Dance-offs

Last morning on the picket for this week and we finished with a dance-off between the Dinosaur of Solidarity and Daisy the dog. At the same time our national negotiators are involved in their own dance-off, negotiating with their counterparts from UCEA at ACAS.

At this early stage the rules and processes will be agreed before discussions on a deal can begin. If we hold fast we give our negotiators a much stronger hand in the bargaining process. We don’t want to strike but we need to strike to keep pressure on our employers so that an agreement can be reached.

Re-ballot

Negotiations can take a while, so it is essential that we re-ballot now to have a mandate for another 6 months of industrial action. The aim is to reach agreement but we need to be able to leverage the threat of continuing strikes and marking and assessment boycotts if we are to get the best deal.

Ballot papers will start to arrive from Wednesday 22 February and more information will follow in due course.

Vote Yes to continuing industrial action in the re-ballot and be in the room with your union.

 

Half term heroes

A big thanks to the hard core half term skeleton crew of students and staff who  neglected studies and put home lives aside for picket duties today. All those jobs don’t do themselves.

We will be back tomorrow but much more important than the picket is that we keep up the pressure on our employers by staying out on strike until a settlement is reached. On strike days please observe the virtual picket line and don’t work, don’t attend meetings other than UCU teach outs and members’ meetings, and don’t deal with email or Teams conversations about work.

There is no obligation to tell your line manager or anyone else that you are going to participate in strike action. It is university management’s responsibility to explain to students if classes are to be cancelled on strike days but you may wish to talk to your students before any industrial action, explaining why the union is taking this step and asking them to write to university management to voice their concerns. There is a useful UCU explainer leaflet and we have plenty of paper copy too.

We have the support of students, both local and national, and it is important to remember that staff teaching conditions are also student learning conditions. We are in this together on the picket and at rallies, fighting for a fairer education system.

If you would like to participate in any of the Q+A sessions with students we would be very grateful for volunteers. Please check your HW UCU members emails for a link to a poll of availability or contact a committee member. Sessions generally run from 11-11:30am in the Student Union on selected strike days.

 

 

What’s it all about: 4-Fights

Out of bed early and onto the picket to fight for better pay and working conditions, then through to Glasgow to attend the UCU rally and stand with other staff and students from across Scotland.

Pay and working conditions dispute

The 4-Fights is a national dispute on pay and working conditions. We are asking for:

  • an increase of inflation plus 2% or 12%, whichever is the higher.
  • the elimination of precarious contracts
  • action on gender, ethnic, and disability pay gaps
  • a standard 35 hour week for full time employees with no loss of pay

In May 2022 a pay settlement of 3% was forced on us by our employers. Figures show that we now earn around 25% less than we did in 2009 adjusted for inflation. Our pay demands incorporate an uplift to cover the current cost of living plus recovery of some of this pay erosion. In the latest round of talks UCEA, representing the employers, have made a tiered offer which would see a meagre uplift of only 4-5% for most.

Across the sector around one half of teaching staff are on fixed-term contracts, and two thirds of research-only staff. Despite widespread condemnation many institutions still use zero hour contracts. We are asking for national approach to end these insecure employment practices.

More work needs to be done to tackle equality. There are significant pay gaps between Black and white staff, across genders, and which affect disabled staff. These same groups are disproportionally likely to be on precarious contracts and/or affected unmanageable workloads.

Workloads have soared due to huge class sizes, pressure to secure funding, inefficient IT systems, poor work environments, and the reduction of support through constant cycles of ineffective restructuring. The average working week in higher education is now over 50 hours.

Workload, pay inequality, and insecure contracts are linked. We are forced to do more for less. It undermines our professionalism and affects our health. At the time of writing no commitments have been secured on casualisation, equality, and workloads.

The Principal will say that that every 1% of pay rise increases running costs by £1M and that the university cannot afford it, but 2021 the 5 key management personnel at Heriot-Watt took home more than £1.1M between them. This is the Principal, the Deputy Vice-Principal, the University Secretary, the Global chief Operating Officer and the Global chief Financial Officer. Executive pay costs at Heriot-Watt rose by more than 40% between 2020 and 2021 while staff were offered 0% at the JNCHES national pay negotiations. We seem to be able to afford this.

We can also afford an overspend of around £5M and rising on a catastrophic Oracle ERP project which has so far failed to deliver on anything but the most basic of reporting. And we can also afford to nudge closer and closer to a debt cliff as we borrow to finance vanity projects instead of investing in staff and improving teaching, laboratory, and working spaces – the bricks and mortar of the university in which revenues are earned.

Every year staff are expected to deliver more for less, while the our senior leadership team deliver less for more. We only have to look at staff satisfaction surveys and student feedback to see where the problems lie. We demand better for staff. Fair pay, reasonable workloads, and a safe stress-free workplace that is environmentally sustainable. Join us on the next picket on Valentine’s Day 14 February and help make our employers show staff some love.

