reviews which involve incorporation of any of the five commitments, professional development associated with Making VU, attendance of cluster meetings and attendance of any seminars associated with Making VU;
• Bans on contribution to VU’s Higher Education Research Data Collection processes, including faculty and school level processes;
• Bans on contribution to VU’s course and unit management systems, including the CAMS process and related reporting activities;
• Bans on any recording, or transmission to the University, of assessment results for University Summer School units; and
• A 24 hour strike commencing on Monday 15 December, to involve pickets on higher education campuses and a boycott of the Vice‐Chancellor’s end of year party to coincide with a rank‐and‐file end‐of‐year staff party — come and celebrate the end of the year with your friends and colleagues at Footscray Rowing Club!

Carried unanimously

4. That this meeting call on the National Office and Victorian Division of the NTEU to establish a subdivision of the National Defence Fund to help support staff and their families taking even more forceful industrial action in the New Year.

Carried unanimously

5. That this meeting supports the general campaign against senior management’s proposed round of redundancies in their entirety.

Carried

http://www.nteu.org.au//bd/vu#a34197

10 December 2008

Update on Plans for a Sustainable VU, Tues 9 Dec 2008



Update on Plans for a Sustainable VU:
Course rationalisation, staff redundancies and financial sustainability
Tuesday 9th December 2008
Dear Colleagues,
I am sure that you are looking forward to the break in a few weeks time. The advice in this email should give you a better sense of the situation at this stage on VU’s major sustainability initiatives so you can organise the rest of your year with some peace of mind.
I have listed the headlines for you to skim - with web links for the detail on those aspects that interest you most.
  • Council last night approved the 2009 Budget and $27m in savings
  • Progress on savings in HE continues while building on our strengths
  • Changes to HE courses and units are now in a HE Change Plan
  • HE staff separations have been extended to voluntary options
  • Other savings measures
  • HE Change Plan has now been released for discussion (attached)
  • Meetings on FE, VE and HEW staffing are going ahead
  • VU is turning its attention to the Bradley Report, expected soon
Council last night approved the 2009 Budget and $27m in savings
The budget approved last night will be a key document for use by everyone in 2009. For full details on the Budget, including my Introduction, refer to: http://intranet.vu.edu.au/Finance/pdf_files/2002_budget_draft4Feb/2009BudgetDocument.pdf.
We still have a lot of work to do together on the savings plan in the first few months of the New Year. While some non salary savings have been identified, the bulk of the $27m will have to come from savings in employment costs.
A special Sustainability Office is being established to work with managers across VU on both staffing changes and other savings initiatives. At Council’s request we will then be providing Council with detailed advice on the strategies that are linked to the full $27m at the April 2009 Council meeting.
Progress on savings in HE continues while building on our strengths
The process to identify savings has continued in Higher Education over recent weeks.
Firstly, we have had to face and to address the limitations in our data on HE units, courses and staff workloads. Secondly, senior staff members have been working closely to address these challenges and produce the HE Change Plan. Thirdly, there has been an unfortunate coincidence of timing with external commentary about the future of HE in Australia. This has added to
speculation and anxieties of some of our staff. The conversations will be better informed when the Bradley Report, now imminent, is made public.
Changes to HE courses and units are now in a HE Change Plan
The HE Change Plan advises which courses and units we propose to discontinue from 2009.
The proposal to discontinue from 2009 approximately 140 HE courses and over 500 units is just one step in our efforts to focus our teaching and staff resources on VU’s strengths. This still leaves over 200 courses and over 1,700 units of courses and units that remain on VU’s books for students to take. I am talking to ERB about the progress we have made and what else needs to be done on Wednesday.
The massive task undertaken over the past two months to assess the viability of every HE unit and course will now form the basis for the creation of a Course and Unit Management System that will be used to maintain a sustainable teaching profile in HE. The system will be managed centrally by the PVC (IS).
HE staff separations have been extended to voluntary options
We have not yet made the progress we need to make to reduce our staffing costs because of problems in compiling accurate data about HE staff and their individual workloads. This work is continuing. Feedback from the HE Faculty leadership, staff and the President of the VU Branch of the NTEU, Richard Gough, has suggested that voluntary separation options and other savings measures be considered to mitigate the need for as many targeted redundancies. This request has been agreed to and therefore no targeted HE academic redundancies will be made in 2008. The NTEU has been informed of our progress.
Details of separation options available to eligible HE staff are described in the HE Change Plan and will be available on the HR intranet site from tomorrow. Eligible HE academic staff will be invited to submit an EOI to separate from the University. Please note that EOIs need to be submitted by 16 January; affected staff will be notified of the outcome of their EOI by 2 February 2009.
Other savings measures
Other savings strategies are being explored by the three Executive Deans and their staff, including the cost of sessional staffing (estimated at $12m in 2008) and changes in teaching practices (eg tutorial sizes and time-tabling). All strategies are to be set out in Internal Partnership Contracts (IPCs) with itemised savings for 2009 at the level of each Faculty and its Schools.
And in addition, we are improving our data collection, with workload data of each HE academic will henceforth be collected on a central data bank, as well as in their Schools.
HE Change Plan has now been released for discussion
The purpose of the HE Change Plan is to inform staff of the scope of the changes proposed under the first phase of 2008 Plan for a Sustainable VU and to provide staff with the opportunity to comment on the proposed actions over the next two weeks. The HE Change Plan can be accessed at: http://intranet.vu.edu.au/wp/sustainablevu/Documents/ChangePlan.pdf.
The release of this document begins a 2 week consultation period with staff, between now and 23 December. We invite feedback on the plan, including courses and units and mitigation strategies. I encourage you all to read the Plan carefully and let your views be known by sending your feedback to ProjectManager@vu.edu.au.
Meetings on FE / VE and HEW staffing are going ahead
Following the changes in HE positions, change plans for VE / FE and HEW staff will be developed. Principles and processes for the change process for HEW staff will be agreed with managers in December. Meetings are now being organised to begin discussing the process for reducing employment costs and other savings initiatives in these areas. FE /VE and HEW Change Plans will be distributed as the next step in the consultation process for staff in these areas. A date will be set for issuing these plans following these consultative processes.
VU is turning its attention to the Bradley Report, expected soon
Colleagues, we are all acutely aware that staff members across VU are facing uncertainty and the events of the past six weeks have been particularly hard in the HE faculties. The process is nonetheless giving us a much clearer picture of our course strengths as well as the contributions made by so many of our staff. We are building VU’s financial fitness for a future shaped by contestability, the Bradley Report and global economic change. We will issue a VU comment on Bradley developments as soon as these are known.
I thank staff members across all parts of VU who have helped as we have developed a clearer picture of our teaching and research strengths.
Together, we will ensure that VU has the resources we need to offer the right courses from Certificate to PhD, at the right campuses, with the right staff – for VU students.
Liz Harman
Vice Chancellor

