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Australia: Victorian teachers union convenes delegates
meetings to ram through industrial agreement
By the Socialist Equality Party
2 June 2008
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The Australian Education Union (AEU) is holding delegates
meetings across Victoria over the next two weeks to try and achieve
ratification of its sell-out agreement with the state Labor government.
These meetings have been convened on a completely antidemocratic
and unrepresentative basis. Their essential function is to prevent
ordinary teachers from being able to openly discuss and debate
the contents of the proposed agreement, and to isolate those teachers
who rightly sense that the union has betrayed their interests.
By combining the arbitrary selection of union delegates with intimidatory
tactics against teachers who oppose the deal, the AEU aims to
push through a yes vote ahead of a state-wide secret
ballot of all teachers, to be held later this month.
The Victorian public school teachers campaign has lasted
more than a year. It has involved a series of rolling work stoppages,
as well as two mass meetings, with the central demands being a
30 percent pay rise over 3 years, maximum class sizes of 20, and
a significant shift away from contract teaching to permanent positions.
Yet the final agreement between the AEU and the Labor government
of Premier John Brumby abandons all of these demands. For all
but first-year and some senior teachers, the AEU has agreed to
a real wage cut that almost exactly corresponds to the governments
initial offer of a 3.25 percent nominal annual increase. The agreement
contains nothing on class sizes, entrenches the ongoing exploitation
of contract teachers, and further advances the governments
right-wing education Blueprint agenda, including introducing
new and unexplained categories of teachers such as executive
class and teachers assistants.
The Socialist Equality Party noted on May 20: The fact
that many teachers have never heard of these provisions simply
underscores the need for mass meetings and a genuine discussion.
But the AEU is proceeding in precisely the opposite manner, doing
its utmost to spread confusion, conceal the real terms of the
deal, and intimidate and bully members into accepting it... At
every stage of the campaign, the union has fought to keep its
membership isolated and in the dark and to stifle genuine discussion
and debate. This situation can no longer be tolerated. Union branch
meetings should be held at every school and resolutions passed
rejecting the agreement and demanding that the union convene a
mass meeting. (See Demand
mass meetings to reject Victorian teachers union sell-out!)
The AEU has organised the delegates meetings to involve
no more than 5 percent of the union membership, with one delegate
per 20 members. In reality, the numbers involved will be significantly
less, because in several schools not enough teachers have nominated
themselves as delegates to fill the 20-1 ratio. The scheduled
meetingsincluding only five for the entire Melbourne metropolitan
areaare deliberately being held on school days in the afternoon
in an attempt to lower attendance. In at least one schoolBacchus
Marsh Secondary Collegeteachers have been told that they
will not be permitted to attend the meetings as observers.
The delegates meetings are not the appropriate forums
for voting on the AEU deal, and teachers will be entitled to reject
as illegitimate any outcome in which it is formally approved.
In at least one school, Niddrie Secondary College in Melbournes
western suburbs, the union branch secretary rejected calls from
teachers to hold a branch meeting in order to elect delegates.
Instead, a secret ballot on the agreement was heldwithout
any discussion or distribution of material, including the text
of the deal itselfand delegates were then to be simply appointed,
unelected, by the pro-agreement union leadership.
A meeting was convened only after Frank Gaglioti, a member
of the Socialist Equality Party (SEP) and teacher at the school,
organised a petition to insist on a discussion. Even then the
AEU leaders moved to quash debate by immediately announcing the
result of the schools secret ballot27 teachers (66
percent) for the agreement and 14 (34 percent) against. The atmosphere
was designed to stifle discussion and intimidate younger teachers
and those on contracts. In the end, only two teachers spoke. The
rest of the meeting was devoted to the undemocratic process of
binding the delegates votes. Three were deputised by the
union branch leadership, with two instructed to vote for and one
against. No other teachers were invited to attend the delegates
meetings.
There is no doubt that what happened at Niddrie has been repeated
in other schools across the state. The question needs to be posed
to AEU Victorian President Mary Bluett and her colleagues: how
many school branch secretaries have upheld their members
right to vote for their delegates? How many have simply appointed
the unions trusted supporters?
In some other schools, where the union has successfully browbeaten
a majority into approving the agreement, the significant minorities
that opposed it have been completely disenfranchised. Every delegate
has been bound to vote yes at the ratification meetings.
