Advocate, March 2021

Page 4

◆ EDITORIAL

ADVOCATE

ISSN 1329-7295

All text & images ©NTEU 2021 unless otherwise stated

Publisher Matthew McGowan Editor Alison Barnes Production Manager Paul Clifton Editorial Assistance Anastasia Kotaidis, Helena Spyrou 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

READ ONLINE AT NTEU.ORG.AU/ADVOCATE

NTEU NATIONAL EXECUTIVE National President Alison Barnes General Secretary Matthew McGowan National Assistant Secretary Gabe Gooding Vice-President (Academic) Andrew Bonnell Vice-President (General Staff) Cathy Rojas Acting A&TSI Policy Committee Chair Sharlene Leroy-Dyer National Executive: Steve Adams, Nikola Balnave, Damien Cahill, Vince Caughley, Cathy Day, Andrea LamontMills, Michael McNally, Virginia Mansel Lees, Cathy Moore, Rajeev Sharma, Melissa Slee, Ron Slee, Michael Thomson, Perpetua Turner, 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 The plastic bags used for postage of Advocate to home addresses are 100% biodegradable. 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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Dr Alison Barnes, National President k abarnes@nteu.org.au

D @alisonbarnes25

Confronting 2021 in a COVID world Welcome to the first edition of Advocate for 2021. This year has started in much the same vein as 2020 finished. The sector is still suffering from funding shortfalls, mainly related to the continued absence of large numbers of international students and the refusal of the Federal Government to allow universities to qualify for JobKeeper payments. Moreover, the funding changes flowing from the Jobs Ready Graduate legislation will be felt within this calendar year.

The Government is, however, not solely responsible for job losses and hardship. University managements should be held accountable for their decisions: operating a business model reliant on ripping off a workforce they’ve chosen to casualise and to prioritise capital works over investment in staff and, by extension, students.

Campuses are resuming face-to-face teaching and related activities, but may be hampered by periodic restrictions as state governments cope with COVID outbreaks.

Hope for 2021

As with most other aspects of Australian society, things are unlikely to return to a pre-COVID ‘normal’ until most of the population has been fully vaccinated, which may not be completed this year.

This year we must focus on building our workplace structures and our delegate networks. We need to grow our workplace strength by asking our friends and colleagues to stand with us and join the Union.

Jobs and revenue devastated in 2020 Peak body Universities Australia estimates the overall operating revenues of Australian universities fell by $1.8 billion in 2020. It predicts a further $2 billion fall in 2021.

Despite 2020's pervasive gloom, last year also demonstrated the resilience generated by standing together.

We want to tell the stories of the people whose jobs were and are affected by COVID and its flow-on effects, as well as the wider stories of the impacts on the culture and fabric of universities and on society more broadly.

The result has been that more than 17,300 jobs were lost in the sector last year, a figure which is unlikely to include all of the casual and fixed-term positions that have gone from around Australia.

We need to make the community aware of the crisis tertiary education faces and the damaging implications for future generations of students. We need to build the case for higher education so that the broader community stands with us.

Many of those who have lost their jobs face the prospect of losing not only income but a vocation they have invested in. They face all of the stress and upheaval associated with uncertainty.

Watch out for information from your Branch or State Division about when and how you can get involved, but start talking now to your colleagues who aren’t in the Union!

The Morrison Government carries much of the responsibility for these job losses. But for its repeated changing of the rules to prevent public universities accessing JobKeeper, many of these jobs could have been saved.

Stay safe, and best wishes for 2021. ◆

ADVOCATE VOL. 28 NO. 1 ◆ MARCH 2021

Alison Barnes, National President


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Articles inside

Staffing data 2020 & expectations for the future

2min
page 12

Free Sean Turnell!

1min
page 6

Obituary: Professor Margot Prior Hansen

5min
pages 40-41

Vale Dr Olga Lorenzo

2min
page 39

Obituary: Dr Rod Crewther

5min
pages 38-39

Can Biden's plan for 'Education Beyond High School' solve the student loan crisis?

6min
pages 32-33

Delegate profile: Brian Pulling, UniSA

2min
page 36

Delegate Profile: Patrick Hampton, UNDA

3min
page 35

Turkish students fight for autonomy and democracy

4min
pages 30-31

Education unions defend & promote academic freedom around the world

4min
page 34

Gearing up for the next bargaining round

2min
page 37

Fiji's deportation of the USP VC is a shameful act

5min
pages 28-29

Academic freedom and (free?) speech

4min
pages 26-27

Course cuts : Student choice in the Job Ready Graduates era

2min
pages 16-17

2021: A CAPA homecoming

3min
page 15

The art of protesting in a pandemic

4min
pages 20-21

Crowd-sourcing research for better uni governance

5min
pages 22-23

2020: The year the Government abandoned universities

5min
pages 18-19

Underpinning change in universities

5min
pages 14-15

Campaigning on A&TSI employment targets

4min
page 13

IR Omnibus Bill will worsen insecure employment

3min
page 6

An independent and peaceful Australia

2min
page 10

U-Vet members campaign to protect jobs

2min
page 9

Newcastle management’s 'act in haste, repent at leisure' costs them $6m

4min
page 8

Healing the scars of 2020

3min
page 5

Fighting for workload and pay justice at La Trobe's School of Nursing & Midwifery and Rural Health

2min
pages 11-12

Confronting 2021 in a COVID world

2min
page 4
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