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Australia: Escalating hostility among Victorian teachers to
government-union deal
By our reporters
27 May 2008
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Opposition among Victorian school teachers is rapidly escalating
as details of the proposed industrial agreement negotiated by
the Australian Education Union (AEU) and the state Labor government
become more widely understood. A broad discussion is emerging,
through emails, the internet, letters to the major newspapers,
and school union branch resolutions registering teachers
hostility to both the government of Premier John Brumby and the
AEU.
The deal, which was initially announced on May 5, but only
made available to teachers on May 14, was initially hailed by
the media, the government, and the union as a major victory for
Victorias teachers. An examination of the yet-to-be-ratified
agreement, however, makes clear that none of the central demands
raised by teachers in the course of their year-long campaignincluding
a 30 percent pay rise over 3 years, maximum class sizes of 20,
and a significant shift away from contract teaching to permanent
positionshave been met. Instead, most teachers face a real
wage cut and the further undermining of public education through
the governments right-wing Blueprint. (See Details of the proposed AEU-Victorian
government sell-out teachers agreement)
Many of the emails being circulated around the schools have
focussed on the issue of teachers salaries. Earlier this
year, the union announced it was dropping its 30 percent pay claim
in favour of parity with New South Wales rates. This represented
a major capitulationNSW teachers, like those throughout
the country, are grossly underpaid, and forced to work in under-resourced
schools. Nevertheless, the union has failed to deliver even on
this scaled-back target.
In one email, titled Spin v Reality, Brent Houghton,
a third-year teacher from Lilydale High School, noted that under
the agreement, some Victorian teachers will be more than $12,000
or 16 percent worse off in 2008 than their NSW counterparts. He
contrasted this with AEU Victorian President Mary Bluetts
statement when the deal was first announced: I am delighted
and relievedwe have gone from being the lowest paid teachers
in the country to the highest.
The email also counterposed the spin of Bluetts
claim that, Its a complex arrangement, but the least
any teacher is going to get out of this is somewhere between five
and six percent per annum, with the reality that many teachers
will receive little more than the governments initial pay
offer of an annual 3.25 percent increase. Under the union agreement,
those at the top of the Leading Teacher scale, for
example, receive $11 per year (i.e., less than $1 per month)
more than what they would have done under the governments
proposed 3.25 percent. Houghton notes: In 2011, the most
experienced Leading Teachers will be paid 21 cents a week more
than the government had originally offered. Thats an improvement
of half a cent per working hour!
Much of the teachers anger has been directed against
the union for issuing confusing and misleading information that
deliberately conceals the true situation. Pay tables published
on the AEU website appeared to claim as a new pay rise salary
increases that would have happened anyway as teachers moved up
the pay scale each year.
Justin Mahoney, one of the 2,700 members of the group Better
Pay for Victorian Teachers on the social networking web
site Facebook, compared the unions presentation of the new
pay scales with the actual figures listed in the proposed agreement.
Why are there two documents? he asked. Why is
our own union selling us a deal which is absolutely unacceptable?
The union executive is a shamthe membership at school has
already called for them to explain themselves but they are ignoring
the validity of what we are saying.
In the same forum, Natalie Baker added: I am completely
dubious about this deal. It is so complicated that
it makes no sense and its hard to understand what it is
really about... How hard is it to put out a table with four columns,
Your Wage 2008, Your Wage 2009, Your
Wage 2010, Your Wage 2011, so that we can compare
where we are now against where we will be in the future? I will
not be voting on this agreement in its current state and presentation.
On May 20, clearly under pressure, the AEU issued a new document
defending the deal on its web sites frequently asked
questions, as well as a reply to Brent Houghtons Spin
v Reality email. The FAQ amounted to little more than a
rehash of the bureaucracys distortions and evasions. None
of Houghtons facts were challengedinstead the union
insisted it had never promised to secure anything more! At
no time has the AEU said that every teacher would be paid the
same as teachers in NSW, the union stated. The media
quote assumes that Mary Bluett was quoted correctly [when she
said that Victorian teachers were now the highest paid in the
country] and, depending on how you interpret it, it is true that
Victorian teachers at the top of the scale will be paid the highest
salary in Australia.