If you can’t attend in person please observe the strike. Don’t work. Don’t check your email. Don’t participate in virtual meetings about work. On non-strike days we continue to work action short of a strike (ASOS). This includes: working to contract; not covering for absent colleagues; removing uploaded materials related to, and/or not sharing materials related to, lectures or classes that will be or have been cancelled as a result of strike action; not rescheduling lectures or classes cancelled due to strike action; and not undertaking any voluntary activities.

The longer the picket line, the shorter the dispute

Noticed has been served that strike action will be taking place in November as follows:

  • Thursday 24 November
  • Friday 25 November
  • Wednesday 30 November (with a national demonstration at Kings Cross in London)

We will also be commencing Action Short of Strike (ASOS) from Wednesday 23 November. This means:

  • work to contract (meaning that you only fulfil the duties explicitly expressed in your contract)
  • not undertake voluntary activities
  • not cover for absent colleagues
  • refuse to reschedule classes missed due to industrial action
  • remove materials for classes that would have taken place on strike days from online learning platforms.

Our message to the employers is clear, and this is just the start. If negotiations are not heading in the right direction by the new year, then we will commence escalating action including a marking and assessment boycott.

Financial support will be available for those who need it, and more information will be circulated shortly.

We need to deliver the kind of action that makes our employers, led by vice-chancellors with huge pay packets, sit up and listen.

UCU Rising: halfway through the ballot

We know that some of you still have concerns about voting YES in this ballot. That is why our general secretary Jo Grady last night answered your difficult questions about the ballot in a UCU Live Q&A session which you can replay here.

We are now officially halfway through our higher education ballot window but we cannot afford to take our foot off the gas now. If you have already voted or need a replacement ballot please let us know now.

Winning this ballot is the only way that we can bring your employers back to the negotiating table, the only way that we can improve your working conditions, and the only way that we can fix the injustices of the higher education sector.

UCU’s demands on pay and pensions

Our demands are reasonable and affordable but we need to win a massive YES vote in the ballot.

Pay

  • an increase to all spine points on the national pay scale of at least inflation (RPI) + 2% or 12%
  • nationally-agreed action, using and intersectional approach, to close the gender, ethnic, and disability pay gaps
  • an agreed framework to eliminate precarious employment practices by universities

Pensions

  • UUK should agree to withdraw their benefit cuts and put pressure on USS to restore benefits to 2021 levels as soon as possible.
  • UUK should put strong pressure on USS to ensure that the next and all subsequent valuations are moderately prudent and evidence based. Prudence should be defined in terms of the likelihood of all pensions being paid from investment returns and contributions going forward.

The full Higher Education Joint Unions’ Claim for 2022/23 can be found at https://www.ucu.org.uk/media/12528/HE-unions-claim-2022-23/pdf/TUJNCHESclaim202223FINAL.pdf

 

I’m voting YES

You have all been outstanding at returning your ballots in the past. Please keep it up and vote YES then let the branch know when you have posted it off.

Please help us by posting a picture to social media with the hashtag of #ucuRISING and tag us at @UCUHWU on Facebook or @UCU_HWUBranch on Twitter. If you don’t have social media you can email your photos to John at the local branch.

This has never been a better time to get involved with union activity at branch level. If you would like to help spread the word please contact Joss at the local branch committee.

Scotland Demands a Pay Rise

Our HWUCU branch jointed trade unionists from across Scotland to march on Parliament in the rain yesterday in protest of continuing pay cuts as the cost-of-living crisis continues to push families across Scotland into poverty.

We demand decent working and living conditions #ScotlandDemandsBetter.

The ballot is open, vote YES/YES

The ballot packs from Civica (CEC) went into the post yesterday and some will already have been delivered. You should also be receiving your #ucuRising campaign material, including a poster in the post.

You will receive two ballot papers in one envelope and with one return envelope for both ballots. Please complete and return your ballots at the earliest opportunity.

Our key demands are

  • a fair pay rise
  • meaningful commitment to tackle casualisation
  • meaningful agreement on workloads
  • action on equality pay gaps
  • restoration of pension benefits
  • moderately prudent evidence based USS pension fund valuations in future

The full Higher Education Joint Unions’ Claim for 2022/23 can be found at https://www.ucu.org.uk/media/12528/HE-unions-claim-2022-23/pdf/TUJNCHESclaim202223FINAL.pdf

Deliveries may be delayed by industrial action being undertaken by CWU on Thursday and Friday. If your ballot has not arrived yet, please be patient. We need supportive of our posties #StandByYourPost.

Can we ask that that you take a selfie when posting your ballot, with your poster in shot if possible, and post online with the hashtag of #UCUrising and tag/mention HWUCU branch on Facebook at https://www.facebook.com/UCUHWU/ or Twitter at https://twitter.com/UCU_HWUBranch. If you don’t have social media email your photos to John at the local branch committee.

No problem if your paws are camera shy, please just post your ballot and let our GTVO team know that you have voted when they get in touch. This is a big national aggregated ballot this time so there may be communications from both the local branch and UCU HQ but we will do our best to avoid asking you again once you have already notified that you have voted.

This is a great time to get involved with union activity at branch level. If you would like to help spread the word please contact Joss at the local branch committee.