Thousands of university staff have joined picket lines across the UK at the start of three days of strike action over pay, pensions and working conditions.
In what the University and College Union (UCU) has described as the country鈥檚 鈥渂iggest ever university strike鈥, which is expected to involve more than 70,000 staff at 150 universities on 24, 25 and 30 November, union members gathered outside campuses and university buildings to protest against a national pay deal of 3 per cent for 2022-23 鈥 rising to 9 per cent for the lowest paid 鈥 as inflation hit a 40-year high of 11.1 per cent.
In Cambridge, about 50 union members joined a picket outside Anglia Ruskin University (ARU), with around 400 UCU members across the institution expected to walk out over the coming days before beginning 鈥渨ork to contract鈥 action.
Andy Noble, vice-president of ARU鈥檚 UCU branch, told 探花视频 that the 3 per cent deal came 鈥渘owhere close to compensating staff for the real-term cuts in pay over the past few years鈥.
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鈥淥ur union has shown that universities have huge resources and held back large amounts during the pandemic 鈥 we just don鈥檛 accept the argument that employers can鈥檛 afford to pay any more,鈥 said Dr Noble, a senior lecturer in employment law.
Large pay rises to senior managers and vice-chancellors, and millions held back for future infrastructure projects, showed that higher education institutions could afford to release funds when it suited them, added Dr Noble.
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鈥淚t鈥檚 time some of this money came the way of staff 鈥 without them, the university cannot function,鈥 he said.
At the University of Cambridge, pickets were also held outside Senate House, in Downing Street and outside the offices of Cambridge University Press, with some 800 non-collegiate members of staff due to participate in strike action.
Speaking outside Senate House, Eleanor Blair, a UCU representative in the department of engineering, where she is an academic-related member of staff working in IT, said the minimum 3 per cent deal imposed in August did not reflect the sector鈥檚 financial strength. 鈥淐ambridge has certainly made a lot of money over the past few years but I鈥檇 say the sector鈥檚 finances as a whole are quite rosy 鈥 there is money in the coffers for a decent pay rise,鈥 said Ms Blair.
鈥淰ice-chancellors鈥 pay certainly hasn鈥檛 stagnated in the same way as ours has,鈥 she added, stating that salaries in university sector had fallen by 25 per cent in real terms over the past 13 years.

Staff precarity was also a major issue at Cambridge, with the Justice for College Supervisors campaign set to hold a rally on 25 November to highlight the plight of hourly paid teaching staff, said Ms Blair.
鈥淧eople are doing one or two hours of preparation for the small group teaching that Cambridge is known for, but they are not being paid for this time 鈥 if they make a fuss they will not be given any teaching the following term,鈥 she said.
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Michael Abberton, president of Cambridge鈥檚 UCU branch, said the strike also reflected anger over recent cuts to the pensions of those enrolled in the Universities Superannuation Scheme.
鈥淢y pension will be cut by at least 30 per cent after the changes, but, for new starters, they will see higher than that,鈥 said Mr Abberton. 鈥淭he pension valuation was taken at the height of the Covid crisis but we鈥檝e already shown that it is now back in surplus.
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鈥淲e have record profits being recorded by some universities and money being poured in assets here 鈥 and that is happening in other universities too. We have building projects starting all the time, but we are bleeding academics out of the industry, and administrative staff too, because they see how pay and benefits are not increasing. This has to stop and this is why we are here today.鈥
UCU described the picket lines nationwide as 鈥渉uge鈥, with staff telling the union they were 鈥渢he biggest picket lines they have ever seen along with huge student support鈥.
But the Universities and Colleges鈥 Employers Association said initial reports were that the industrial action had resulted in 鈥渓ow and isolated鈥 levels of disruption to university teaching. Raj Jethwa, its chief executive, said institutions were 鈥減roving that they have effective mitigations in place to minimise any interruption of learning or services to students and staff鈥.
鈥淲e respect employees鈥 right to take lawful industrial action, but it is misleading to their members for UCU to ask them to lose pay in pursuit of an unrealistic 13.6 per cent pay demand which would cost institutions in the region of 拢1.5 billion. UCU leaders must provide its members with a realistic and fair assessment of what is achievable because strike action does not create new sector money,鈥 Mr Jethwa said.
鈥淯CU鈥檚 own research confirms that, in many parts of the country, HE institutions are important local employers. Those communities simply cannot afford to lose jobs that an unaffordable pay uplift would risk.鈥
Ucea has offered to open pay negotiations for 2023-24 early but insists it will not revisit the 2022-23 deal, stating employers regarded the pay round as concluded.
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