Friday, November 8, 2024

Australian university union agrees to job losses at Western Sydney University College

Must read

A meeting of Western Sydney University (WSU) staff and students will be held on Wednesday, June 12 to form a rank-and-file committee to fight the job destruction and restructuring at WSU College. To join the meeting, contact: cfpe.aus@gmail.com

The National Tertiary Education Union (NTEU) has done a deal with Western Sydney University (WSU) management to help destroy scores of jobs at WSU College, the university’s wholly-owned feeder college.

This has been done behind the backs of staff and students at WSU College and across the university as a whole. Virtually nobody at WSU even knows about the pro-business restructuring of the college.

Western Sydney University [Photo: eminentedu.com]

The union’s WSU branch president David Burchell sent emails this week to NTEU members at WSU College welcoming management’s agreement to the union’s request for staff members to be offered the chance to apply for a so-called voluntary redundancy.

This request was the central focus of a formal dispute notice issued by the NTEU, which will now result in a yet-to-be-seen modified management “change proposal.”

This deal means the union will assist management to get selected people out the door via “expressions of interest” (EOIs) in redundancies. The clear purpose is to prevent a unified struggle, across WSU as a whole, to defeat the restructuring. This is a time-honoured method by which the trade unions strangle opposition to the slashing of jobs and conditions.

Burchell said the union was now “reassured” that its concerns would be addressed in management’s final “change proposal,” even though “jobs will be lost in the shift to the new structure.”

WSU management is demanding the elimination of the equivalent of 17 full-time positions—or more than 10 percent—and a “spill and fill” regime to force staff members to compete against each other for the remaining posts.

Those targeted by WSU include 15 teachers, around 6 First Year Experience Coordinators, 10 Learning and Teaching Coordinators, 7 managers and 6 technical officers. The heaviest cuts are to arts, literature and humanities.

Latest article