General Meeting – 24 April 2013

Southampton UCU are holding their next General Meeting on Wednesday 24 April at 1pm in room 58/1007 Lecture room C, Highfield campus.

The topic of the meeting will be “Stress: The Most Important Health & Safety Issue”.  We all know that stress is a huge cause of workplace absenteeism, ill health, and shortened life spans – but what can we do about it?

Our own Denis Nicole, a UCU Health and Safety Representative, will be on hand to share with you the latest information on workplace stress, how it affects our sector, and how we can work to protect ourselves and our colleagues from its negative effects.

We will also have information for you regarding University services that can help you to manage stress, from workshops to private counselling services, as well as information from Recourse, the UCU-funded helpline for higher education professionals.

Our branch is also involved in joint work with the University on reducing levels of workplace stress, and your input and feedback will be very valuable as these discussions progress.

So please come along and join the discussion.  Workplace stress is one of the greatest challenges facing the higher education workforce today – and the more we can address the problem at its core, the healthier we will all be!

——-

Eric Silverman

Southampton UCU President

Dr Jenny Rohn and the Science Is Vital Campaign

We were pleased to host Dr Jenny Rohn of the Science Is Vital Campaign for our Anti-Casualisation Day of Action on 6 March.  Dr Rohn gave us a stimulating and enlightening presentation on the Campaign’s work on academic job security and their current push for protecting research funding in the UK.

For those of you who missed the event, Dr Rohn has given us permission to upload her presentation slides herePlease note that these slides should not be re-used without her permission, nor are they intended for general public dissemination!

6 March – Anti-Casualisation Day of Action

On Wednesday 6th March UCU is holding an Anti-Casualisation Day of Action. This day will be a platform for publicizing the issues associated with the growing over-use of fixed-term contracts and the proliferation of poorly-paid and poorly-valued casualised positions in UK academia. We will be spending the day holding information stalls and running events to raise awareness of these problems, and to inspire colleagues on casualised contracts to join our union and help us in our local bargaining efforts.

What is happening at Southampton:

1. 11:00 to 14:00 – We are running two information stalls to be run at the Highfield and Avenue Campuses, at these stalls you will be able to ask about national UCU policy and current local branch priorities with respect to Fixed Term Contracts.

We will also have a large variety of campaign materials, flyers, posters, and stickers available which we encourage you to pass along to colleagues and put around your workplace to show your support. If you’d like to become involved in our anti-casualisation campaigns, we will be happy to advise you on how to join our efforts!

2. 15:00 to 17:00 – We will be running a workshop called Casualisation and Academic Careers, to be held in building 34/3001. The workshop will feature several different speakers:

Dr Joe Viana, Southampton UCU Fixed-Term Contract Representative, will explain why you should get involved in our anti-casualisation efforts and the challenges we face in this area;

Dr Eric Silverman, Southampton UCU President, will talk about our extensive local bargaining agenda on this issue and will give a summary of the national picture;

Dr Julie Reeves, from the University of Southampton Professional Development Unit, will detail how the University aims to support the career development of researchers and academics on fixed-term contracts;

Dr Jenny Rohn of the Science is Vital Campaign, our special guest speaker, will discuss the Campaign’s grassroots efforts to promote the importance of a strong science base to the UK’s economy and international reputation. For more information, please visit the Campaign’s website. In particular, we recommend reading their report titled Careering Out Of Control, which does a fantastic job of summarising the current unsustainable nature of the academic career path.

Please do come and join us for the Day of Action! The issue of casualisation affects all of us — it forces thousands of our colleagues to endure job insecurity, poor work-life balance, and high stress levels; it reduces the productivity of our academic teams and causes us to lose promising talent and valuable expertise; and it splits academia against itself, creating inequality and animosity between permanent staff and casualised staff.

The academic career structure is becoming increasingly dominated by casualised contracts, and we must act now to protect our friends and colleagues!

We will be using the attached poster (AntiCas Poster) to promote the event and encourage academics on casualised contracts to join us on the day. If you feel able, please do print out a copy and place it on your door so that your colleagues can see what we have planned.

The national UCU office has also provided a lot of excellent flyers and other materials for the Day of Action, which you can find here.