The union also denied that anyone faced a real wage cut, citing
Victorian Treasury inflation estimates of 3 percent inflation
this year and less than 3 percent from 2009 to 2011. This argument
underscores the social gulf that separates the privileged AEU
bureaucracy from ordinary teachers. Teachers, along with the rest
of the working class in Australia, have faced escalating costs
of living for housing, groceries, fuel, and other necessities,
which have all far exceeded the official inflation rate. With
rising interest rates, a deepening rental crisis in Melbourne,
and petrol prices tipped to rise as high as $2 a litre later this
year, there is no doubt that many Victorian teachers will see
their real wages significantly eroded under the AEU-backed agreement.
The reality was inadvertently confirmed by the federal Labor
governments finance minister Lindsay Tanner in an interview
with the Business Spectator web site on May 17. Asked whether
the teachers agreement could spill over to other
sections of the working class, potentially fuelling inflation,
he replied: Im not sure that [these concerns] are
justified, because I note that the Victorian increase is a bit
more complex than its been portrayed and there are sections
of the teaching fraternity that have been jumping up and down
saying theyre being betrayed and so forth. Often with these
things you get dual presentations. You get one presentation for
general public consumption, which is were being really
nice to teachers, and then you get particular teachers or
the teachers union jumping up and down and saying look
what a great victory weve just won and then elsewhere
youve got the fine print which shows that its slightly
more sober and less dramatic than a simple glance suggests.
Tanners extraordinary remark reveals just how conscious
the Labor governments of both Prime Minister Kevin Rudd and Premier
Brumby areworking hand in hand with the AEU in attempting
to con the teachers. While the presentation for general
public consumptionfor teachers and working people
as a wholeinvolves claims of some major victory, the realitywhich
is well understood by the Labor Party, big business, and the union
bureaucracyis that the new agreement undermines teachers
wages and public education as a whole.
As the Socialist Equality Partys May 20 statement, Demand mass meetings to reject Victorian
teachers union sell-out!, noted: The fight
to defend wages and conditions can only be sustained and developed
to the extent that it is based on an entirely opposed political
perspective to that of the unions and the Labor government: one
that starts, not with accommodating to the demands of the financial
markets and big business, but with the intellectual and creative
needs of the states young people and the right of all teachers
to a secure, well-paid job, with decent conditions in fully resourced
schools and classrooms.
The corporatisation of education
Teachers hostility to the proposed deal has by no means
been confined to the question of pay. The unions abject
capitulation on class sizes and contract teacherswho now
make up 20 percent of the total workforcehas generated significant
opposition. There is also discussion about the introduction of
new categories of teachers, such as teachers assistants
and executive principals, new mechanisms to sack existing
teachers, on the basis that they have become disengaged,
and the incorporation of an updated version of the state government-AEU
Blueprint for Early Childhood Development and School Reform
into the agreement. These issues were stressed by teachers who
recently spoke with the World Socialist Web Site.
There is not enough debate of the broader issuesnot
just wages, but the constant pressure, Hilary, an art teacher
who works as a casual emergency teacher, told the WSWS. The
Blueprints introduction of continuous
improvement means a juggernaut involving ridiculous pressure
on teachers. How are teachers to keep improving? Surely
there is an endgame? All it means is continuous stress. Young
teachers are not encouraged to consider what education is for
in a general sense. My friend had a ghastly experience of the
contract circuit. For five years she was on contracts for three
months at a time. It is horrendous, you barely get to know the
kids names or where the rooms are. All the time you are
busting yourself to get a foot in the door.
What does the Labor government mean by underperforming
schools? I have been an emergency teacher in Dandenong, which
has a large Sudanese community, where I was working with a Year
One class. There was literally only one pencil per student and
one kid had no pencil, so I couldnt get him to write. I
was appalled. It was so tightall these little people learning
to writeand there werent enough grey lead pencils!
