The University’s response to UCU proposals for industrial action – a critique

By now everyone will have had a chance to look at and digest the points made in the University’s letter to staff threatening to withhold 100% of pay if an individual participates in action short of a strike, in this case a setting and assessment boycott.  The VC, Koen Lamberts, today received the following letter from a UCU member at Leeds, Simon Hall.  This letter is excellent, and from the emails that have been coming into the union office, epitomises what many people are thinking and feeling.

 30 October 2014

Dear Professor Lamberts,

I recently learned that the University of York intends to withhold 100% of pay from members of the University and College Union (UCU) who participate in ‘Action Short of a Strike.’ As you know, this industrial action has been called in response to the proposed ‘reforms’ to the Universities Superannuation Scheme – proposals that, in their present form, constitute the most serious threat to academics’ pay and conditions in at least a generation, and which will leave thousands of academics many tens of thousands of pounds worse off in their retirement.

Your threat to dock 100% pay on a continuous basis – which amounts to nothing less than old-fashioned union-busting – might be expected of a nineteenth century mill owner, but it has absolutely no place in a university system which, quite rightly, values collegiality. The decision to define any work that unionised academics at York continue to do (including the preparation and delivery of lectures, the planning and running of seminar classes, the hosting of visiting speakers, research, the writing of journal articles, conference papers and books, the supervision of undergraduate, MA and PhD students, the provision of pastoral care, the writing of references and letters of recommendation, the preparation and evaluation of grant proposals, committee work, and the enthusiastic participation in a range of undergraduate admissions and recruitment activities, including open days) as merely “voluntary” is utterly shameful. The decision to calculate deductions in pay on a 1/260th basis – thereby ignoring the substantial amount of work that, as you know perfectly well, is undertaken by academics on weekends – only adds insult to injury.

I note the University of York claims to apply “the best ethical standards” in all of its activities, while your latest strategic plan lauds York’s “informality”, “friendliness” and “flat management structure” – all part of a distinctive “ethos”, we are told, that is designed to help “promote a sense of belonging and worth” among your employees (an approach, furthermore, that you claim will be “protect[ed] and develop[ed]” because “it contributes to the dynamic intellectual environment on which our future success depends”). I am very keen to know how your proposed actions in response to the UCU’s action short of a strike tally with these values, and eagerly await your response.

With very best wishes,

Dr Simon Hall

Senior Lecturer in American History

School of History

University of Leeds

 

 

STOP PRESS – BALLOT RESULTS

Mandate for strike action is carried – here is the letter from Sally Hunt in full

Dear colleague

Trade dispute between UCU and your employer concerning proposed detrimental changes to the University Superannuation Scheme (USS) and your employer’s failure to agree a collective agreement with UCU to protect pension benefits.

The ballot closed at noon on Monday 20 October 2014. The responses to the questions members were balloted on are as follows:

Are you prepared to take industrial action consisting of strike action?

Number of ballot papers counted: 17,212
Number voting YES: 13,395 (77.8%)
Number voting NO: 3,817 (22.2%)

Are you prepared to take industrial action consisting of action short of a strike?

Number of ballot papers counted: 17,154
Number voting YES: 14,879 (86.7%)
Number voting NO: 2,275 (13.3%)

The turnout was 44.5%. You can view the full scrutineer’s report here: http://www.ucu.org.uk/?mediaid=6867

Please note that the next negotiating meeting is Wednesday 22 October 2014 and the union’s higher education committee meets on Friday 24 October to discuss next steps.

Yours sincerely

Sally Hunt
UCU general secretary