Advocate, Nov 2020

Page 26

◆ JOB-READY GRADUATES

Tales from the trenches Tasmania and SA were at the pointy end of the fight against the Job-Ready Graduates Bill. Jenny Smith and Cécile Dutreix share their war stories.

Jenny Smith Scientist & Tas Division Councillor The cost of a law or humanities degree is now nearly double, with the passing of the Job-Ready Graduates Bill. NTEU’s campaign to ‘Fund Uni Fairly’ targeted key Senators including Tasmania’s Jacqui Lambie, who ended up being a strong opponent of the Bill. I grew up in a very disadvantaged area in Tasmania. I was the first student from my school to go to uni. Other families saw my family’s plans for me to go to uni, and this opened their eyes to what was previously an impossible dream. However, they would never have sent their kids to uni if a huge debt awaited them at the end of their studies. Senator Jacqui Lambie is a passionate advocate for Tasmania and for battlers, but was initially ambivalent about the Bill, so I knew she needed to hear my story. I knew what to say, but I had no time to write a coherent message, and I guessed

Cécile Dutreix Field Education Coordinator, UniSA In September 2020, it became apparent that the Coalition were close to passing the Job-Ready Graduates Bill. Crossbenchers were the only hope to thwart this ill-informed, devious attempt to further decrease equitable and affordable access for students to higher education. The South Australian campaign targeted Centre Alliance Federal Member for Mayo, Rebekha Sharkie, spokesperson on Education, and Centre Alliance Senator Stirling Griff, whose votes against the Bill along with ALP, Greens, Jacqui Lambie and Rex Patrick would’ve Blocked the Bill. My family and I migrated to Australia in 1969. I was the first person in my family to attain a university degree, a degree in social work. Without higher education policies of the time I wouldn’t have had

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Senator Lambie had little time to read it. I also knew that seeing and hearing a person speak with passion is powerful: 'people may not remember what you said or what you did, but they will remember how you made them feel'. I wrote down about 4 sentences, went to the laboratory with my phone, and recorded what I wanted to say. It took me two minutes. I looked at the video; like anyone who looks at videos of themselves I cringed a little (okay, a lot!). But I thought ‘stuff it, I’ve shown how I feel and I’ve said a few facts, it will just have to do’. I sent it off to Senator Lambie, and also to NTEU President Alison Barnes to use as they saw fit. The NTEU media team put my video on Facebook, and I’ve had so many people comment on the feelings I conveyed in that video. Hearing Senator Lambie speak strongly against the Bill, in contrast to her previous wavering, was a highlight – I felt my strong feelings about the terrible unfairness of the Bill had formed part of the basis of her strong opposition.

This Bill only just passed. Next time a uni-crushing Bill comes up, I hope others feel they can make a short video to communicate how they feel – you’ll feel shy and weird and awfully self-conscious, but seeing and hearing a person speak with passion about their personal story is how many a mind has been influenced. ◆ Above: A still from Jenny's Facebook video. See video at nteu.info/jennysmithvideo

access to university education, particularly as a mature age single parent. I’m now an educator at UniSA working within social work. As member of the UniSA Branch Committee, the Women’s Action Committee, and one of two members in the SA Division who live in Mayo, I felt compelled to reach out to my Federal representative to listen to reasoned arguments from the NTEU about how this Bill negatively impacts students. Along with NTEU comrades around Australia we swamped social media, drove a bus and banner around Mayo, held Snap Actions online, rang the offices of Centre Alliance members and wrote letters. Unfortunately, Centre Alliance made a deal with the Coalition in return for funding for roads in Mayo. Caring and supporting every member of my community is important to me and a value made active in the NTEU.

ADVOCATE VOL. 27 NO. 3 ◆ NOV 2020

When I witness injustice I cannot, with any integrity, say and do nothing. Being a union delegate is one of the ways that I can actively fight injustice, inequality, racism and the neoliberal agenda that profits the few and disadvantages the many. If you concur, I implore you to become a delegate and join us in the pursuit of a fair and just society. ◆ Above: Cécile with the Fund Uni Fairly billboard


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Articles inside

Cathy Moore elected new WA Division Secretary

1min
page 49

Jonathan Hallett steps down as WA Div Sec

1min
page 49

Pep Turner takes over as Tasmanian Division Secretary

1min
page 48

Tasmania farewells Kelvin Michael

1min
page 48

Out from under the cover of COVID

5min
pages 35-36

2020 Joan Hardy Scholarship goes to Sonja Dawson

3min
page 47

Sara Ranatunge awarded 2020 Carolyn Allport Scholarship

2min
page 46

Anna Stewart Memorial Project continues in 2020

5min
pages 42-43

Vale Prof Tracey Bretag

3min
page 43

National Council during COVID

4min
pages 40-41

Building on the moment

3min
page 37

Delegate Profile: Professor Peter Dabnichki, RMIT

7min
pages 38-39

Hong Kong trade union leader re-arrested

1min
page 36

Wear It Purple Day: mostly remotely

3min
page 34

Fractured futures? Recent transformations of academic work

6min
pages 32-33

AUR: recent past and near future

1min
page 29

Higher education should be for everyone

4min
pages 22-23

Curtains for Theatre & Performance

6min
pages 24-25

Wage theft is core university business

4min
pages 30-31

Tales from the trenches

3min
page 26

Jacqui Lambie is right: It just got harder for working class kids like me to go to university

3min
pages 20-21

Clear-felling environmental expertise

5min
pages 18-19

Job-Ready Graduates Bill passes into law

5min
pages 14-15

Online Forums see greater member involvement

2min
page 15

A response from ‘No Concessions’ casuals to ‘Letter to a fellow worker

5min
page 4

Racism is a union issue

2min
page 13

NTEU launches legal action against JMC alleging sham contracting

2min
page 7

Flawed foreign relations bill tightens the reins on university independence

4min
page 8

2020: A year like no other

4min
pages 3, 5

USYD professor arrested at protest

3min
page 7

Meeting COVID challenges

3min
pages 4, 6
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