08 December 2008

Today Monday 8 Dec

My thoughts are with all the VU Staff today as some will be receiving news about their employment status. It will be a difficult time for many.

Please know that there are many support groups out there in the community and within VU. These are some services that are available to staff

COUNSELLING SERVICES FOR VU STAFF
Confidential and independent counselling and other services are available to all staff of Victoria University through the Employee Assistance Scheme (EAP).

As an employee of the University you can access short-term assistance for work-related or personal issues that may be affecting your ability to function at work.

An important aspect of the EAP is that it is private and confidential. Everything discussed in the sessions is kept between you and the consultant you speak with, and your details will not be passed on to anyone at Victoria University.

Staff can ring the EAP provider OSA Group on 1300 361 008 any time of the day.
http://www.vu.edu.au/Current_Students/Support_Services/Counselling_Services/Staff/Counselling_for_Staff/index.aspx

CHAPLAINCY
Staff and students of all beliefs or no faith background are invited to visit the chaplain or the Reflection Centre. We are pleased to meet Buddhists, Christians, Hindus, Jews, Muslims and everyone from all walks of life. Everyone is accepted as important and valued as an individual.

Chaplaincy is a caring presence to support you on your journey. The chaplain will companion you with a listening heart and compassionate spirit and to journey with you in times of loneliness, struggles/tragedies, difficult times, study/work pressures, pains/worries, relationship/family concerns, spiritual or faith matters etc. She will be happy to share your stories of joys, surprises, discoveries, dreams, creativities, talents/gifts and your value of self-worth and meaning in daily events.

You are invited to meet Sister Catherine, chaplain, at the
Reflection Centre (Footscray Park Campus Building M Room 229, St Albans Campus Building 1L Room L101) or at her office (Building 4 Room 134N) Should you wish to have a private appointment please telephone 9919 2292, or 99192399 or email catherine.tay@vu.edu.au
http://www.vu.edu.au/Current_Students/Support_Services/Chaplaincy/index.aspx

DEPRESSION
If you are feeling depressed, please call and talk to someone at
Beyond Blue
Information Line 1300 22 46 36
http://www.beyondblue.org.au/index.aspx?

