|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : Australia
& South Pacific
Socialist candidate warns Victorian teachers of union betrayal
By Frank Gaglioti, Socialist Equality Party candidate for
Calwell
22 November 2007
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email
the author
Will Marshall, a teacher at Footscray City College and the
Socialist Equality Partys candidate for the federal seat
of Melbourne, addressed a mass meeting of 10,000 striking teachers
in Melbourne yesterday, advancing a socialist alternative to the
ongoing betrayals of the Labor and union leaderships.
The meeting overwhelmingly endorsed the union resolution of
a 24-hour walkout for February 14 and a series of regional four
hours stoppages in pursuit of a 30 percent wage increase over
three years. It also demanded a reduction in the number of short-term
contract teachers.
While teachers voiced their anger over the Victorian state
Labor governments paltry offer of a 3.25 percent wage increase,
Australian Education Union (AEU) officials demonstrated that they
had no intention of defending wages and conditions. The official
resolution allows them to maintain their ongoing collaboration
with the Victorian state Labor government, which will continue
implementing its agenda of school closures, short-term contract
employment, sub-standard pay rates and poor working conditions.
Union officials will negotiate with the state Labor government
over the next two months. Throughout the meeting, they were intent
on promoting the illusion that the election of a federal Labor
government would defend their members rights and conditions.
The AEU leaderships real purpose was exposed most clearly
in its desperation to prevent any genuine discussion and debate
at the meeting. A timid amendment calling for another mass meeting
to ratify any final settlement was even denounced by AEU state
secretary Brian Henderson, who claimed it would disenfranchise
regional members.

Marshall was the only speaker to oppose the official resolution.
He indicted the AEU leaderships political record and foreshadowed
a counter-resolution. AEU Victorian branch president, Mary Bluettthe
main speaker and meeting chairread only part of it, bureaucratically
ruling that it was out of order and outside the unions
log of claims.
Marshalls resolution warned that in order for teachers
to avert another defeat and the ongoing destruction of public
education, they needed to expand their action and appeal for industrial
and political support from other sections of the working class.
The resolution called for the payment of the full wage claim
with no tradeoffs; the elimination of the contract employment
system; a reduction in class sizes to 20 and the hiring of extra
teachers throughout the state; no school closures and amalgamations;
and for billions of dollars to be allocated to radically improve
state education.
The resolution explained: Such a program can only be
achieved through teachers making a decisive political break from
the Labor Party and its apologists in the AEU and the adoption
of an alternative socialist perspectivethat is, one that
challenges the very basis of the capitalist system itself.
Marshall told the meeting that the AEU leaderships resolution
was farcical and a replica of what was presented
to us in 2004.
During the last wage contract negotiation in 2004, the union
called for a 30 percent wage rise, held two 24-hour strikes, and
then signed an agreement with the Labor government that not only
accepted a 12 percent wage rise over 3.5 years, but maintained
its backing for contract teaching.
Marshall asked the meeting, How did this come about?
It didnt just fall from the sky. It is a direct result of
the union leaderships collaboration with state Liberal and
Labor governments.
Teachers on short-term contracts now stand at over 19
percent of the teaching workforce. This is the highest level ever.
Eighty percent of young teachers are on contracts. This is at
a time when there are increasing social problems in the schools.
In 1993, when contract teaching was introduced, there was not
even a whimper from the teacher unions.
But the AEU signed on the dotted line. As the 2004 agreement
says, some fixed term casual employment will continue to
be necessary. In other words, they signed a blank cheque
to allow the government to do what it wanted. But guess what?
In the current log of claims this year you find exactly the same
thing.
AEU president Bluett tried to silence Marshall, interrupting
him on two occasions with the claim that he was not speaking to
the resolution.
But Marshall was given important backing from sections of the
mass meeting when he directly challenged Bluett, declaring: I
am speaking to the resolution. Im raising the unions
record because if you know someones record, you know what
theyll do in the future. A number of teachers scattered
throughout the 10,000-strong meeting demanded Marshalls
right to be heard, and Bluett backed off.
Marshall pointed to the AEUs efforts to support the election
of a Rudd Labor government and warned that this would be a political
trap for teachers.
The AEU on its web site, he said, asks teachers
to help elect the ALP this weekend by handing out an ACTU-backed
Your rights at work pamphlet. And we all know what that
means. Vote Labor.
The unions claim that Labor represents a lesser
evil than the Liberals is an attempt to pull the wool over
teachers eyes. Already the state Labor government has utilised
Howards WorkChoices against the nurses, and Rudds
IR has all the same essential features of Howardsit
illegalises striking.
Marshall warned: Above all, our struggle requires a break
from Labor, and their junior partners in the AEU. Education has
to be based on need, not on the budget constraints of Liberal
and Labor governments.
The AEU leadership immediately responded to Marshalls
intervention by shutting down any further discussion and putting
the official resolution.
While the AEUs resolution was overwhelmingly passed,
teachers are becoming increasingly hostile to contract employment
and concerned that any future wage settlement will be tied to
further productivity demands from the state government.
These concerns were reflected in the support for Marshalls
intervention and the loud applause in response to Audrey Gunn,
a 23-year-old contract teacher, who spoke prior to the discussion
on the official resolution.
Gunn detailed the horrendous conditions facing those on short-term
agreements. She was cheered when she declared that contract employment
was like being on trial and called for teacher graduates
to be given stable, ongoing jobs as soon as they left university
and for the abolition of such retrogressive agreements.
