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WSWS : News
& Analysis : Australia
& South Pacific
Australian students protest against 'voluntary student unionism'
legislation
By Laura Mitchell
3 April 1999
About 5,000 university students protested on Tuesday in cities
and on university campuses across Australia against a new Higher
Education Amendment Bill being introduced by the federal government.
Known as "voluntary student unionism," the legislation
will block funding to student unions and associations and effectively
end or curtail most student services.
Currently students pay a compulsory enrolment fee, generally
around $300, at the beginning of each year and automatically become
members of the student union. The money is used to finance student
elections, student newspapers, clubs and societies, sporting facilities,
student theatre, health care, child care, subsidised food and
counselling.
Under the new legislation, not only will universal membership
of student unions be banned, but the Liberal government plans
to bar funding to all "non-academic" areas of university
life. From the year 2000, any university financing student organisations
or services "not directly related to the educational courses
the student is enrolling in" will have its federal funding
reduced or stopped.
Even the conservative Australian Vice-Chancellor's Committee
has spoken out against the legislation, pointing out that many
of these "non-academic" areas--including student newspapers
and elections--have been an integral part of university culture
for more than a century.
In its overall thrust and logic "voluntary student unionism"
(VSU) is commensurate with the new environment being established
in universities, one in which higher education is increasingly
the preserve of the wealthy. Education Minister David Kemp has
declared the concepts of "universal membership" and
"collective action" to be "arcane and obsolete".
If students want access to non-academic services they will simply
pay for them individually, runs the argument. But the supposedly
"modern" ideas advanced by the Liberals, including "user-pays"
and "individual rights," are ones that discriminate
against poor and working class students.
The legislation will result in the removal of student input
and control over areas of university life. The proof lies in Western
Australia (WA), where a similar version of VSU was introduced
in 1994. The student association at Edith Cowan University is
insolvent. Student newspapers in the state depend on advertising.
At Murdoch University, there is no funding for clubs and societies
while at Curtin University only $30,000 is available (down from
$250,000). With the exception of the latter, not a single student
union in the state can afford to employ research officers. The
loss of funding has forced the closure of services such as those
for overseas students, part-time and mature age students and students
with disabilities. As well, funding is no longer available for
student theatre and film nights.
The origins of VSU
VSU has been a pet project of Liberal student clubs and of
elements within the parent Liberal Party for well over two decades.
Liberal hostility to student unions and associations was provoked
by the radicalisation of young people during the late 1960s and
early 1970s, which saw active support for Labor Party and left-wing
student clubs, the election of "left" leaderships in
campus elections and the formation of a national student union
(the Australian Union of Students, or AUS, and then the National
Union of Students, or NUS).
The student radicalisation was part of a broad upsurge of the
working class, which led to the election of the first Labor government
in 23 years and culminated in a series of reforms, including the
establishment of free tertiary education. While tuition fees were
eliminated, however, the Whitlam Labor government maintained an
annual enrollment fee to finance student unions and campus services.
It is this compulsory fee which the Howard government is now moving
to abolish. (Under Whitlam and the subsequent Liberal government
of Malcolm Fraser, poorer students were provided a modest grant
toward the cost of this enrollment fee. The Hawke Labor government
abolished the grant in 1987.)
Once a fringe policy largely directed against Labor influence
on campus, VSU has now moved to centre stage and takes on a broader
and more sinister logic. It aims at stifling political and cultural
dissent and imposing an intellectually sanitised environment on
the campuses. In 1994 when VSU was introduced in WA and Victoria,
a Liberal party briefing document stated: "We do not want
compulsory student monies flowing out to anti-Kennett and anti-Coalition
(Liberal-National Party) campaigns and other fringe activities
of the hard left." This year at a briefing to fellow federal
backbenchers, senior Liberals spoke of truncating "the culture
of compulsory unionism ... before people enter the workforce"
and attacked student unions for donating to political causes including
the Palestine Liberation Organisation.
While VSU has been official Liberal Party policy since the
early 1980s, it is being introduced in 1999 in the context of
the largest cuts in history to university funding. Faculties are
still reeling from the impact of the August 1996 Budget with at
least $600 million cut from university operating grants in barely
three years. To examine just one university--Monash--and its Faculty
of Arts: 49 staff positions were lost in 1998 through "Voluntary
Early Retirement" packages, 241 subjects have been cut and
the entire Classics Department has been closed.
The Howard government has also dramatically lifted the tuition
fees that students must pay under the Higher Education Contribution
Scheme (HECS) introduced by the Hawke Labor government in the
1980s, and reduced Austudy student allowances.
But greater changes lie ahead. The Liberals plan to privatise
universities and have floated various models for full, up-front
fees, including a so-called voucher system--a scheme first touted
in Australia by the Labor Party's Peter Baldwin. Significant cuts
to federally-funded student places are in the pipeline, with the
aim of forcing desperate students to pay thousands of dollars
for a place. The University of Melbourne is in the process of
building a new university to be known simply as "Melbourne
University Private".
The VSU legislation is part of the preparation for this new
regime. The vast majority of students defend the concept of free
and accessible higher education and have opposed the ever-wider
encroachment of "user-pays" under successive Labor and
Liberal governments. That is why the Liberals are compelled to
ram through legislation to forcibly gag and dismantle democratically
elected student organisations.
'It is aimed at silencing students'
At the anti-VSU rally in Sydney, the World Socialist Web
Site interviewed a third-year Early Childhood Education student
from Macarthur campus of the University of Western Sydney. "I'm
here protesting today because I'm worried about the attempts by
the government to bring in up-front fees," he said. "Howard
will utilise 'voluntary student unionism' to silence political
opposition in order to clear the way for full fees to be introduced."
"Many students are not aware of the implications of VSU.
It is aimed at silencing students because student groups have
always opposed government legislation attacking education. The
government is putting the needs of the economy before people.
Policies should be based on humanitarianism.
"At our university we are facing class overcrowding. Universities
are under pressure to enrol more and more students to attract
funding. I'm in my third year and we are suffering in the ways
we are being taught.
"There are many problems developing. For instance at UWS
Macarthur there is no disability access for students. The student
association has been requesting these facilities for years but
because of the cuts in funding the university administration says
they cannot provide the funds. Many faculties now don't provide
photocopies of material needed for courses. Students now have
to pay for their own. It's costing hundreds of dollars for students
every year.
"I now have to work part-time to pay the rent. The Austudy
allowance is not enough. I'm a mature age student but many students
I know that are under the age of 25, who have been put on Youth
Allowance, are dropping out of courses because they can't afford
to stay at Uni. Many are converting to part-time so they can try
and work full-time to survive.
"The cuts in funding are leading to the closure of courses
and departments and a reduction in subjects offered. One way of
driving students out is to make conditions at the universities
unbearable and open it up for mainly fee-paying students. We have
to force some change."
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