NTEU Press Conference

NTEU State Secretary Matthew McGowan will hold a media conference outside Victoria University at 2:45pm on Ballarat Road outside the main Victoria University campus at Footscray Park.

Where: Corner Ballarat Rd and Hoadley Ct, Victoria University, Footscray Park Campus
When: 2:45pm today, Monday 8 December 2008

Media Enquiries
Alex White
Communications Officer
0403 694 397

http://www.nteu.org.au/news/current/victoria_university_staff_stop

Victoria University Staff Stop-Work and Strike Today

NTEU members at Victoria University will be taking strike action today, Monday 8 December from 1pm, commencing with a stop-work meeting.

Staff are engaging in protected industrial action to secure a new collective agreement.

Staff are unhappy at Victoria University over the drawn out negotiations with senior management for a new collective agreement, the lack of respect shown by Vice-Chancellor Elizabeth Harman towards staff, and the controversial 270 forced redundancies.

http://www.nteu.org.au/news/current/victoria_university_staff_stop

05 December 2008

Invitation to Friends of VU

Friends of VU are invited to attend both events.
A giant picket will be formed around the University at 2.30 pm at Footscray Park Campus following the stop work meeting and a bus will be available to take people into the city for the Council Meeting Protest.


STOP WORK MEETING
Date: 8 December 2008, Monday
Time: 1.00 pm
Place: D231, Footscray Park Campus

NON-VIOLENT PROTEST
Date: 8 Dec 2008, Monday
Time: 4.30pm
Place: VU City Campus 300 Flinders Street.

Please make every effort to be there. VU Staff needs our support.

NTEU stop work meeting and half day strike Monday 8th Dec

STOP THE SACKINGS - VU STAFF DEMAND RESPECT

Last week NTEU members at VU voted overwhelmingly (98%) in favour of taking industrial action.

The NTEU has imposed work bans at 9.00am on Monday 8 Dec, with a strike and stop-work meeting starting at 1pm, so that staff at VU send a strong message to VU senior management.

We want real job security - not mass staff sackings.

Job security and no net job losses are important parts of the NTEU claim to get a new and improve Collective Agreement. Instead of delivering on these issues, VU management has decided to sack over 270 staff without consultation. Tell VU management to negotiate with your Union in good faith.

STOP WORK MEETING

Date: 8 December 2008, Monday
Time: 1.00 pm
Place: D231, Footscray Park Campus

www.universitybargaining.com.au

Latest News on Retrenchments

As you read this, the Vice-Chancellor and her leadership team are finalising their lists of names for the first round of forced redundancies.

On Monday 8 December, an unknown number of VU Staff will each receive an invitation to a meeting with our supervisor.

It has become apparent, however, that the likely targeted redundancies will fall well short of the projected 150 academic redundancies that management appeared to want, again because they are finding it difficult to match staff with unprofitable units.

Further retrenchments of General Staff and TAFE staff will occur in the New Year. The University has also announced that in addition to range of further strategies to reduce the number of targeted redundancies for Academic staff.

A voluntary redundancy program will be announced. This represents some mitigation of the targeted retrenchment process which has been put in place; however, targeted redundancies, possibly still in large numbers may occur.

Music Courses closed down at Sunbury campus

In the first wave of announced cuts to courses, the Vice-Chancellor has formally withdrawn the following courses from VTAC..

Bachelor of Music (Performance)
Bachelor of Music (Technology)
Bachelor of Science (Computer Science and Aviation)

These courses will have no intake in 2009. The cut to the Bachelor of Music degrees at Sunbury campus is particularly significant because it will effectively ‘cut-off at the knees’ a major pathway used by TAFE students in the Diploma of Music to reach Higher Education .

The NTEU has already received a number of reports of aggrieved students who are finding it very difficult to find an alternative destination to finish their qualification, if at all. The West and outer West also remain arguably poor in terms of venues to study the performing arts and this loss will further impoverish the limited range of music offerings available to residents in the west.

Cuts to postgraduate courses are also on the agenda, many of which are fee-paying and profitable. Units of study are also under scrutiny. However, it remains to be seen which courses and units will be cut.

The fiction that VU has a ‘long tail’ of small unprofitable units is proving just that and the University’s razor gang is finding it very difficult to find courses and units which meet their closure criteria.

The Vice Chancellor has also ruled out in a recent meeting with the NTEU that profitable courses would be cut. We wait with interest therefore to see what will be cut and will keep you informed as we are updated.