As teachers marched through Melbourne yesterday afternoon,
Labor premier Brumby contemptuously declared that any wage rise
above the governments 3.25 percent level would require a
range of productivity tradeoffs, ensuring that schools became
more efficient.
Contrary to the AEUs claims, a Rudd Labor government
will not protect teachers wages and conditions. It will
intensify the Howard governments attacks on state-funded
education. Labor leader Rudd has embraced Howards reactionary
school funding formulaSocio Economic Status fundingin
toto until 2012. This blatantly favours elite private schools
over the public system and will result in a major expansion of
the private system at the direct expense of the public.
Rudd is also a proponent of school league tables, in which
schools results are used to pit one against the other. With
funding tied to enrolments, the lower ranked schools face a rapidly
declining funding base, and then closure or amalgamation. In other
words, a Rudd Labor government will deepen the market-based policies
that the Victorian state Labor government has already imposed
on the state education system.
The way forward for teachers lies not in a Labor victory in
the federal elections or in the unions meaningless protests
against the Brumby state government. It lies in teachers beginning
to conduct a conscious political struggle against the entire Labor
and union bureaucracy on the basis of a socialist perspective,
aimed at ending the profit system and providing a modern, high
quality and free public education system for all.
* * *
A number of teachers spoke with the World Socialist Web
Site about the ongoing erosion of conditions.
Michael Meeking, a music teacher of 12 years,
said: Its impossible for us to give any more time
than we already do. Im part-time and although I only teach
for three days a week I have to spend the rest of the week preparing,
report writing and countless other things. In other words, I work
a five-day week on three days pay.
Contract teaching is really bad and has to change. Its
not fair for teachers who are just starting out to be subjected
to this. At the school where one of my friends teaches there were
five or six teachers whose contracts were not renewed. This means
theyre out of work. What are they supposed to do with their
careers and all the training they put into it?
Andy, from Mill Park Secondary College, said:
Its the second largest school in the stateacross
two campuses, there are 1,700 students. Im a travellerI
work 48 periods a fortnight, and I have so-called two spares
to travel between the two.
Ive lost faith in the union. I feel the AEU has
been putting off its real active fighting responsibilitiesit
should be trying to fight for our working and pay conditions.
It is atrociousover the last 10 years our wages have declined
against CPIwe get these three percent palm-offsit
doesnt address our needs at all.
Brumby in the Age today says weve got the
best teaching conditions in Australia. Are you joking? He claims
no other state or territory pays so much! Hed supposedly
be happy to work back in teaching! What a joke!
Ive heard horror stories regarding cases filed
against teachers whereby the union was very reluctant to become
involved. It may be only hearsay, but it has made me very sceptical,
Im afraid.
I have struck with the union every time in the last 21
years. Im wondering whether the AEU is prepared at all to
take up a fight against the government. It doesnt matter
which government gets inwere heading to a really destructive
futurewhere it is just the pursuit of the dollar against
human needs and rights.
Pavlos Andronikos,
a former lecturer in Greek is now teaching English at a high school.
He said that teachers should not allow the union leadership to
make any tradeoffs for the 10 percent wage claim. The public
education system today is not run by those interested in genuinely
teaching people but ideologues and bean counters.
Our workloads are already too demanding, he said.
There are not enough hours in the week to do what we have
to do as teachers today. Much of our time is spent in preparation,
extra curriculum workwe have too many additional duties
to do our jobs as teachers properly.
Ive always supported Labor but honestly I dont
think any really difference whether its Liberal or Labor
is in power. The state Labor government has never been friends
of teachers and yet the teachers union has always supported
Labor. I cant see how this has been of any help.
Anne Gillard and Lyndell Shepherd from Kew
High School said that they backed Will Marshalls comments
to the meeting.
I think the union executive should spend a year in the
schools, preferably with some Year 9 classes. Their memory of
teaching is from the 1970s and its incredibly harder now.
We can be asked to do any extra job for no extra money because
of the pay system. We have such a small time allowance that has
no relation to the length of the job.
Commenting on the AEUs refusal to even allow a final
mass meeting to ratify an agreement with the Labor government,
Shepherd said, And were not allowed to come back and
vote on any decisionits got to be left up to someone
else.
I feel sorry for contract teachers. They just have to
jump higher and higher. When you think back to when you were a
first year teacherwhat a mess you made. But you still had
a job, and you could learn and you did learn. Now youre
not allowed to do that, you have to be perfect from day one. And
you have stuff that you have to fill in from the VIT [Victorian
Institute of Teaching], and for all that effort you still dont
necessarily get your job back.
But were also getting discriminated against because
were older. I have had a school principal say to me, for
two old teachers like you; I can get three young teachers who
will do whatever I say. And they have to jump through any hoops
that theyre asked to. Thats why Labor wants them in
because theyre malleable.
We want to work a 37-hour week instead of getting to
school at 8am and getting home at 5.30 and then having to do marking
for an hour. Weve been teaching for 33 years. We have to
teach our classes, do our reports and on top of that learn something
new in our own time.
Both of us have taught in the private system for a short
time. But we left that because we didnt like the top down
management. But what were finding in the state system is
that its reverting to that.
Authorised by N. Beams, 100B Sydenham Rd, Marrickville,
NSW
Visit the Socialist Equality
Party Election Web Site
See Also:
The AEU and the Victorian teachers' wage
rise campaign
[19 November 2007]
Australia: 25 years of Labor-Liberal
reform wreaks havoc on public schools
[8 October 2007]
University education in Australia
and the impact of free market reform
[22 August 2007]
Australia: Labor makes
cynical promise on public education in Victorian election
[24 November 2006]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |