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Australia: NSW teachers strike against attacks on jobs and
conditions
By our reporters
28 May 2008
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More than 34,0000 teachers from New South Wales (NSW) public
schools and Technical and Further Education colleges stopped work
for 24 hours on May 22 in protest against the state Labor governments
attacks on jobs and working conditions.
Since April 28, the Iemma government has introduced a new model
of local recruitment which gives school principals the power to
hand-pick teachers. This replaces a long-standing system in which
the Education Department supplied teachers centrally to the states
2,200 schools. The new principal hire opens the way
for victimisation and favouritism. It will exacerbate the divide
between rich and poor public schools, and pressure principals
to employ under-qualified teachers.
TAFE teachers joined the walkout to express their opposition
to government moves to downgrade TAFE teaching qualifications
from a 700-hour degree or graduate diploma at a university to
a 90-hour course available through private and community colleges.
A rally organised by the NSW Teachers Federation (NSWTF) was
attended by around 3,000 teachers. It was held outside the state
Education Department offices in central Sydney, and protesters
brought flags and banners from schools across the state expressing
their anger at Education Minister John Della Bosca and the departments
Director General, Michael Coutts-Trotter.

While teachers hostility to the governments plans
was clearly evident, the event was tightly stage-managed by the
NSWTF leadership.
Officials explained how the new recruitment methods would widen
the gulf between impoverished and better-off schools and denounced
the state Labor government for abandoning teachers and students.
They also issued vague threats of further industrial action while
telegraphing to the state government that the union could efficiently
deliver staffing changes without dismantling the state-wide employment
system, as it had done before.
NSWTF president Maree OHalloran told teachers the union
had been negotiating staffing agreements with Liberal and Labor
governments for 15 years. But now, she declared, we have
a director-general with no idea about how to staff our schools
other than some sort of managerial theory that we think about
but we dont have any idea how it will work in practice,
and a minister who tells us to suck it and see.
NSWTF senior vice-president Gary Zadkovich said the union had
repeatedly advised the government that an expected increase in
teacher retirement rates could be used as a vacancy-driven
opportunity to achieve a different mix of staff appointments
and that under the 2005-8 staffing agreement, more than 2,500
teachers had been recruited through a form of principal hire.
We have put these ideas on the table, he said,
but they have cast them aside and conduct their policies
by edict. The director general has said he will exercise his managerial
prerogative but he doesnt have a clue about what goes on
in our class rooms in this state.
Zadkovich was cheered when he declared: If these people
think that this is the only action we are going to take theyre
terribly wrong. We will conduct political and industrial action
on this issue next week, next month, next year if necessary. We
will not abandon public school students to the policies that these
people are seeking to impose.