04 December 2008

SHOW US RESPECT, SAY VU STAFF

SHOW US RESPECT, SAY VU STAFF

http://www.nteu.org.au/news/current/untitled_3
MEDIA RELEASE
2 December 2008

Staff at Victoria University will be taking industrial action on 8 December, following overwhelming support in a secret ballot last week.

The NTEU today announced plans for a strike and work bans, unless the University demonstrates a new attitude to staff demands.

“Strike action at Victoria University could be averted if Vice-Chancellor Elizabeth Harman suspends the planned mass-sackings over Christmas and comes to the bargaining table in good faith,” said Matthew McGowan, Secretary of the NTEU Victorian Division.

NTEU members voted overwhelmingly to authorise industrial action, with the Australian Electoral Commission announcing the result yesterday. The first round of industrial action will take place on Monday 8 December. A mass meeting of NTEU members on that day will consider recommendations for subsequent rounds of industrial action, including further strike action in December.

“As we head into the holiday season, there are over 270 staff at Victoria University that won’t be celebrating. We have been trying to get the university to bargain for a new collective agreement since May this year, but their response has been to engage in delaying tactics,” said Mr Richard Gough, President of Victoria University NTEU Branch.

“University senior management can end this dispute today by treating staff with the dignity and respect they deserve. We are calling on Professor Harman to end the forced redundancies and come to the bargaining table ready to negotiate a new collective agreement that would ensure that there would be no forced redundancies for the life of any new agreement,” Mr Gough said.

“If these redundancies go through, students will come back next year to the worst class sizes and student-teacher ratios in Australia,” he said.

In a recent NTEU survey of higher education staff which asked whether staff had confidence in the administration, Vice-Chancellor Harman and the senior management at Victoria University rated worst in the state. 94 percent of staff did not have confidence, compared to a 72 percent state average. 95 percent of VU staff did not consider themselves to be respected or valued at work, compared to a 76 percent state average.

Monday 8 December Strike

Staff at all campuses of Victoria University will be taking lawful industrial action, including strike action and the imposition of work bans, on Monday 8 December. There will be a stop-work meeting at 1pm at the Footscray Park campus, which will consider further industrial action.

For more information:

Matthew McGowan, State Secretary, NTEU Victorian Division 0417 054 110

Richard Gough, President, Victoria University NTEU Branch 0418 102 547

http://www.nteu.org.au/news/current/untitled_3

Industrial Action at VU 08 December 2008

Dear students,

As you may be aware, the National Tertiary Education Union has called for its members to take industrial action next Monday 08 December 2008.

I do not anticipate that there will any direct impact on students during Monday morning, but some staff may not be present on campus on Monday afternoon which may have an adverse impact on some aspects of University services.

While VU respects the right of staff to take protected industrial action, we regret any inconvenience that may be caused to students.

Regards, Stephen
Stephen Weller
Pro Vice-Chancellor Students
VICTORIA UNIVERSITY 03-9919-5460
stephen.weller@vu.edu.auwww.vu.edu.au/people/stephenweller

02 December 2008

The 7.30pm Report - ABC

To watch this report please click the link below
http://www.abc.net.au/7.30/

Universities announce staffing cutbacks amid funding crisis

Three Melbourne universities have announced staffing cutbacks and are predicting more in the new year. Universities say they are struggling to compete internationally, after enduring cutbacks in funding for more than a decade.
http://www.abc.net.au/7.30/

Note: Thanks to JS for forwarding this information: There was footage from the first VU community meeting in Footscray on the 7:30 report last night. A great extract from Scott's speech (very powerful), a sound bite from Jamie, some of the Mayor's opening comments and David and Tom in the background.

14 Vice-Chancellors

An extract. For full media release go to
http://www.vu.edu.au/About_VU/Media_Releases/Statement_by_fourteen_Vice-Chancellors_of_Australias_non-aligned_universities/indexdl_94600.aspx

Statement by fourteen Vice-Chancellors of Australia's non-aligned universities before the Bradley Report
24 November

Fourteen Vice-Chancellors have issued the following statement in advance of the report of the Australian Government's Review of Higher Education (Bradley Report) due in December 2008. This includes Professor Elizabeth Harman, Vice-Chancellor, Victoria University.

As the Vice-Chancellors of fourteen non-aligned Australian universities, we keenly anticipate both the upcoming report of the Bradley Review of Higher Education and the government's response.

The Bradley report and its recommendations will require testing through analysis, elucidation and critique. We look forward to a future government plan for the tertiary education sector that is equitable, visionary and sustainable.

