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Australia: NSW teachers endorse 48-hour strike in February
By Erika Zimmer
13 December 2003
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Public school and Technical and Further Education (TAFE) teachers
across the state of New South Wales held stopwork meetings over
their salaries claim last week, voting to endorse a union recommendation
for a 48-hour strike on February 11 and 12, early in the new school
year.
Teachers also agreed to impose a range of bans, including on
the writing of an annual report on each schools results
and on administering tests, such as the basic skills tests and
ELLA and SNAP (literacy and maths) tests from the start of 2004.
While the number of teachers who turned out to vote on the
strike resolution16,000 out of the states 50,000appeared
to be down on the last two-hour stoppage on July 29, some 98 percent
of those who attended last weeks meetings backed the strike,
reflecting the mood among teachers.
NSW teachers have not undertaken a two-day strike since 1981.
While the immediate trigger for the strike is to support their
claim for a 25 percent pay increase over two years, as part of
a new industrial award due to commence on January 1, the vote,
and the fact that the union felt obliged to recommend it, expresses
broader underlying discontent.
Teachers are disgusted not only with the continuing erosion
of their salaries, estimated to have fallen by more than 20 percent
in real terms over the past five years alone, but the erosion
of education budgets and the systematic dismantling of the public
education system by successive Liberal and Labor governments,
state and federal. At the same time, there is a growing distrust,
born out of bitter experiences, in the teachers union leadership.
Three years ago, the NSW Teachers Federation (NSWTF) assisted
the state Labor government to push through its central demand
that teachers had to accept more flexible working
conditions in the name of making public education more competitive
in the education market place.
The 2000 award extended the working day, allowing some teachers
to be required to work anytime from 7.30 a.m. to 5 p.m., permitted
teachers to be directed to work in a number of different schools
and introduced the category of temporary teachers.
The governments agenda sparked intense opposition, resulting
in the largest teachers rally for more than a decade. But
eventually, after the better part of a year, the union managed
to wear down the resistance of teachers, in return for small pay
increases.
The union was further discredited in March 2001 when it did
little to oppose the governments plan to shut down 10 Sydney
schools. Parents and teachers were largely left on their own to
conduct a campaign against the closure of each school.
The NSWTF launched its latest campaign in July, acutely aware
of the undercurrent of hostility among teachers over its previous
actions. At the July stopwork meeting, union officials insisted
that this time there would be no trading off of conditions, and
called a 24-hour strike on September 17. The Victorian and Western
Australian (WA) teachers unions, also facing unrest, later
recommended a strike on the same day. The national teachers
union, the Australian Education Union, hailed it as an historic
national day of action.
But union leaders had no intention of developing a concerted
and united campaign, despite the fact that teachers in every state
face Labor governments carrying out a far-reaching assault on
public education. The much-vaunted cross-border unity
has been deliberately allowed to dissipate.
The Western Australian teachers union has since ordered its
members to call off industrial action, including strikes and bans
on compiling student reports. The union has apparently reached
a deal with the WA Labor government, after the government placed
a $20,000 advertisement in last weekends papers, outlining
its pay and conditions offer to teachers. Teachers in Victoria
are likely to take further industrial action at the start of the
new year, with no headway being made in their pay dispute.
In NSW, union leaders always intended to tie their members
to a work value ruling by the Industrial Relations
Commission (IRC), sending the claim into the court even before
the one-day strike. They have attempted to foster the illusion
that the case offers a once in a decade opportunity
for a substantial wage increase, citing as precedents a 20 percent
increase in teachers salaries in 1970 and a large
increase in 1981, attained through work value cases.
It is significant that NSWTF officials are compelled to reach
back two or three decades to point to something that they can
claim as a clear victory. Throughout the 1980s and 1990s, the
union assisted state governments, both Labor and Liberal, in making
deep inroads into public education. Behind the slashing of social
services was a growing competition between the states to attract
investors by cutting corporate taxes and offering financial incentives
at the expense of the needs of working people.
The very basis of the unions case in the IRC is the worsening
conditions that it has helped impose on teachers and students.
The September issue of the NSWTF journal, Education, lists
a range of factors that have increased teachers workloads,
in support of the case for a salary increase. They include the
difficult conditions under which teachers work, student
discipline and violence, community and parental expectations of
schools, and the competitive environment in which schools and
TAFE operate.
The NSW government is deepening its offensive. Education Minister
Andrew Refshauge has confirmed plans to shed 1,000 jobs and slash
$70 million a year from the education budget in its latest restructure.
He has made it plain that any pay rise for teachers over 3 percent
per year must be financed from reductions to school budgets, raising
the threat of further cutbacks to education services, bigger class
sizes and more teacher job losses.
While the union has publicly ruled out trading off more conditions
for a pay rise, there is little doubt that it will make concessions
in the course of the IRC case. The government has already indicated
its line of attack. It has dismissed the unions work value
case with contempt, arguing, for example, that because student
assessment procedures have been standardised, the amount of work
that teachers do has, in fact, decreased.
The WSWS spoke to two NSW teachers who are sceptical about
the unions role in the dispute. They identified increased
workload, on-the-job stress and lack of funding as the major issues.
Helena, an English teacher in her first year of teaching, said:
I havent been working long enough to know what changes
have taken place, but I dont have much hope that the strike
will do much. It seems to be a fruitless statement. Im supporting
the strike because I think we need to give people a wake up call.
A lot of people dont know whats involved in teaching.
There needs to be a restructuring of the whole budget
so that more priority is placed on education. The government says
it doesnt have any money but things are just going to deteriorate
and no one will want to teach in the public education system.
Maureen, an English teacher with two years teaching experience,
said she had thought the strike was not only about salaries but
also about funding for schools. Its always in the
back of my head that we need more funding for resources. In terms
of the governments priorities, I think things are just going
to get worse. I dont think the strike will give us a 25
percent increase. More likely a 5 percent increase. To make an
impact Id go out for a week or two. I dont know if
theres a way to let the public know what things are really
like.
While teachers have voted for a two-day strike, the union leadership
has left open the option of calling off the stoppage if it obtains
an interim decision from the IRC before then. It has provided
for an emergency meeting of the union executive in late January,
before the start of the new school year.
See Also:
Australia: Teachers union
calls strike in bid to regain credibility
[11 September 2003]
Report highlights deterioration
of Australian public schools
[11 November 2002]
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