Southampton UCU will have plenty of hard copies of these materials available closer to the day, so please contact us if you require any copies to distribute in your workplace.

In solidarity,

Eric Silverman (President) & Joe Viana (Fixed Term Contract Rep)

Article about casualisation in academia from The Guardian

There’s a good article in The Guardian today about job insecurity amongst younger academics.  It provides some personal stories from young academics on insecure contracts (including myself!) and mentions the Anti-Casualisation Day of Action on 6 March, organised by Ed Bailey and the national UCU campaigns team:

The University and College Union (UCU) is holding a national day of action for casual workers next month. It says that higher education has become one of the most casualised sectors in the UK – second only to the hospitality industry. Edward Bailey, who is leading the protest for the union, says: “We are seeing an increase in people who are on successive fixed-term contracts for years on end. There is a feeling that universities are calling all the shots and they should be grateful just to have a job, but these places shouldn’t be sausage factories.”

Please give it a read and spread the word to your colleagues.  The more attention drawn to this issue, the more chances we have to enact change!

——-

Eric Silverman

Southampton UCU President

Anti-Austerity Demonstration in Southampton, 12PM on 26 January

Some of our colleagues and comrades in other unions are holding an anti-austerity demonstration in Southampton on 26 January.  We encourage anyone interested in these issues to attend and show support for our sister unions.  Details follow below:

Following an initiative from RMT Southampton Shipping branch and a successful meeting of over 70 various activists bringing together many groups around the Hampshire, Sussex and Dorset areas, a demonstration will be taking place this Saturday 26th Jan starting at MIDDAY.

Please make an effort to attend this demonstration. It can be used to highlight the McNaulty campaign, the Condor shipping campaign or any other campaign fighting against austerity and decimation of workers pay and conditions.

Bring your banners and placards.

Congregate in front of Southampton Guildhall. Each organisation is encouraged to inform the public about why they are against the cuts, more information can be found at this site:

https://www.facebook.com/groups/368051493288766/ 

 

——-

Eric Silverman

Southampton UCU President

University 2011/12 Finance Report

The University recently issued a report including statistics for the 2011/12 financial year, available in PDF format.  The report is quite long and dense, so we have collected a few relevant points for our members below.

On the big picture:

The report opens by stating that the University has achieved a budget surplus of £14.2 million in 2011/12 (3.2% of income).  This academic year has started with £9,000 as the standard fee across all undergraduate programmes.  The changes in funding in the University sector means that Southampton will lose approximately 62% of state teaching support by 2015/16.

The report goes on to state that “the new fee regime should, assuming no change in student numbers, be broadly financially neutral for the University in the medium term provided we are able to maintain student recruitment broadly in line with current levels“.  However, this is concerning given the statements immediately following, which refer to the marked drop in student recruitment for 2012/13.

Overall, University income increased by 1.7% to £438 million.

On research funding:

The report notes that HEFCE grant funding was reduced by £1 million this year, as they “increased the concentration of research funding in the very highest quality 3* and 4* areas”.  RCUK efficiency savings imposed by the Wakeham Review mean that we lost a further £1 million in contributions to indirect costs.  The report indicates that this “is counter to the ethos of full economic cost funding and the University is disappointed to incur such penalties while delivering an efficient research base on every performance measure currently used”.

The University also criticises RCUK for pursuing “a value for money agenda” which is having a profound impact on funding for “top quality research”.

This is certainly an area where UCU is in agreement — cuts in research funding will be disastrous for UK higher education, particularly at a time when other nations are substantially increasing research budgets.

On staff cost:

The report notes that expenditures on salaries and wages increased by only 0.5% to £235 million this year despite hiring additional academic staff (making for an increase in staff numbers of 2.5%).  The University touts its “tight control of staff costs since 2007 after previous years of number growth and pay inflation”.  Pay inflation is a questionable characterisation, given the implication that we are somehow being paid over the odds — despite the fact that UK academics are ranked 27th in the league tables for pay, and are working long hours and experiencing very high stress levels.

Also, such “tight control of staff costs” clearly does not apply to the Vice-Chancellor, who enjoyed a raise from £267,000/year to £277,000, representing a pay increase of 3.75%.