Note: to read the rest go to http://www.vu.edu.au/About_VU/Media_Releases/Statement_by_fourteen_Vice-Chancellors_of_Australias_non-aligned_universities/indexdl_94600.aspx

Statement by fourteen Vice-Chancellors of Australia's non-aligned universities before the Bradley Report

Statement by fourteen Vice-Chancellors of Australia's non-aligned universities before the Bradley Report
24 November

Fourteen Vice-Chancellors have issued the following statement in advance of the report of the Australian Government's Review of Higher Education (Bradley Report) due in December 2008. This includes Professor Elizabeth Harman, Vice-Chancellor, Victoria University.
As the Vice-Chancellors of fourteen non-aligned Australian universities, we keenly anticipate both the upcoming report of the Bradley Review of Higher Education and the government's response.

The Bradley report and its recommendations will require testing through analysis, elucidation and critique. We look forward to a future government plan for the tertiary education sector that is equitable, visionary and sustainable.

As the leaders of universities comprising a critical mass of Australia's Higher Education sector, we stress that it will be imperative in the post-Bradley period that the policy debate about universities be set in the interests of the sector as a whole, not any of its particular components.
A future Higher Education policy that does not deal adequately with all universities will be one that disadvantages a significant number of students, Australian and international, future teachers and health professionals, Australia's underprivileged, rural and metropolitan regions and Indigenous people.

The Tests for the Bradley Review report and the government's response
Our universities are crucial to Australia's Higher Education system and to the workability and equity of any future policy prescription applied to that system. We will assess the Bradley report and the government's response against the three fundamental imperatives of:

  • social inclusion;
  • education and training for a skilled and professional workforce;
  • support for research with impact.

Social Inclusion
Australia's non-aligned universities have long been institutionally committed to providing more opportunities to those who are doing least well, whether these are students facing social or economical disadvantage, regional and rural students, Indigenous students, older Australians seeking essential skills and learning, or students with a disability.


The same principle underlies the Commonwealth Government's most basic educational policies.

Our universities will look to the Bradley report and the government's response for:

a. major improvement in the support of students, such as extensions of living and accommodation scholarships and greater student income support;
b. systemic change ensuring that funding for teaching and learning takes account of the likely learning support needs of the students educated by each university to support equitable outcomes for students from different backgrounds; and
c. avoidance of proposals that have the practical effect of reducing access to or funding of higher education for the disadvantaged and marginalised.

Education and training for a skilled and professional workforce
Universities are Australia's major sources of skilled, flexible, creative labour. Our universities are the Universities of Work: they have a particular capacity to produce an immense variety of work-ready, internationally recognised graduates. Our graduates are trained to meet both their own expectations of employment and their employers' expectations of quality across all regions of Australia.

Our universities will look to the Bradley report and government response for concrete means to:
d. strengthen the contribution of industry and employers to universities; ande. support those universities with an institutional emphasis upon ensuring the fitness of graduates for employment and life-long adaptability as working professionals.

Research with impact
Research is fundamental to all universities, but types of research do and should vary, from the pure or abstract to the applied and engaged. Our universities' research is heavily weighted to research for deployment in partnership with industry, government and communities. It works towards social, technological, health and other practical outcomes, with significant regional, national and international impact, in fields such as health and well-being, technology, education and social inquiry.

Hence, we believe research should be funded on the basis of its quality, with strong support for research with demonstrated meaningful application.
f. Our universities will look to the Bradley report and government response for concrete means to support strong research funding for research that engages with current industry and community need.

Why non-aligned universities matter
The non-aligned universities comprise a real and varied collectivity of students, staff and associated communities. These universities in 2007:

  • Enrolled 376,017 students, representing 38% of the national total, more students than any of the formal interest groups;
  • Enrolled 38%of all international students;
  • Earned $4.8 billion, being 28% of Australian university revenue;
  • Taught 51% of teacher education students and 53% of nursing students;
  • Taught 46% of lower SES students;
  • Taught 57% of regional students and 45% of remote students;
  • Taught 43% of indigenous students; and
  • Taught 39% of students with a disability.
Conclusion
The Bradley Review of Higher Education is vital to Australia's future. As fourteen Vice-Chancellors from the non-aligned universities which make up a significant part of Australian Higher Education, we look forward to its constructive recommendations to ensure our institutions can continue to meet the needs of all Australians and our international students.

