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WSWS : News
& Analysis : Australia
& South Pacific : New
Zealand
Widening rebellion by New Zealand teachers against government-union
pay deal
By John Braddock
28 May 2002
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Simmering discontent among New Zealand secondary school teachers
over employment contract negotiations has boiled over into open
rebellion against both the Labour-Alliance government and the
Post Primary Teachers Association (PPTA). On May 16, union and
government negotiators announced a deal to settle the 14-month
dispute over pay and working conditions. At the same time, the
PPTA executive issued a directive to teachers to cancel all bans
and industrial action.
This is the second time that an attempt by the government and
the PPTA to enforce a settlement has met with open hostility from
rank-and-file teachers. In February, teachers voted by a 57 percent
majority to throw out the unions recommendation. In March,
two subsequent government offers were rejected by the union executive,
fearful that they too would be opposed. Teachers in the Auckland
region took unauthorised strike action to protest the unions
timid, drawn-out industrial campaign.
The latest deal, which was put together over four days of negotiations
involving Prime Minister Helen Clark, Labour Minister Margaret
Wilson and Associate Education Minister Marian Hobbs, was signed
off on the eve of the Labour Partys election-year congress,
held in Wellington over the weekend of May 17-19. A planned picket
of the event by Wellington and Hutt Valley teachers was cancelled
following a branch delegates meeting, at which PPTA executive
members threatened dissenters with disciplinary action under the
unions Code of Ethics. Strikes planned to begin
the following week were also called off.
The agreement provides for an immediate two percent pay increase,
backdated to last July, a further 1.5 percent in July 2002 and
another two percent 12 months later. This is essentially the same
as the governments pay offer in March. It amounts to a 5.5
percent increase over a three-year periodless than the anticipated
inflation rate. There is a three-step allowance, totaling $3,500,
as the price for the introduction of new school qualifications,
the National Certificate of Educational Achievement (NCEA). Under
the deal, staffing provisions for 2002 and 2003 will generate
three non-contact hours per teacher each week, with a guarantee
that it will rise to four hours in the following year. After that,
school administrations will endeavour to provide five
hours per week non-contact.
The striking teachers are objecting to the fact that the offer
is virtually identical with those already rejected. The wage component
in the deal is $NZ45 million less than a compromise
presented by the union which, after 14 months of talks and sporadic
calls to industrial action, was endorsed as ratifiable
by 74 percent of membersmost of whom considered it to be
the bottom line.
After years of suffering deteriorating conditions, greater
workloads and cuts to the purchasing power of their salaries,
teachers face significant new burdens with the introduction of
a new qualifications system, involving increased testing, internal
assessment and administration tasks in the next three years. They
want extra pay for this work, as well as guaranteed time to carry
it out. Instead, the new deal provides for an allowance payable
only to those teachers deemed by their principals to have met
certain criteria, and will not extend beyond 2004. The workload
component does little more than codify existing practices in most
schools and will simply perpetuate current conditions.
Almost as soon as the details were relayed to schools, teachers
began to walk off the job. On May 17, 40 teachers at Orewa College
north of Auckland struck in protest at the pathetic
settlement. They picketed the school in the rain for several hours
and faxed other schools nationwide asking for support. Their local
PPTA branch issued a statement repudiating the executives
directive to halt industrial action, saying: We are sick
and tired of our members ratifying an agreement merely because
they feel that we wont be offered anything better... We
feel that we should fight for what were worth and not just
roll over... and take what were given... PPTA do not have
the right to accept an agreement on our behalf .
Growing rebellion
The next week, teachers at other schools followed suit. In
Wellington, 1,000 students at Onslow College were sent home every
afternoon after staff voted for rolling stoppages, while a strike
shut Havelock North High School in Hawkes Bay. On Tuesday, Taita
and Nae Nae Colleges in the Hutt Valley region declared they would
join the snowballing wildcat action. By the end of the week, stoppages
had spread to the South Island and over 20 schools nationwide
were participating. Seven more schools have announced plans to
go out this week, while staff at schools in the South Auckland
region voted to withdraw entirely from administering the NCEA.