The University also states that the pay award in 2011 of £150 reduced “the risk that salary costs would increase faster than the rate of income growth”.  They point out that government ministers have told them that higher education is effectively — if not officially — part of the two-year public pay freeze, and that “it is expected that there will be very little growth in pay levels in the next few years”.

Given that the drop in salaries combined with high inflation means that the average UK worker has lost 8% of their salary over the last 5 years, the prospect of this continuing for several more years could make academic careers on the low end of the pay scale untenable for many, particularly those with families or care obligations.

The University also discusses what it calls “the programme … to increase productivity”, better known as “centralising admin and sacking a lot of people”:

“We estimate the annual savings that should result from the reduction in staff to be £6 million. The administrative savings have allowed a permanent switch of resources from administrative to academic activity and in 2011/12 there was an increase of 102 academic staff.”

Interesting to note here that the University characterises this switch as “permanent” — apparently we are expected to cope with much-reduced admin resources in perpetuity, despite significant increases in academic staff numbers and thus an increased need for admin support.

Finally, the University reiterates its alleged focus on “improving the student experience” while simultaneously “optimising our submission to the 2014 Research Excellence Framework“.  The University increased ERE staff by 102 full-time equivalents in 2011/12 (4.4% increase) as part of their strategy for these two points.

Page 27 has a table summarising the numbers of highly-paid staff (over £100,000).

On pensions:

The University’s comments on pensions and the changes in USS are fairly dry, simply providing a list of the changes and noting that there is a continued risk of “large estimated deficits” despite these changes.  Brief mention is also made of the impact of the changes on the University’s financial position, as they note that “overall the risks posed by salary and pension costs to the University’s strategic aims have not increased over the past year”.

Once again these changes mean very little for the Vice-Chancellor, who received £37,600 in pension contributions to USS last year.

——-

Eric Silverman

Southampton UCU President

Public meeting on student fees

Local student activist group Southampton Students for Education will be holding a public meeting tomorrow at 12 noon at the SUSU pods (just inside the Student Union entrance) on tuition fees and other changes in UK higher education.

Details of the meeting are available on the relevant Facebook event page.  We encourage all members with interests in this area to attend and show support for our students.

Representatives from the on-campus trades unions will be in attendance, as well, and we are hopeful that we can work continue to work closely with students in future to push back against damaging changes to UK higher education.

——-

Eric Silverman

Southampton UCU President

Public Meeting on the Climate Emergency

Below is a link to the flyer for a meeting on the current climate emergency, featuring Phil Thornhill from the Campaign Against Climate Change.  The meeting will be held Thursday 22 November at 7.30PM in the Sir James Matthews Building, Itchen Lecture Theature, Above Bar Street.

Any members interested in climate change and environmental advocacy, I urge you to attend.  Local activists including members of the Southampton and South-West Hampshire TUC will be in attendance.

climate-emergency

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Eric Silverman

Southampton UCU President

Researchers, Fixed-Term Contracts, and Universities

Vitae, an organisation supporting the development of researchers in higher education, released an interesting report in 2010 describing the current state of the laws around fixed-term contracts and their implementation in higher education.  The Foreword gives a good summary of the intent of the report:

 

“We believe that a positive management culture which supports the development of staff is essential to building a successful higher education institution. To make the case that a well- managed workforce is a productive workforce it is important that we are able to provide institutions with high quality, evidence-based information to benchmark themselves against. This Vitae report represents a major contribution to the evidence base about how to successfully manage researchers to ensure positive outcomes for researchers, their managers, the  institutions where they work and the sector as a whole.”

 

The report stresses the importance of productive, cooperative communication between institutions and researchers, in order to ensure that the arrangements in place take into account the needs of both parties.  For those members on fixed-term contracts, or for those who manage fixed-term contract staff, please take a look at this report and spread it around to anyone who may find it of interest.

 

——-

Eric Silverman (President) and Joe Viana (Fixed-Term Contract Representative)

New issue of our newsletter — Collegiality

The link below will take you to a PDF copy of Southampton UCU’s newsletter, Collegiality.  You’ll find updates on our campaigns and useful info on how to get involved in our activities.

If you have suggestions for future issues, or have something you would like to contribute, please contact the UCU office!

Collegiality issue 3