TAFE teachers association president Rob Long denounced
the government for its lack of consultation and said
the government was motivated by short-term budget gain
while NSWTF executive member Laurie Mulholland, a Keira High School
principal, was loudly cheered after he told the rally that many
secondary principals opposed the government changes to staff and
were on strike throughout NSW.
The real agenda, he continued, is to withdraw funding
and resources from public schools with these measures dressed
up in terms like self management of schools, community control
and other Orwellian phrases. The new proposals would introduce
an alien and destructive culture and not deliver any
improvement in student outcomes, extra teachers or dollars to
overcome the chronic under-funding of public schools. Mulholland
called on teachers to support the union campaign for as
long as it takes.
NSWTF deputy president Bob Lipscombe concluded the rally by
reading out messages of support from Australian Education Union
federal president Angelo Gavrielatos and Unions NSW secretary
John Robertson. He called on teachers to lobby their local members
of parliament and the media. Be prepared for further action,
he said, if this government doesnt see sense and commit
itself to genuine negotiations. The meeting chairman closed
the meeting accompanied by chants of We will be back.
Notwithstanding the militant rhetoric, the demagogic denunciations
of Della Bosca or Coutts-Trotter, and the references to more protests,
last weeks walkout was designed to use teachers anger
as leverage in the unions negotiations with the government.
Union officials put no proposal or resolution for future industrial
action to the rally and blocked calls by Socialist Equality Party
member and teacher, Erika Zimmer, to address the meeting. Zimmer
was told by union officials that they were running the rally and
that no speeches from rank and file teachers would be allowed.
The NSWTF has a long record of organising stage-managed protests
while concluding deals with the government that ride roughshod
over members jobs and working conditions. In 2000, it accommodated
to government demands that public schools compete in the education
marketplace. In 2004, the NSWTF refused to mobilise teachers
against demands by the Carr Labor government that the employment
of principals be made conditional on their meeting performance
targets, and in 2005, it signed off on a deal to introduce partial
local selection of teachers.
In reality, the NSWTF has no fundamental opposition to the
Iemma governments demands that public education be made
subordinate to the profit requirements of big business. Prior
to the 24-hour strike, for example, the union published statistics
revealing that 30 percent of the approximately 7,000 teacher vacancies
in 2006-7 had already been filled by local selection.
That is why the defence of public school jobs, conditions and
the educational rights of every student requires, above all, the
development of a political struggle not only against the NSWTF
and the rest of the union bureaucracy, but against the state and
federal Labor governments. As a first step, moves should be made
to link up with the fight currently being waged by Victorian teachers
against a sell-out deal struck between their union and the state
Brumby Labor government, and with teachers around the country.
Such a campaign can only be carried forward on the basis of a
socialist perspective aimed at fundamentally changing the priorities
of economic and social life, including the complete reorganisation
of public education to meet the needs of students, teachers and
all working people, not the demands of corporate Australia.
* * *
Among the teachers at the rally
who spoke with World Socialist Web Site reporters was Selahattin
Fil, a language teacher from Lidcombe primary school.
He said: The state governments main aim is to privatise
public education, just like what its trying to do with hospitals,
roads, water and electricity.
There are no differences between Labor and the Liberals.
I would even say that Labor is worse because they say one thing
and then do the opposite. They say that they support public education,
yet every day spend millions of dollars on the army and warfare
but hardly anything on education.
I dont think the trade unions are playing a good
role either. A one-day strike doesnt do muchobviously
it doesnt hurtbut there should be a general strike
of teachers all around Australia, otherwise these governments
dont give a damn. This is what we need to work towards.
And it seems to me that the unions should oppose Labor and the
Liberal parties. These are system parties, which go up and down
like see-sawsone comes and one goesbut all end up
doing the same thing.
Nawal has been an AMES (Adult Multicultural
Education Services) teacher since 2004. Originally from Lebanon,
she told the WSWS she came to rally in order to defend our
jobs, the future of the children we teach and for better education
services. We need secure employment and more teachers.
We immigrated to Australia for a better life and a future
for ourselves and our kids, she continued, and yet
now it seems to be getting worse here and especially in education.
Education is the most important sector of any country and shouldnt
be run like a business.
Nawal called for national action to defend teachers
jobs and conditions: Ive just picked up a leaflet
about 1968 in France, she continued, when many workers
came out on strike and it was something like a revolution. We
need this to get what we want and for the good of this country.
Tim Jones
from AMES Sydney has been teaching for 23 years. In the
1980s AMES staff, supported by management, went down to Canberra
to lobby the government to get an English-language service for
migrants, and we were successful. Now the present education department
management is happily dismantling teachers gains. Theyre
not replacing permanent teachers who retire and only employing
casuals and full-time temporary, he said.
These are retrograde steps and based on short-term economic
priorities that fail to think about the future. As a teacher Im
concerned about trying to overcome inequity, not having the government
increasing it by directing money to private schools. In many ways
were going backwards.
Greg told the WSWS: Im a TAFE
teacher and very concerned that the present governments
policy is to reduce teachers qualifications. This is happening
in England where they bring in teaching assistants because they
cant get adequate teaching staff. The assistants end up
taking classes and in the UK assistants dont need to have
any teaching qualifications and they cost a lot less money.
The [NSW education] department is trying to bring this
into TAFE in the name of achieving parity with part-time
teachers, who dont need the level of qualifications as full-time
teachers. I understand the need for parity but I think it should
be raising the standards of teachers, not lowering them. We should
be trying for the best we can get, not the worst.
Greg said TAFE teachers also opposed the new staffing arrangements.
The government is trying to divide and conquer teachers.
These issuesschools not being able to get enough teachers
and employing teachers without proper qualificationsare
very closely linked. If the departments staffing scheme
goes ahead it will be very difficult to find teachers to work
in low socio-economic areas and so they will then say, We
cant find people to work with qualifications, so lets
hire people without qualifications.
Lindsay, who has been teaching for 34 years,
said: Im on strike because Ive been in western
Sydney schools and know just how difficult it is, and its
harder than it used to be. Under the current scheme these schools
are guaranteed to get teachers and it is more or less equitable.
Under the intended scheme its a free-for-all with schools
there and in the remote areas of the state being really hard-pressed
to find people. It will be a situation like we have with doctors
and with dentists. Even up in the Blue Mountains region where
I live, which is only 100 kilometres from Sydney, we have trouble
attracting some professions.
Labors supposed to be pro-public education but
I think the reason theyre doing it has to do with the private
school lobby and the weight they have these days. Apart from that
Im a bit puzzled but there is a parallel with the governments
privatisation agenda for the states electricity supplies,
which I dont agree with either. Public utilities as important
as that should remain in governments hands and not be handed
over to businesses, which are all about profits before people.
Linda Noordewier from Kensington primary school
has taught for 25 years: Giving principals the right to
hire and therefore fire teachers is the thin edge of the wedge.
Ive looked at what is happening in Victoria and dont
want this sort of thing coming up here.

Im surprised this is coming from a Labor government
and Im so outraged about it that Im going to vote
Liberal next time. Ive voted Labor all my life but want
to sweep out the dirt. I know that theres probably no real
difference between the two but Im so angry. How dare they
do this to us!
Don Whibley, a primary teacher of 34 years
but currently on leave, told the WSWS: This is more than
just a staffing issue but is about the destruction of public education
as we know it. Labor is moving towards privatisation and handing
powers to principals that can be abused. What were dealing
with is like something from a Liberal government and will bring
about a total change in the work place.
Although you mightnt get as much money as others
when you take on a teaching career, I made the decision because
of certain working conditions. Now the government is getting rid
of these conditionsits like playing football and then
somehow in the middle of the game the goal posts are changed.
See Also:
Australia: Escalating hostility among
Victorian teachers to government-union deal
[27 May 2008]
Australia: NSW teachers strike but union
prepares to deliver staffing changes
[21 May 2008]
Australia: Demand mass meetings to reject
Victorian teachers union sell-out!
[20 May 2008]
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