Note on Data:
The data cited refer to all universities which are not members of the Australian Technology Network, the Group of Eight, or the Innovative Research Universities Australia.
The data are drawn from:Finance 2007: Selected Higher Education Statistics, DEEWR 2008, http://www.dest.gov.au/sectors/higher_education/publications_resources/profiles/Finance_2007_stats.htm
Students 2007 [full year]: selected higher education statistics, DEEWR 2008 http://www.dest.gov.au/sectors/higher_education/publications_resources/profiles/Students_2007_full_year_.htm

The fourteen Vice-Chancellors and universities are:
Professor Greg Craven, Vice-Chancellor, Australian Catholic UniversityProfessor David Battersby, Vice-Chancellor, University of BallaratProfessor John Finlay-Jones, Acting Vice-Chancellor, Edith Cowan UniversityProfessor Helen Garnett , Vice-Chancellor, Charles Darwin UniversityProfessor Liz Harman, Vice-Chancellor, Victoria UniversityProfessor Bill Lovegrove, Vice-Chancellor, University of Southern QueenslandProfessor Bill MacGillivray, Acting Vice-Chancellor, Southern Cross UniversityProfessor Sally Walker, Vice-Chancellor, Deakin UniversityProfessor Stephen Parker, Vice-Chancellor, University of CanberraProfessor Alan Pettigrew, Vice-Chancellor, The University of New EnglandProfessor Jan Reid, Vice-Chancellor, University of Western SydneyProfessor John Rickard, Vice-Chancellor, Central Queensland UniversityProfessor Paul Thomas, Vice-Chancellor, University of the Sunshine CoastProfessor Ian Young, Vice-Chancellor, Swinburne University of Technology
Professor Elizabeth Harman, Vice Chancellor, Victoria University will be available for comment in relation to this statement, from Thursday 27 November 2008

Media Contacts:
Ms Christine White, Media Manager,Marketing & Communications Department, Victoria UniversityPh: (03) 9919 4322; mobile: 0434 602 884
Andy Gash, Snr. Media OfficerMarketing and Communications Department, Victoria UniversityPh: (03) 9919 4950; mobile: 0411 255 900

29 November 2008

INDUSTRIAL ACTION

VIC UNI STAFF OVERWHELMINGLY VOTE IN FAVOUR OF INDUSTRIAL ACTION

MEDIA RELEASE
28 November 2008


Victoria University staff have voted to take protected industrial action to secure a collective agreement and protect quality of teaching, following the largest round of targeted redundancies in Australian university history.

“The initial reports indicate that over 98 percent of NTEU members have voted to take protected industrial action,” said Matthew McGowan, Victorian Secretary of the NTEU.

“This result in this vote is a overwhelming rebuke of the Vice-Chancellor and the senior management behind her and follows on from an NTEU survey conducted over the past fortnight that showed over 80 percent of surveyed staff had no confidence in the Vice-Chancellor.”

“Staff are saying that they want respect from Vice-Chancellor Elizabeth Harman, rather than disdain and contempt,” he said.
The industrial action ballot authorises legal, protected industrial action, including work bans, bans on the transmission of student examination results, over-time bans and strike action.


“There is a strong feeling amongst Victoria University staff, and that has been reflected in the results we are seeing today. Elizabeth Harman needs to come to the bargaining table to genuinely negotiate. VU staff want job security and a restoration of lost conditions, but most of all they want respect,” said Mr McGowan.

“If the job cuts go through and the University refuses to negotiate a collective agreement, students at VU will be facing the worst student-teacher ratios in Australia. We are acting now to protect the quality of teaching and research at VU, as well as to ensure that students in the West receive the best possible education,” he said.

Victoria University NTEU members will be considering in the next few days what form of protected industrial action will be taken and when.
The Union will be meeting with the Vice-Chancellor this afternoon at 4pm in an attempt to get the University to engage in genuine negotiation.

For more information:
Matthew McGowan
State Secretary, NTEU Victorian Division
0417 054 110

Richard Gough
President, Victoria University NTEU Branch
0418 102 547


http://www.nteu.org.au/news/current/untitled_2

26 November 2008

Petition

PETITION
We, the undersigned, are a concerned group of people who respectively urge Ms Elizabeth Harman, the Vice Chancellor of Victoria University, to act now to support and guarantee the future of the Social Work Unit at St Albans Campus, Victoria University.

The Social Work Unit needs the continued support from University management to be able to provide quality education & training for social work students in the Western metropolitan area. The Social Work Unit has developed and maintained strong links and partnerships with labour force providers in the Western region and broader community. It is paramount that the University retains the Bachelor of Social Work course to be able to meet the ever growing and diverse needs of the community.

