Members have voted in unprecedented numbers to support industrial action
following the employers’ refusal to negotiate with AUT. It is a stunning
result, and represents a high
turnout for a ballot of this kind. The full ballot result is as follows:
Given the strength of your support for the union’s position, I have today
written once again to UCEA - the university employers’ body – asking them
to resume negotiations with AUT on your
pay and grading. My message to the employers is clear. Members have confirmed
to the employers what AUT’s negotiators have been saying for months. Without
further meaningful negotiations a damaging dispute is now inevitable.
Without your support, the employers now have no mandate to introduce their plans
which would:
The employers’ proposals are complex, but come down to this. Your
pay and grading will be based on where you work, not on what you do.
Of course, industrial action should never be undertaken lightly –
especially by dedicated professionals who care passionately about their
students and about the service
they provide.
That is why AUT has sought to change the employers’ minds through negotiation
for more than two years.
The employers have had endless opportunities, but this is now the
end of the road. We either take action to bring them to their senses
or we give up.
That is why AUT’s Executive is calling on you to participate in a
programme of industrial action which will begin with a UK wide week
of action – starting on Monday 23 February.
There will be one day of strike action in England, Wales, Scotland
and Northern Ireland during that week with a further centrepiece day
when members in all the home nations will be on
strike – Wednesday 25 February. This means that during the week beginning
Monday 23 February, you will be asked to take two days strike action
– one UK day, and one day limited to the country in which your employer
is based. You can find our more details about the week of action at
http://www.aut.org.uk/index.cfm?articleid=707
On Monday 1 March AUT members are called upon to begin a programme
of continuous action short of a strike. The action short of a strike
includes a boycott of assessment activity,
job evaluation and staff appraisals as well as refusal to either provide
cover for absent staff or to honour established call-out arrangements.
Your local association will provide you with more guidelines on what
this means, and guidance is also available on the website at http://www.aut.org.uk/index.cfm?articleid=707
I am also pleased to say that AUT has linked up with the National
Union of Students (NUS) to campaign jointly against the marketisation
of higher education. Our dispute is about pay.
Their campaign is about variable fees and the need to increase funding
in the sector but both sides are working together because we recognise
that staff and students have a major stake in the future of our sector.
This means that in the same week as we begin our strike action, the
NUS will be calling upon its members to take part in a university shutdown.
Aside from the UK wide student shutdown which
will take place on Wednesday 25 February,the NUS informed us that students
will be taking part in ‘disruptive action’ all week. High on their
agenda will be solidarity with AUT members.
A recent opinion poll, commissioned by AUT, showed that 65% of ordinary
students support AUT’s industrial action against the employers. This
is because they recognise that variable pay
and variable fees are both part of the same agenda which seeks to bring
the market into higher education. Who will suffer if not staff and
students?
Many members have said to me that they fully support the union’s position,
but that they are worried that we will not succeed. I understand this
anxiety, and I will make no promises.
What I do know is that without united action by all AUT members – we
definitely will not win.
I also know that our union is united as never before in this fight
to defend your pay and conditions. If we don’t succeed, career earnings
will fall, a process of localised job evaluation
will begin in which we have no confidence, meaningful national bargaining
will be destroyed and large parts of AUT’s membership will have their
pay and grading be split off from their academic colleagues.
We must win this fight if we are to defend our profession, and my
promise is that you will have the full backing and resources of the
entire union:
If every member gets behind our democratic decision,
If every member called to do so takes action; and
If every member supports their colleagues
then we can win
So, between us let’s make the week of action the biggest shutdown
of higher education ever seen. Then, let’s make the assessment boycott
and other further actions really stick. Your
future may depend on it.
Yours sincerely,
Sally Hunt, General Secretary
Members (excluding clinical academics and heads of institutions),
employed by the institutions below, were included in this
ballot and are now being called to take strike action indicated in this
schedule. All these members are called to take action short of a
strike beginning on and continuing from 1 March 2004.
Employers in Wales: strike action called for 23 February 2004 and 25 February
2004
| University of Wales Aberystwyth |
University of Wales College of Medicine |
University of Wales Swansea |
| University of Wales Bangor |
University of Wales |
University of Glamorgan |
| Cardiff University |
University of Wales Lampeter |
|
Employers in England including the Open University: strike action
called for 24 February 2004 and 25 February 2004
| Aston University |
School of Oriental and African Studies |
Harper Adams
University College |
| University of Bath |
School of Pharmacy |
University of Hertfordshire |
| University of Birmingham |
University of London (Senate House) |
University
of Huddersfield |
| University of Bradford |
University College London |
Kingston University |
| University of Bristol |
Loughborough University |
Leeds Metropolitan
University |
| Brunel University |
University of Manchester |
Liverpool John Moores
University |
| University of Cambridge |
University of Newcastle Upon Tyne |
Manchester
Metropolitan University |
| City University |
University of Nottingham |
Middlesex University |
| University of Durham |
Open University |
University College Northampton |
| University of East Anglia |
University of Oxford |
University of Northumbria
at Newcastle |
| University of Essex |
University of Reading |
Nottingham Trent University |
| University of Exeter |
Royal College of Art |
Oxford Brookes University |
| University of Hull |
University of Salford |
University of Plymouth |
| Keele University |
University of Sheffield |
University of Portsmouth |
| University of Kent |
University of Southampton |
St Martin’s College |
| University of Lancaster |
University of Surrey |
Sheffield Hallam University |
| University of Leeds |
University of Sussex |
Southampton Institute |
| University of Leicester |
UMIST |
South Bank University |
| University of Liverpool |
University of Warwick |
Staffordshire University |
| Birkbeck College |
University of York |
University of Sunderland |
| Goldsmiths College |
Royal Agricultural College |
University of Teesside |
| Institute of Education |
Bolton Institute |
Thames Valley University |
| King’s College London |
University of Brighton |
University of the West
of England |
| London School of Economics |
University of Central Lancashire |
University
of Westminster |
| London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine |
Coventry University |
University of Wolverhampton |
| Queen Mary (University of London) |
De Montfort University |
University
College Worcester |
| Royal Holloway (University of London) |
University of East London |
Writtle
College |
| Royal Veterinary College |
Edge Hill College of Higher Education |
London
Metropolitan University |
| St George’s Hospital Medical School |
University of Greenwich |
|
Employers in Scotland: strike action called for 25 February 2004 and 26 February
2004
| University of Aberdeen |
University of St Andrews |
Napier University |
| University of Dundee |
University of Stirling |
University of Paisley |
| University of Edinburgh |
University of Strathclyde |
Queen Margaret
University College |
| University of Glasgow |
University of Abertay Dundee |
Robert Gordon
University |
| Heriot-Watt University |
Glasgow Caledonian University |
|
Employers in Northern Ireland: strike action called for 25 February 2004 and
27 February 2004
| Queen’s University of Belfast |
University of Ulster |
Any members employed by subsidiary university companies, the Medical
Research Council, or otherwise not employed by the higher
education institution at which they are an AUT member, were not included
in the industrial action ballot and are not included in this
call to take action.