Thats all they had. How could you force the staff to work
harder under these conditions?
This category of assistant teachers is not
good. I worked in central London about five years ago, and they
were used there a lot. In secondary schools they would work with
a single student with a disability. In primary schools they were
cutting and pastingmenial jobs to supposedly save the teachers
time. But I think it was covering up the shortage of trained teachers.
In London the shortage was rife, they were using lots of emergency
teachers, and about 50 percent of the staff was on short-term
contracts. These assistants provided some continuity, they knew
the class, so that when an emergency teacher came, an assistant
could help. But there is always supposed to be a four-year trained
teacher in front of the classsooner or later there would
be no teacher for an hour or so, and the assistant could be pressured
to bridge the gap.
As for Rudds education revolutionis it always
a Labor government when there is an inflationary cycle? The Liberals
are definitely imploding, because they are not in power. I dont
think there is any difference between the [former] Howard government
and the Rudd governmentan ongoing agenda is beginning to
emerge. You can see that a confrontation is looming. If the agreement
was as great as the union says it is, then why would they be so
worried about holding a mass meeting?
Paul Spencer, an English teacher with ten years experience
who now teaches at Braybrook Secondary College, told the WSWS:
I see this as the corporatisation of education. Even the
terminology, such as executive class, is oriented
to business. Im concerned at how they make the decision
that someone is disengaged. The assistant teachers
are a cost-cutting exercisean assistant is a diminished
teacher.
Teachers at my school are very angry. We have had some
big turn-outs at union meetings. Then the AEU leadership got wind
that we were discussing the agreement with other schools. [AEU
Vice President Brian] Henderson came to our school to hose this
all down. Most of the teachers did not accept what he said and
wanted to pass no confidence motions. Their main complaint was
the lack of consultation and failure to publish the material.
We were also really frustrated that our ordinary increments were
included in the unions presentation of the agreement to
make it seem we were getting a pay rise.
David Gordonwhose teaching career spans several decades
and who now works at Dandenong High Schoolsaid: With
this agreement the union tried the same sort of methods they always
use. They announced the agreement through the media, put a positive
spin on it, nobody would be left out, there would be a pay rise.
We were being kept deliberately in the dark. When we started receiving
emails about the agreement, people were really keen to read them,
and they helped to accelerate an atmosphere of scepticism. All
sorts of people at school were asking me what did it really mean?
Young teachers were ambushed, they were confused. They dont
know whos got any authority to make an assessment.
Conversations around the school were about the credibility
of the AEU executive, a suspicion that they were not representing
us properly. It became apparent there was no improvement to teaching
conditions. They were asking: Have we still got the same
as in the old agreement? Through that agreement wed
seen the slow erosion of conditions. Everyone believesa
number having worked overseas and seen itthat teaching assistants
will be what people call half-price teachers, child minders. When
we go into team teaching, an assistant will replace teacher absences.
As for so-called disengaged teachers, no
one is openly talking about that. Who is a disengaged teacher?
It will be those who are willing to make criticisms on any issue.
Executive principals? Will this be a way to close down underperforming
schools? This is another attack in line with the basic philosophy
of privatisationto reduce the number of parents willing
to send their kids to the local public school.
There are confrontations coming. Teachers are becoming
more conscious. They are realising that this is them being attacked.
Now sidestepping the issue is no longer possible. They have to
start seeing things from a different perspective. Thats
why people are starting to read the WSWS. Thats what we
have to doget more information out. There is a vacuum and
people are looking.
See Also:
Australia: Demand mass meetings to reject
Victorian teachers union sell-out!
[20 May 2008]
Australia: Victorian teachers
face fight with Labor governments over pay and conditions
[13 February 2008]
Australia: Victorian teachers
union blocks discussion on strategy to oppose government attacks
[26 February 2008]
Socialist candidate
warns Victorian teachers of union betrayal
[22 November 2007]
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