As university staff begin to emerge from the COVID-19 lockdown, many — perhaps most — are perplexed at the perverse behaviour of the industry union, the National Tertiary Education Union (NTEU).
The union’s leadership has offered university managements a National Jobs Protection Framework that diminishes hard-won conditions and salaries. For rank-and-file NTEU members, the preceding secret negotiations between NTEU leaders and employer representatives added industrial and political isolation to the physical isolation of the lockdown.
what on Earth is the union doing?
As long-standing local office-bearers of the NTEU, and two among many observers of its un-union-like turns of direction in recent years, we can offer some informed speculation about the reason for the unprecedented cave-in following the sector’s loss of international student income.
First, we take with a grain of salt most of the NTEU leadership’s stated reasons for caving in. On April 25, national president Alison Barnes sent a “softening-up” email to all members preparing them for the Framework sell-out.
To scare the horses, eight claims were made about what damaging industrial relations measures managements could implement under current legislation and enterprise agreements.
The first three are limited by strict accompanying conditions, but these were not stated: “Stand down without pay any staff member who has insufficient work; Coerce leave under threat of stand down or redundancy; and Coerce cuts in fraction under threat of stand down or redundancy.”
Insufficient work?
The crucial qualification missing in the email was that university managements would have to demonstrate, case by case, insufficient work, and that the insufficient work was the result of the pandemic.
This is no easy task in a sector that is — according to the NTEU’s statements for more than two decades — burdened with massive quantities of mostly unpaid overtime and excessive hours of work. And with some vice chancellors boasting of sacking loads of casuals to deal with the crisis, then for almost all staff stand-downs are the least of their concerns. Redundancies are another threat eagerly noted in the email, and we turn to that below.
Second are the fourth, fifth and sixth stated reasons: “Not renew fixed-term contract jobs and transfer duties to permanent employees; Terminate [the employment of] casuals and in many cases transfer their work to permanent employees; and Increase class sizes and teaching loads.”
In many current enterprise agreements (signed off by the NTEU national executive, of course) not renewing fixed-term contracts is regarded as management’s prerogative and has little or nothing to do with employers’ response to the pandemic.
On the other hand, Barnes’ email pictures work being transferred from (previously employed) fixed-term contract and casual employees to permanent staff. So the email’s scare story provides an implausible scenario of the COVID-19 response causing both too much work and not enough.
The fact is, as in non-COVID-19 times, work performed by sacked contract and casual staff is shifted either to others with insufficient work, or foisted onto those already carrying a full workload. If it is done by those with insufficient work, then that solves the problem of stand downs arising from insufficient work. If it is imposed on those with sufficient work, then in better times those staff had a way to demonstrate their over-burden. But, in recent years that’s become harder. We’ll turn to the reason for that in a moment.
Third, are what we can speculate are the tangentially expressed but real reasons for the NTEU’s COVID-19 cave-in: “Close programs and campuses; and Implement compulsory redundancies on a wide scale.”
While the closure of campuses and programs needs no pandemic, nevertheless the implementation of redundancies/retrenchments on any scale will be blamed conveniently by managements on the pandemic.
Retrenchments
Some retrenchments — in those universities with a high reliance on international student income — will be partly the result of loss of income and partly attributable to poor decisions about expenditure and income-generating priorities. However, in those universities with little reliance on international student income, there won’t be retrenchments as a result of the travel ban, and where they do occur they were going to happen anyway.
In other words, university managements both pre- and post-COVID-19 have a virtually free hand in sacking staff, and the fact that the NTEU’s Framework asks for some meagre moderations to mass sackings and damaging restructurings is why some, perhaps many, university managements will not be signing up to it.
To return to the question of redundancies/retrenchments: no small part of the reason retrenchments can happen so easily in the higher education sector, at least in terms of academic staff, is found in the vagueness of almost all academic workload models in current enterprise agreements.
Over the years, the union’s national executive has signed off on vague, poorly quantified and often unenforceable workload models. Retrenchments can be thwarted if, for example, maximum teaching quantums exist and limit the over-burdening of those already working at the maximum. The story of one Australian university that had such a workload model but recently lost it through the treachery of the NTEU’s national and state leadership is for another day.
Abrogating responsibility
Speculating from the position of being informed insiders, it appears the real reason the NTEU leadership is abrogating its responsibility to uphold the two bedrocks of trade unionism — to improve or, at least, defend pay and conditions; and to operate more democratically and transparently than employers — is that the senior officers are petrified of losing dues-paying full-time members through mass sackings.
Yet this has meant capitulating to, in fact tacitly endorsing, neoliberal governments’ long-standing imposition on the sector of artificial austerity. It means a Framework that really does very little to prevent redundancies/retrenchments if universities continue to cry poor.
It’s a secretly negotiated agreement that provides no more hope than presently to casual and contract staff of gaining tenure or increased job security. It is a corporate-union business model hooked on the revenue that comes from permanently employed senior staff who, most likely, will be the ones first targeted for retrenchment.
Crises like the one we are witnessing often expose the shortcomings of society and in places where one may not have thought to look before.
[Tim Battin has been an elected officer of the University of New England branch of the NTEU for 11 years, a national councillor for 10 years, and five times a representative of the NTEU-UNE enterprise bargaining team (between 1999–2019). Kelvin McQueen has been an NTEU member since 1995, a member of local branch committees for 20 year and a member of NTEU negotiating teams for four rounds of enterprise bargaining. A version of this piece was first published at .]