The striking teachers have gathered widening support. In Auckland,
students in uniform from Northcote College and other schools attended
pickets at the offices of Labour MPs. On May 23, over 100 striking
teachers from three Wellington schools and their supporters demonstrated
outside parliament during the presentation of the Labour governments
2002 budget. The national organisation for teachers of English
as a Second Language announced that strike action was likely because
the settlement had left its members out in the cold.
A spokesman said that while language teachers, who coach foreign
fee-paying students, were supporting the countrys newest
billion-dollar industry, they were expected to perform
all the additional assessment required for free.
A key provision in the settlement is designed to save the government
millions of dollars into the future, at the expense of the salaries
of primary school teachers. A government and union working party
will be established to make recommendations on secondary teacher
supply and remuneration. Its unstated aim is to establish a mechanism
that will be used to sever the contractual links that guarantee
pay parity between 14,000 secondary teachers and their
40,000 colleagues in primary schools.
A clause in the primary teachers contract requires any
pay rise won by secondary teachers to be passed on to primary
teachers. Playing on long-standing rivalries between the bureaucrats
of the respective teacher unions, the government has attempted
to divide teachers throughout the course of the dispute and justify
its refusal to make a significant pay offer on the grounds that
it would be too expensive. The PPTA has opportunistically seized
on this ploy to run a grubby campaign against parity, arguing
that primary teachers are not worth as much as secondary teachers
and that staffing shortages in the secondary sector justify higher
rates of pay. The union is trying to sell its latest deal by promising
that the pay entrenchment clause will be removed, clearing the
way for further secondary pay increases.
A significant number of teachers, including some on strike,
have fallen for this reactionary line. Many resent the fact that
the primary teachers union, the NZ Educational Institute
(NZEI), has used the pay parity legislation to avoid conducting
any industrial struggles. Since gaining pay parity several years
ago, the NZEI has settled each pay round as quickly as it could,
and then depended on secondary teachers to win additional increases.
Should the secondary teachers now win more than the one-off allowance
for the introduction of the NCEA, it is quite likely the NZEI
would, for its own reasons, seek to prevent this in the courts.
Thus, both groups of bureaucrats are responsible for setting primary
and secondary teachers against each other in order to defend their
own turf, and to deflect teachers attention from the governments
attacks on education at all levels.
The PPTA leadership has responded to rising membership defiance
by publicly condemning the strikes. At the same time, it is moving
to limit the damage by quickly pushing ahead with ratification
meetings. On Saturday May 25, regional representatives were brought
to an extraordinary meeting of the executive in Wellington, purportedly
to be given an opportunity to air grievances. Immediately following
the meeting, the Auckland region chairman released a statement,
widely quoted in the media, appealing for calm and
saying he had been convinced that the governments latest
offer was as far as it could go.
Sensitive to the impact of the teachers wildcat action
on broader sections of the working class, the peak union body
has rushed to defend the PPTA leadership. Having, for 14 months,
shown no interest in the contract struggle, the Council of Trade
Unions (CTU) denounced the teachers strikes as undemocratic
and divisive. CTU president Ross Wilson went on to suggest the
legality of the strikes was a grey area. Under Labours
Employment Relations Act, which was framed with input and advice
from the CTU, it is legal to strike in support of a collective
agreement, but not when a settlement has been reached.
The teachers strike wave throws into sharp relief the
widening chasm between the working class and the official representatives
of the labour movementthe unions and the self-proclaimed
parties of the centre-left that form the Labour government.
The strikes are being driven by immense anger and frustration
among teachers, who know that the settlement will only exacerbate
the ongoing decline in living standards, working conditions and
the state of the public education system as a whole.
See Also:
New Zealand teachers strike
after rejecting pay deal
[3 April 2002]
Labour-Alliance budget
cuts New Zealand health and education services
[18 June 2001]
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