The VU Social Work Unit education and training, exemplifies the philosophical principles of social justice, equality, anti-oppression, client self - determination and empowerment.
Mary Hutchinson
Western Region
Social Worker: ISIS Primary Care.
mlouhutchinson@optusnet.com.au
mary.hutchinson@vu.edu.au

Maree Corbo
Western Region
Djerriwarrh Health services
Social worker/Counsellor:
mareeco@djhs.org.au
*******************************************************************************************************************
If you support this petition and would like to add your name to the petition please send an email to Mary mlouhutchinson@optusnet.com.au / mary.hutchinson@vu.edu.au or Maree mareeco@djhs.org.au and let them know. Please include
Your Full name
Region, Occupation, Organization - Optional
Email address
Brief Comment - Optional
Date
Mary & Maree will collate all the names present the petition to the Vice Chancellor, Liz Harman.
*******************************************************************************************************************

Support from former students of VU

I received this very encouraging email from Maree, a former student of VU Social Work Unit informing me about a petition she and other former students have started.

Maree has given me permission to blog their petition. Following is an extract of her letter...

We just wanted to give you a bit of a heads up about what we as alumni are up too. We received notice last week that the future of the social work unit, while reasonably secure is by no no means out of the woods. My former student colleague and I decided that we could get a petition going around the various networks that we work in and hopefully present a petition to the vice chancellor. As you could imagine Liz Harman will not like to get on the wrong side of the community that supports the university and are hopeful that she may listen to our concerns.

Cheers
Maree Corbo
Counsellor Coordinator of Men's Faxback
Melton, Caroline Springs and Bacchus Marsh
Djerriwarrh Health Services
Cnr High & Yuille Sts
Melton Vic 3337
mareeco@djhs.org.au

Friends of Victoria University – Statement of Intent

Friends of Victoria University – Statement of Intent

Introduction
Friends of Victoria University was formed on 19 November 2008 to represent the interests of communities served by Victoria University. It is comprised of community members from the Western Suburbs, as well as staff, students and alumni at Victoria University.

Background
Friends of VU formed following the announcement by the Vice-Chancellor of sudden campus closures in Melton and Sunbury, and the forced redundancies of over 270 staff. This decision undermines the original purpose of VU.

Vision
Friends of VU will work to ensure the original vision of Victoria University is maintained: to have a university to serve the Western Suburbs of Melbourne, to provide higher education opportunities to students from the western suburbs.

To this end we will seek to uphold those principals outlined in section 6 of the Victoria University of Technology Act 1990, in particular objects 6 (i), (j) and (k).
6. Objects of the University

The objects of the University include-

(a) the development of an institution with excellence in teaching, training, research and scholarship, with particular emphasis on technological development and applications of knowledge;
(b) the provision of high quality educational, research, residential, social, recreational, sporting and other facilities;
(c) the promotion, advancement and transmission of knowledge and its practical application by research and other means, the dissemination by various means of the outcomes of research and the commercial exploitation of the results of that research;
(ca) to promote critical enquiry within the university and in the general community;
(d) the provision of a wide range of programs and courses of study in post-secondary education, including courses of instruction or training relevant to a trade or other skilled occupation and facilitation of articulation between programs;
(e) the participation in commercial ventures and activities;
(ea) the conduct of teaching, research, consultancy and development activities within and outside Australia;
(f) the fostering of the general welfare and development of all enrolled students;
(g) the conferring of prescribed degrees and the granting of prescribed diplomas, certificates and other awards;

(h) the offering of opportunities for development and further training to teaching and other staff of the university;
(i) the development and provision of educational, cultural, professional, technical and vocational services to the community and in particular the fostering of participation in post-secondary education for persons living or working in the Western Metropolitan Region of Melbourne;
(j) the provision of programs and services in ways which reflect principles of equity and social justice;
(k) generally the development and carrying on of a university providing such appropriate and accessible academic and other programs, courses of study and research activity as the Council considers necessary for the attainment of the foregoing within Victoria and elsewhere.

Aims
Friends of VU will work to pursue the short-term interests of VU to ensure that the integrity of VU’s mission is not undermined. It will also work to ensure VU’s long-term interests by supporting efforts to improve VU’s profile and funding.

Friends of VU is politically unaligned, and works solely for the interests of the communities, staff, students and alumni of Victoria University.

Action
Friends of VU will engage in a wide range of activities to represent the communities served by VU, including:
§ Community meetings;
§ Publishing fact sheets and newsletters;
§ Preparing submissions for Government Inquiries or funding processes:
§ Issuing media statements;
§ Lobbying the Vice-Chancellor, University Council, Deans, heads of schools and other leaders of Victoria University;
§ Lobbying local, state and federal government; and
§ Working with staff and student unions.

