Advocate, March 2020

Page 4

◆ EDITORIAL

ADVOCATE

ISSN 1321-8476

All text & images ©NTEU 2020 unless otherwise stated

Publisher Matthew McGowan Editor Alison Barnes Production Manager Paul Clifton Editorial Assistance Anastasia Kotaidis Published by National Tertiary Education Union ABN 38 579 396 344

PO Box 1323, South Melbourne VIC 3205 Australia Feedback & advertising advocate@nteu.org.au

Dr Alison Barnes, National President Envelope-Square abarnes@nteu.org.au

M @alisonbarnes25

Scorched summer reminds us: climate change is union business As the ash settles on the smoke-soaked Australian summer of 2019–20, it’s worth taking stock of what happened and what it means for our communities, our sector, and our union. We were all affected in some way by the bushfire crisis that engulfed Australia. Whether it was our families, homes, holidays, workplaces, wildlife or Australian society – we all have a story about how the bushfires affected us.

NTEU NATIONAL EXECUTIVE National President Alison Barnes General Secretary Matthew McGowan National Assistant Secretary Gabe Gooding Vice-President (Academic) Vice-President (General Staff) A&TSI Policy Committee Chair

Andrew Bonnell Cathy Rojas Shane Motlap

National Executive: Steve Adams, Nikola Balnave, Damien Cahill, Vince Caughley, Cathy Day, Jonathan Hallett, Andrea Lamont-Mills, Virginia Mansel Lees, Michael McNally, Kelvin Michael, Catherine Moore, Rajeev Sharma, Melissa Slee, Ron Slee, Michael Thomson, Nick Warner

Advocate is available online free as a PDF and an e-book at nteu.org.au/advocate NTEU members may opt for ‘soft delivery’ of Advocate (email notification rather than printed version) at nteu.org.au/soft_delivery In accordance with NTEU policy to reduce our impact on the natural environment, Advocate is printed using vegetable based inks with alcohol free printing initiatives on FSC certified paper under ISO 14001 Environmental Certification.

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The plastic bags used for postage of Advocate to home addresses are 100% biodegradable.

For me, it was a summer defined by apprehension for our climate and for my family: my mother lives by herself in a house separated from a national park by a fire trail; my daughter and her classmates spent their lunch times in classrooms, unable to play outside due to the heat and hazardous air quality; most distressingly of all, I worried about my brother and his children (particularly my severely disabled niece) who twice had to evacuate not knowing if their house would survive. As our union works on our priorities for 2020, some members may think that although climate change is an important issue, it is one largely beyond our remit. I can understand that view. After all, we have a big agenda already, with important workplace and sector campaigns that we need to win: growing our membership and building grass roots participation; making employment more secure; boosting federal funding; safeguarding our workplace; enshrining academic freedom and integrity – the list goes on. Those issues will certainly continue to form the core of our work. But we would be remiss as an organisation if we had no plan to use our expertise and our power to push for action on the climate crisis that is bearing down on us. As a union we are well placed to both lead the debate and the campaign on climate change. Our approach is evidence-based: we check our facts, we read the footnotes, and we examine the evidence before reaching our conclusions. Our members produce the climate science, track the economic modelling, research the technological solutions, and teach the

ADVOCATE VOL. 27 NO. 1 ◆ MARCH 2020

students who will be living with the impacts of climate change for years to come. We know – because our expert members in climate science have been telling us for some time – that the burning of fossil fuels makes climate change worse, supercharging extreme weather events like bushfires. We know that we are currently on-track for runaway climate change that threatens human life and the natural world on a catastrophic and irreversible scale. This message was echoed recently when more than 440 scientists and academics signed an open letter to Prime Minister Scott Morrison calling for action on climate change and bushfires. We teach our students to think critically when constructing their arguments: to examine the evidence, to explore the literature. But seeing Senator Jim Molan declare recently on ABCTV Q&A, ‘I’m not relying on evidence,’ I’m forced to conclude that some Government members are indeed living in a post-truth universe. The fact is that our Government is hopelessly unwilling and incapable of responding with the urgency and reason that this crisis demands. We need to change that – and our union is one of the best placed in Australia to help lead the way. NTEU National Council in 2019 directed our union to develop a comprehensive climate justice campaign, and we have commenced this work. If you’ve got ideas about what we should be doing, or you want to put your hand up to be active in this space, please get in touch with me or your branch and let’s work out how we can all play a role. ◆ Alison Barnes, National President


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Articles inside

New NTEU staff Updating your membership details

3min
pages 54-56

Casual/sessional fee increase delayed due to coronavirus

1min
page 52

Qld Division goes solar & funds APHEDA Upcoming Friday Sessions for members

1min
page 53

Farewell from over the Ditch

4min
page 51

Sylvia Klonaris, CDU

3min
page 50

Kate Mattingly, UniSA

3min
page 49

Liberals’ digital ascendancy

4min
page 48

The surreptitious infiltration of private interests in public education

5min
pages 46-47

Faith no more

5min
pages 44-45

QUTE Conference 2020: Our Voice @ Work & Beyond

5min
pages 37-39

Who's out at work?

5min
pages 42-43

Working late, weekends and poolside

4min
page 36

Stop supercharging climate change

8min
pages 34-35

Unions must declare a climate emergency

7min
pages 32-33

Scientists' warning ignored for decades

4min
page 26

Bushfires spark green shoots of solidarity

9min
pages 27-29

Safe as Houses: Climate change & the Australian Dream

6min
pages 30-31

Where are we at with academic freedom?

3min
page 21

It gets a little bit lonelier each week

3min
page 17

Free and equal

5min
pages 22-23

Gerd case not over yet

2min
page 20

Invasion Day rallies call for real recognition

2min
page 15

Babies, breastfeeding and bargaining

3min
page 10

Waging war against wage theft in higher education

3min
page 8

Merry Christmas and a No, No, No

1min
page 11

Round 7 enterprise bargaining complete

2min
page 7

COVID-19 exposes sector’s vulnerability

3min
page 6

Adding up wage theft in Maths & Stats

4min
page 9

Scorched summer reminds us: climate change is union business

4min
page 4

Screening The Final Quarter across Qld

3min
page 14
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