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Victimised Australian professor reinstated but placed on "leave"
By Mike Head
7 May 2002
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Despite losing a Full Federal Court appeal over last years
illegal dismissal of biological sciences Associate Professor Ted
Steele, the University of Wollongong hierarchy is still attempting
to remove the victimised academic. In what has become an embarrassing
standoff, the university has formally reinstated Steele, with
back pay, but placed him on indefinite leave.
On March 28, a three-judge Federal Court panel unanimously
rejected an appeal against a single judges ruling last August
that Steeles sacking in February 2001 without any hearing
or notice breached the procedures set down in a union workplace
agreement. Full legal costs, estimated to exceed $100,000 were
awarded against the university.
Whatever might have been the position in bygone days,
most contemporary employees enjoy a right to be notified of any
allegation of misconduct, and an opportunity to answer the allegation,
before disciplinary action is taken against them, the judgment
declared. During the hearing, Justice Murray Wilcox used stronger
language. Even a murderer is entitled to be heard in their
defence, he said. The suggestion that an academic,
whatever his or her offence, is not allowed to make a defence,
for a university to put that propositionwell, I repeat,
I just find that a shocking proposition.
Nevertheless, Vice-Chancellor Gerard Sutton remains determined
not to back down. He initially dismissed Steele, a tenured professor
with 16 years service at Wollongong, for speaking to the
media about pressure to upgrade students marks in order
to boost fee-paying enrolments. Seizing upon an instant termination
clause in the workplace agreement, Sutton claimed that Steele
had engaged in serious misconduct that caused
serious risk to the universitys reputation.
A week after losing the Federal Court appeal, Sutton announced
that Steele would be reinstated on April 22, with back pay. However,
he demanded that Steele go on trial, either before a university
misconduct committee or a so-called independent arbitrator, on
fresh charges of making false allegations against the university.
Sutton declared that Steele would have to answer complaints
against him by the Dean of the Science Faculty, the Head of the
Biological Sciences Department and other members of the department.
Simultaneously, these staff members publicly stated their refusal
to work with Steele. The management clearly encouraged this stance
in an effort to pressure Steele into relinquishing his post, perhaps
in return for a token monetary settlement.
Steele, however, rejected Suttons ultimatum, branding
it as a case of double jeopardy of the worst kind
with a pre-determined outcomedismissal for the second time.
There has been no attempt to repair the very real damage
to my professional reputation and the enormous personal and financial
costs, he said. Instead, theyre saying that
after a year of hardship, Ive now got to go before a kangaroo
court.
I am refusing to take part in any form of internal inquiry,
he told WSWS. After my damaging experiences of the past
15 months I am insisting that if they want to try me again, it
must be in a real court of law. My position on this is non-negotiable.
Faced by Steeles intransigence, on April 18 university
management instructed him to resume a six-month period of study
leave that he had commenced before he was sacked. At the same
time, it refused to say how long this leave would last, leaving
Steele in limbo. While he is on full pay, he still has no access
to his laboratory and other research facilities. Sutton apparently
hopes to utilise this period to negotiate a face-saving settlement.
As the latest twist in the universitys tactics unfolded,
it was working to bury detailed allegations by another academic
about similar incidents of being pressured into soft marking.
Henry Collier, a senior lecturer in the Faculty of Commerce, sent
a letter to Sutton stating that he had specific evidence of marks
being changed or massaged. In his letter, leaked to
the media, Collier also referred to pressures to pass fee-paying
post-graduate students and to measurement problems
in assessing full fee-paying overseas students.
Collier, who previously taught in the United States, has worked
at Wollongong for 11 years. He told a reporter that lecturers
are under increased pressure to retain studentseven
though they might not be making satisfactory progress towards
their degree. We are also constantly reminded that international
students provide funding for research, travel, conference attendance
and so on. He cited two specific instances where students
who had failed were awarded pass marks.
Besides corroborating Steeles concerns, Collier emphasised
that soft marking and bowing to commercial interests
are widespread in Australian and international universities. It
is not unique to universities in AustraliaI think it happens
everywhere. I know it happens in the US. The process, which has
commonly been referred to as dumbing down, points
to a slow but steady decline in standards at universities. It
comes down to money. To get more money, universities need to get
more students and to retain students, they have to lower standards.
