Advocate, Nov 2021

Page 12

◆ NEWS Image: Name

Unionists lend support after tornado hits UNE Supercell storms passing through the Northern Tablelands region of NSW on the night of 14 October generated at least one tornado in the regional capital of Armidale, which cut a 4km long path of destruction across town and through the main campus of the University of New England (UNE). Hundreds of houses and an untold number of vehicles and outbuildings were damaged by the tornado, and widespread hail across the city caused further damage. At least 11 houses were declared condemned. Half of the city – including the water treatment plant – was left without power until the following afternoon. Incredibly, no injuries from the storm were reported. The news was not good for the UNE campus. The tornado crossed the northern and eastern quadrants of the campus, where university buildings adjoin a eucalypt forest. After surveying the damage, Vice-Chancellor Brigid Heywood reported entire trees from the forest having been 'picked up like matchsticks' and thrown about, many landing on the neighbouring buildings. The damage was so extensive that the entire campus remained closed to staff and the public for a full week after the storm. Evidently several buildings may be condemned and extensive repairs will be required on many others, including the Student Union, Education and Arts buildings. As of this writing, two weeks later, half of campus remains a 'red zone' and staff

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situated in these buildings are working from home, with no immediate resolution in sight. Contractors and maintenance staff are working hard to clean up campus, assess the structural damage and make repairs. Professional staff and hospitality workers have responded quickly and adeptly to make laptops, printing, food and drink and other services available. Meanwhile, academic staff have ensured that this disruption does not extensively affect learning, teaching or research, despite the challenging circumstances. This shocking development comes after years of struggle for the UNE and greater New England communities, amidst the ravages of drought, bushfires, the pandemic and a destabilising and poorly-executed restructure of the University that saw around 200 jobs disappear. At every point, union members stood with their community to lend support. As we approach enterprise bargaining in 2022, it will be important to focus on

ADVOCATE VOL. 28 NO. 3 ◆ NOV 2021

the strong connections that have helped our communities get through these challenging times. We as unionists should nurture these connections and find ways to weave them through our work; this is the only way we can hope to surmount the challenges to come, be they of the 'natural' or the 'managerial' variety. ◆ Craig Johnson, Senior Technical Officer, UNE. Vice President (Professional Staff)
UNE Branch Images: Damage after a 200m wide tornado tore through the northern part of UNE's campus on 14 October 2021. (UNE)


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Articles inside

Joan Hardy scholarship awarded to Geraldine Fela

3min
page 49

Kylie Wrigley wins Carolyn Allport scholarship

3min
page 48

The 10 amazing members nominated for NTEU Life Membership in 2021

4min
pages 46-47

Democracy, Social Justice and the Role of Trade Unions

1min
page 45

National Council 2021

1min
page 45

Vale Steve Mackey

1min
page 44

Statement on COVID-safe workplaces

2min
page 44

NZ tertiary institutions given 10 years to end disparity in minority pass rate

4min
page 43

Pandemic experiences of teaching academics are critically important as universities move towards their ‘new normal’

6min
pages 40-42

Why universities may come to regret the costs of City Deals and private sector ‘solutions’

5min
pages 38-39

Short memory, they’ve got a short memory

5min
pages 34-35

Stop making excuses for casual conversion

15min
pages 30-33

Perspectives on academic freedom in Australia

10min
pages 28-29

Ridd Case: High Court's two cheers for academic freedom

7min
pages 26-27

Our right to express a political opinion is worth protecting

5min
pages 24-25

Wage theft: Our universities’ dirty little secret

3min
pages 22-23

The vagaries of casual employment

5min
pages 20-21

NTEU focus on casual workers

4min
pages 18-19

National Week ofAction for secure jobs& safe workloads

3min
pages 16-17

A reintroduction to Aboriginal & Torres Strait Islander Business is Union Business in the NTEU

3min
page 15

Impact of COVID-19 on universities

4min
page 14

Gladstone before Glasgow

3min
page 13

Unionists lend support after tornado hits UNE

2min
page 12

Take Action for Equity: Bluestocking Week 2021

1min
page 11

ACT workload tracking survey gathers evidence of unsafe practices

2min
page 10

Senate Committee Report exposes 'deeply concerning' insecure work crisis in our sector

4min
pages 8-9

Monash admits to $8.6min wage theft

2min
page 7

Benefits of regulating universities

4min
page 5

For the common good

2min
page 4

Reflections on leaving lockdown and the road ahead

4min
page 6
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