Australia鈥檚 oldest university has moved to water down speculation that it is preparing to jettison thousands of staff, amid claims that some schools are considering downsizing by as much as 30 per cent.
In a statement issued late on 20 August, The University of Sydney said that it was too early to predict the impact that the coronavirus would have on its workforce. 鈥淲e are looking at how best to safeguard Sydney from the ongoing financial impact of this pandemic in a range of different scenarios鈥hat may never eventuate,鈥 the statement says.
鈥淚f we have to move to measures that will affect our staff we want to be more certain about the numbers. Whatever happens, staff will be consulted first and normal change processes will apply.鈥
The statement emerged after the National Tertiary Education Union (NTEU) demanded that the university 鈥渃ome clean on its plans鈥 to cut up to 3,000 jobs.
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Damien Cahill, assistant secretary of the union鈥檚 New South Wales division, said that reductions of that magnitude would compromise the university鈥檚 operations and devastate the lives of those left jobless. 鈥The University of Sydney needs to open its books and disclose its true financial position,鈥 he said.
鈥淸It] is a wealthy institution with extensive reserves. The university management needs to meet with staff to discuss alternatives to job cuts.鈥
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The speculation appears to have been triggered by emails from the dean of the Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences seeking suggestions from heads of schools on how they could cut up to 30 per cent of their staffing load.
The dean subsequently clarified that it was 鈥渘ot a directive to implement cuts but only to conceive of scenarios that might include such cuts鈥, according to a statement from the USyd Casuals Network.
鈥淲e鈥eject the notion that there is a difference between a hypothetical 鈥榮cenario鈥 and a concrete plan to cut conditions,鈥 the network said. 鈥淏oth accept the flawed logic that staff and students should pay for a crisis created by the government鈥檚 refusal to properly fund our sector and our own management鈥檚 failure to defend the university.鈥
Sydney student newspaper Honi Soit that one of the ideas under consideration was for all full-time staff to take one day鈥檚 unpaid leave a week, effectively reducing employment by 20 per cent. The proposal involved maintaining聽lecturers鈥櫬爐eaching responsibilities while reducing research and service hours.
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Staff groups have demanded that management consider alternatives to cutting jobs or 鈥渄egrading鈥 work conditions. Suggestions include utilising the university鈥檚 鈥渆xtensive borrowing power鈥, drawing on its future fund and changing rules that restrict the fund鈥檚 use to paying redundancy provisions rather than maintaining employment.
Job cuts in the region of those being speculated would dwarf redundancy rounds announced at other large universities in New South Wales and Victoria, each involving a few hundred positions. But the NTEU believes that losses among casual and fixed-term staff are far higher again, numbering in the tens of thousands.
While Sydney has not so far announced cuts to permanent staff, it revealed in April that it expected to save A$93 million (拢51 million) by reviewing its casual staffing budgets and avoiding taking on new staff or rehiring those on fixed-term contracts.
Sydney is arguably the most dependent of any Australian university on money from international students, earning just over A$1 billion from this source last year. That was 13 per cent more than it received from the federal government and constituted 40 per cent of its entire revenue.
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On 18 August, vice-chancellor Michael Spence advised staff that Sydney provost Barbara Messerle had resigned from the university 鈥渋n order to pursue other opportunities鈥. Professor Messerle joined Sydney less than a year ago. Dr Spence himself is leaving in December to become president and provost of UCL.
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