At Footscray City College, for example, while 45 percent of teachers
at the union meeting voted against the agreement, the union succeeded
in pushing through a resolution mandating every delegate to vote
in favour. SEP member Will Marshall denounced the move as a means
of leaving nearly half the branch without a voice.
Mounting anger and hostility
There is no question that many teachers are bitterly hostile
to the proposed agreement and are beginning to air their views.
In response, the AEU has resorted to crude intimidation tactics.
In a letter dated May 23, and mailed to every union member in
Victoria, Bluett claimed that rejecting the deal would see teachers
lose one significant advantage in terms of the community
who have supported our claim of lowest funded schools: lowest
paid teachers. The union president also referred to
the initial media presentation of the agreementwhich featured
the AEUs boast that Victorian teachers had won a historic
victory and were now the highest paid in the countryas reason
why the general public would not understand or support a no
vote.
The letters contents are a desperate and cynical fraud.
First of all, teachers have won overwhelming support throughout
their dispute. Rejection of the AEUs betrayalcombined
with a sustained political and industrial campaign in defence
of public educationwould resonate widely among wide layers
of the working class also facing declining living standards and
working conditions. These include teachers in other states such
as New South Wales, who have recently launched industrial action
against the introduction of performance pay and other regressive
measures, Qantas engineers fighting a real wage cut, and NSW electricity
workers facing a state Labor government privatisation drive.
Secondly, the letter underscores the real reason for the public
declarations of victory by Bluett and the Brumby government
as soon as the deal was finalised: to ensure a yes
vote and sideline opposition.
AEU officials have visited several schools in the past week,
threatening that if the agreement is rejected teachers will be
left with nothing. At one school, according to its principal Peter
Lord, AEU Deputy President Ann Taylor declared that there was
no point fighting for improved conditionssuch as better
staff-student ratiosbecause there were simply not enough
staff available. Of course, she failed to explain the role of
the union over the past two and a half decades in presiding over
the destruction of thousands of jobs!
Many schools have rejected the proposed agreement, such as
Braybrook Secondary College, Daylesford Secondary College, Moonee
Ponds West Primary, Lilydale Secondary College and Dandenong High
School, University High School, and Brunswick Secondary College.
A number of schools have also passed no-confidence and censure
motions against Bluett and the AEU executive. Teachers at Daylesford
Secondary College unanimously approved a resolution censuring
Bluett for misrepresenting the proposed Schools Agreement
2008 as a major salary win for teachers when this is patently
unjustified by any objective analysis. Another unanimous
resolution condemn[ed] the AEU leadership for issuing press
releases/information which has resulted in a public impression
that all teachers are getting a $10,000 pay rise.
The bureaucratically-run and undemocratic delegates meetings
will not reflect the true depth of teachers anger and opposition
to the AEUs manoeuvres. Among those silenced will be thousands
of contract teachersnow nearly 20 percent of the total workforce.
Few contract teachers are likely to feel confident enough to speak
against the agreement at the ratification meetings, given their
school principals and other members of the panel who can review
their employment are likely to be present. Young contract teachers
who fear losing their jobs have been among the most determined
opponents of the deal. Last year 75 percent of Victorian first-year
teachers were on contracts, while 60 percent of third-year graduate
teachers were still employed on this insecure basis.
The Socialist Equality Party has opposed the AEU-Brumby government
agreement from the outset. We call on all teachers, whether delegates
or not, to attend the ratification meetings to express their opposition
to the proposed deal.
Members and supporters of the SEP also call on delegatesirrespective
of whether they are for, against, or undecided on the proposed
deal itselfto uphold the right of all teachers, including
those on contracts, to become fully appraised of the agreements
provisions through a full and open discussion and debate, and
to defend the right of all teachers to vote on a document that
is going to determine their wages and conditions, and the future
of public education, over the next three years.
To this end, we call on delegates to move a motion at the outset
of the delegates meetings to suspend standing orders and
discuss the following resolution: This ratification meeting
affirms the rights of all AEU members to participate in a full
and democratic discussion on the AEU agreement and the future
of public education. We call for mass meetings to be held in metropolitan
and regional areas in order to allow teachers to debate and cast
a fully informed vote.
See Also:
Australia: Escalating hostility
among Victorian teachers to government-union deal
[27 May 2008]
Australia: Details of the proposed
AEU-Victorian government sell-out teachers agreement
[24 May 2008]
Australia: Demand mass meetings
to reject Victorian teachers union sell-out!
[20 May 2008]
Socialist candidate
warns Victorian teachers of union betrayal
[22 November 2007]
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