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Strike pressure for pay talks

Published on
一月 20, 1995
Last updated
五月 27, 2015

Australian universities could suffer widespread disruption this year as academic and general staff begin industrial action for a 10 per cent pay rise.

The National Tertiary Education Union has warned members to prepare to take "determined industrial action" in support of the increase.

The action could include bans, go-slows, strikes, withdrawal of support for committees and even the shutdown of payrolls.

The union has called on vice chancellors to support the move by lobbying federal government to fund 8 per cent of the increase.

Universities began negotiations with local branches of the NTEU late last year to provide an initial 2 per cent wage rise to be met from institutional budgets. This is expected to flow into pay packets by September.

A 10 per cent salary boost would add more than Aus$300 million (Pounds 150 million) to higher education spending and would mean that by 1996, professors would be earning $90,000 a year, senior lecturers $80,000 and lecturers $70,000.

The government agreed last year to meet the cost of a 2.9 per cent wage increase which it is paying in two stages, the second part due next month.

Union officials will seek a meeting with education minister Simon Crean to look at ways the government might fund the 8 per cent rise in next May's government budget.

The union is considering the adoption of a summer semester and after-hours teaching to improve student throughput as trade-offs for the rise.

NTEU general secretary, Grahame McCulloch, said a "political and industrial environment that maintains pressure on Labor" was needed.

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