22 November 2008

Lionel Newman: Project Manager's update

Project Manager's update on outcomes of initial consultation phase

The consultation period in respect of the measures outlined in the Vice Chancellor's 17 October announcement 'Course Rationalisation, Staff Redundancies and Financial Sustainability' concluded 14 November.

Staff feedback was received via a broad range of consultative mediums. Feedback received included both opposition and support for the measures, concerns about possible course closures, and suggested strategies to mitigate potential redundancies. Strategies staff felt should be considered included more effective utilisation of our existing teaching capacities, a reduction in the use of sessional, contract and casual staff, and alternative separation strategies, such as voluntary redundancies, pre-retirement contracts and a voluntary early retirement scheme.

Feedback from staff has been considered and the University is committed to mitigating the impact of possible redundancies by reducing its use of non permanent staff where appropriate. The extent to which we can do so will be determined by the skills and experience required to deliver our continuing educational programs.

The feasibility of offering alternative separation options is currently being examined by our HR department and agreed measures will be announced as part of detailed Change Plans for the three categories of staff, HE Academics, VE/FE teachers and General staff. Timings are set out below.

Higher Education Change program

Further work is being conducted over the next few weeks to determine non viable HE courses and units, the HE academic positions that maybe excess to requirement, and the mitigation strategies. It is the University's intention to announce these details in a HE Academic Change Plan in early December.

The planned timeline is to:·

  • Advise all staff on 8 December which HE courses and units are proposed to be discontinued.·
  • Begin a two week consultation process from 8 December to further discuss proposed course and unit changes.
  • Advise affected academic staff from 8 December in writing, and wherever possible in person, of the intention to make their position excess to requirement.
  • Undertake a two week consultation process with affected staff from 8 December to discuss mitigation strategies and the available separation options that apply to them.
  • Advise staff of the outcomes of consultation processes relating to both courses and units and staff redundancies.
Vocational & Further Education and General Staff Change Programs

The process of identifying savings in VE and FE has also commenced and is examining both the viability of courses and units and the effective use of existing resources. We expect to have a clearer indication of the proposed savings measures by mid- December.

Meetings are planned with the managers of corporate and support services in early December to discuss the principles and processes to be used in determining the scope of savings measures for General staff.

A benchmarking exercise will also be conducted to identify better practice in the field of corporate support structures to inform decision making processes.

More information on change plans for VE/FE and General staff will be announced over the next few weeks.

Lionel Newman
Project Manager

Vice-Chancellor's Video Blog


This is a video message from VU Vice-Chancellor Liz Harman

Dear colleagues,

Recognising this is a period of great uncertainty and stress, I speak to you for five minutes in today's VOD. Please be patient as the file is large and will take about 20 seconds to load.

http://tls.vu.edu.au/vcblog/index.html
(If the above link does not open directly from your email, please cut and paste the link directly into your web browser).

An update on the current status of the Course and Staffing initiative from the Project Manager follows below. (Note from blogger: Im blogging it separately. Check next blog)

Regards,
Liz Harman.

21 November 2008

FRIENDS OF VICTORIA UNIVERSITY

MEDIA RELEASE
19 November 2008

FRIENDS OF VICTORIA UNIVERSITY COMMUNITY GROUP FORMS

Friends of Victoria University officially formed tonight following the University's controversial campus closures and job cuts.

Raoul Wainwright and Broden Borg were elected as inaugural co-convenors.

Friends of Victoria University is a broad coalition of community members in the West, including Melton, Sunbury, Werribee and Footscray, as well as staff and students.

"There is a great deal of concern out in the community about the direction that Victoria University is headed," said Raoul Wainwright, a resident of Yarraville.

"Friends of Victoria University will hold Victoria University accountable to the original vision of a community university that serves the West. Victoria University needs to show that it is still committed to the West," he said.

Broden Borg, a resident of Melton, one of the communities that will be affected by Victoria University's campus closures said: "Victoria University has held a central role in Melton and the West. We are very disappointed that the University management has decided to close Melton and Sunbury without consulting the communities."

"In the long-term, we hope that we will be able to work cooperatively with the University senior management. In the short-term however, we want senior management to know how valuable and loved VU is in the community – something they seem to have forgotten at the moment," said Mr. Wainwright.

Friends of Victoria University endorsed the National Tertiary Education Union's campaign promoting job security and collective bargaining.

For more information contact:
Friends of VU co-convenors
Raoul Wainwright
Broden Borg

Note: When the contact info is available I will update it.