A former materials engineering senior lecturer at Wollongong,
Masoud Samadi, also came forward to back Steeles refusal
to stand trial before a university inquiry. Samadi revealed that
he had been charged with misconduct, subjected to an internal
inquiry and forced to resign in 1999 after making allegations
of plagiarism against his head of department. In addition, he
gave details of favourable treatment given to two PhD studentsa
senior manager of BHP Steel, one of the universitys big
business sponsors, and the BHP managers wife.
On April 12, the universitys governing council, which
includes representatives of the NSW state Labor government, tried
to cover-up the issue of soft marking by referring
it to the universitys academic senate for review. Steele
immediately rejected the internal review, demanding an independent,
external inquiry instead.
Critical issues covered up
The National Tertiary Education Union (NTEU) hailed the final
Federal Court ruling in Steeles favour as a massive
win for the protection of all workers under enterprise agreements
as well as a strong affirmation of intellectual freedom.
This is a travesty. Sutton has been able to remain defiant throughout
the Steele affair precisely because the NTEU actively undermined
the opposition of academics, students and others to the universitys
flagrant assault on free speech.
From the outset, Steeles sacking was a test case for
academic freedom. Thousands of university staff across Australia
and internationally condemned his dismissal. Yet, the union initially
rejected any defence of Steele at all and then, under pressure
from its members, initiated a campaign aimed at diverting them
from the crucial issues at stake.
The NTEU leaders refused to demand his unconditional reinstatement,
opposed calls for industrial action and said absolutely nothing
in defence of the fundamental right of academics to speak out
against official policy and the sacrificing of university standards
for commercial reasons. They remained equally silent about the
cases of Collier and Samadi, not to speak of other instances where
university lecturers have been victimised.
Instead, they simply objected to the manner in which Steele
was sacked. After weeks of delay, the union went to the Federal
Court to argue a breach of the unions workplace agreement.
This allowed the university to drag the case out for 14 months,
while Steele remained unemployed.
Sutton, on the other hand, enjoyed warm support from the local
media, as well as the state and federal governments. Interviewed
sympathetically by the daily Illawarra Mercury after announcing
Steeles conditional reinstatement, Sutton defended his role
in sacking Steele, dismissed student demands for his resignation
and declared that he would do what I did again.
Just before the final Federal Court ruling, Sutton played his
trump card. NSW Premier Bob Carr announced funding for a $110
million technology precinct adjacent to the university, jointly
funded by the government, BHP, other corporate giants, hotel developers
and the university. Carr claimed that the project confirmed Wollongongs
status as the city of innovation, featuring one of
the nations most innovative universities. The story
was splashed over the front page of the Mercury, under
the headline: Our good news week.
Wollongong, for decades a steel city dominated by BHP, has
one of the highest unemployment rates in the country. Even if
the technology precinct is built over the next 10 years as scheduled,
its sponsors estimate it will create only 3,000 jobs, far less
than the jobs destroyed by BHP as it slowly closes down its steel
plant.
But Carrs enthusiasm for Suttons management points
to the underlying process driving the Steele case: the growing
commercialisation of the universities. Starved of operating and
research funds by the federal government, Australias universities
have turned to corporate sponsorship and the luring of fee-paying
overseas and post-graduate students. Both teaching and research
have been tailored increasingly to attracting business grants
and investment, servicing corporate clients and satisfying student
customers.
Federal Education Minister Brendan Nelson has made it clear
that the Howard government intends to accelerate these trends.
He has signalled further spending cuts in next months budget,
declared his preference for universities generating commercial
revenue and instigated an inquiry into restructuring tertiary
education accordingly.
Subordinating universities to business inevitably involves
them protecting their marketing images, silencing dissent and
suffocating intellectual freedom, which requires genuine independence
of discussion, research and teaching, free from official and corporate
dictates. An Australia Institute survey of lecturers last year
found that nearly three-quarters thought that academic freedom
had deteriorated under these pressures.
It was this survey that Steele first commented upon in the
media, incurring the universitys wrath. Now, after more
than a year of financial hardship and personal stress, he has
been reinstated formally but is unlikely to ever return to his
post at Wollongong.
The NTEU leadership has remained silent on the political and
big business pressures behind Steeles sacking because it
has no disagreements with the official agenda. Instead, the union
has collaborated in it by signing workplace agreements that not
only allow the dismissal of tenured staff, provided an internal
hearing is held, but also facilitate the increasing restructuring
of universities along corporate lines.
See Also:
Australian university refuses
to reinstate victimised professor
[3 January 2002]
Union undermines the
defence of sacked Australian academic
[20 April 2001]
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