UCU Rising – there’s still time to vote

First of all thank you for your continued support of both UCU nationally and of your local branch. UCU is its members and you are vital to our continued work within Heriot Watt and also with national collective bargaining.

I received my ballot papers the day after they were sent (which is highly unusual). I had just returned from visiting my local CWU picket line to taking UCU’s best wishes to our brilliant fellow trade unionists working as posties. CWU have always supported our pickets, visiting to stand with us in solidarity. Twice now people in the street have stopped me to say thank you for standing with the posties and to say good luck in our ballots.

This morning I had a knock at the door and it was my lovely postie with a parcel, saying they remembered me from visiting their pickets and they wanted to see how I was and to say thank you. A timely and moving reminder that we are not in this alone. We are part of a wider labour movement, standing together, in solidarity, to create the change all of our workplaces so desperately need.

If you have not returned your ballot papers yet, please do so ASAP and be part of a collective movement with your postie, trail workers, dock workers, barristers in England and all the other trade unionists voting to stand up for what is right.

Today you will have received an email asking if you have returned your ballot papers. We ask so that we can see where we are in terms of ballots having been received and if there are members with any questions about the ballots.

If you would like to know more about the campaign or need to order a replacement ballot you can find that information here https://www.ucu.org.uk/rising

Yours in solidarity,
Kate (HW UCU equalities officer and UCU Scotland Equalities Officer)

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

 

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.

We cannot accept the unacceptable

The UCU ballot opens on Tuesday and you can expect your ballot papers to arrive by the end of the week.

Pay

Yet again we are facing a real terms pay cut but this time a bigger pay cut than ever before. Our employers have over successive years chosen to offer us below inflation pay rises. Even when times were relatively good they made cuts to our pay. They have nipped half a percent here, 2 percent there. We have had sub inflation pay rises imposed on us since 2008. Remember the year they gave us 0%!? It all adds up.

They chose not to match inflation when the sun was shining, now things are looking increasingly bleak with many of us facing a cold winter of fuel poverty, our employers are trying to convince us there is no alternative than to offer us the biggest real terms pay cut yet by offering only 3%. If you are not already annoyed enough, look at the UCU modeller to see how far you pay has eroded. Pay modeller

Enough is enough- we are not asking for a pay rise, we are fighting against yet another, massive, pay cut.

Pensions

On pensions- the USS deficit has vanished. Who could have predicted that? We did.

It is infuriating to yet again be proven right and yet not listened to.

Deficit recovery contributions, the extra money our employer is charged to shore up the pension if USS declares a deficit, are at 6.5%, but USS says 0% is required. #thereIsNoDeficit. That is an extra 6.5% our employer is paying that they don’t need to. That is 6.5% that could be going into our pension benefits or into our pay.

Not only that, the future service cost- that is the amount USS predicts it will cost to fund our pension has dropped from the 40 to 50% to ~21% for our current slashed benefits and low thirties percent to keep our previous benefits that were cut in April- that is within the current contribution levels.

All of this is based on USS’s own, contested and overly pessimistic valuation methods.

Yet USS despite being shown to be wrong, again, are saying that they cannot assume the current rosy picture is long term. They were quick enough to cut based on a deficit that was a vanishing artefact, slow to restore our benefits when things improve.

I know it is really galling that we keep having to fight not to be put to further disadvantage. However, we cannot let up. Instead we need to increase the size of the fight. An aggregated ballot will allow us to do this. This is a once in a decade opportunity to actually end these rumbling disputes and it has never been more important.

Thus far we have been able to hold back worse changes: we stopped our employer from allowing USS to get rid of our DB pensions altogether, we reduced the level of the recent cuts, we have shown a light on the failing if USS through the JEP and the increased interest in the FT etc. and I have no doubt had it not been for our action the disappointing pay offers would have been even lower.

We made significant progress with the Marking and Assessment Boycott. Our employer is one of those who have said should there be an upside in USS they would prioritise restoring benefits. Employers representing 32% of members of USS by contributions have taken this position (this does not mean the other 68% are against it- most have no stated position).

If we can bring out the whole sector we can force other employers to move to this position. An aggregated result is a game changer. some employers, particularly the larger richer and arguably more influential employers, sit there happily watching other HEIs suffer- a full aggregated ballot will bring out those HEIs some of them for the first time- they have no experience of strike action and they will panic. They can no longer sit back while strikes happens elsewhere.

We have succeeded in making the employers’, and USS’s position, uncomfortable, this time we need to make it impossible for them to maintain.

What you need to do

You have all been outstanding in the past at returning your ballot for the branch, this time we need you to lend your vote to the whole sector. We have refused to accept the unacceptable before and we are not accepting it now. Please return your ballot when it arrives and let the branch know.

Let’s finish what we have started, this time with all our colleagues across the sector all able to take part in the fight for all our pensions and all our pay and alongside our fellow trade unionists in other unions. The more of us who are out the sooner we win.

We literally cannot afford not to vote to fight.

Together we will win.

Lied to over the USS pension cuts?

The latest figures from USS show a £1.8bn surplus at 30 June 2022, up £15.9bn barely 18 months on from a £14.1 deficit in March 2020.

The 2020 valuation which was used to justify pension cuts of up to 35% of future guaranteed income was undertaken just as the markets crashed because of the Covid-19 pandemic.

UCU have always argued that the scheme was in strong position with excellent long term prospects. We have been lied to, and to add insult to injury it has also been revealed that USS have paid £108,000 in performance bonuses to chief exec Bill Galvin this year on top of his staggering £480,000 salary.

We wait now to see if UUK and the vice chancellors will withdraw these cuts and give staff their deferred wages back.

 

Find out how much you pay has been cut since 2009

Since 2009 average pay in the sector has been cut by more than 25% relative to RPI, and on top of this many of us find ourselves working extra unpaid hours.

Use the UCU HE pay modeller to discover just how much has been cut from your salary while our vice chancellors have continued to earn huge salaries and waste money on expensive vanity project when they could have been investing in staff.

Compare what you are taking home for all those extra hours with what our vice chancellors have been earning since 2009.

Emoluments of Principal and Vice Chancellor

Annual Accounts 2022 £338,0001
Annual Accounts 2021 £312,0001
Annual Accounts 2020 £316,0001
Annual Accounts 2019 £309,0001
Annual Accounts 2018 £282,0001
Annual Accounts 2017 £285,0001
Annual Accounts 2016 £272,0001
Annual Accounts 2015 £92,0002 + £189,0003
Annual Accounts 2014 £237,0003
Annual Accounts 2013 £253,0003
Annual Accounts 2012 £207,0003
Annual Accounts 2011 £211,0003
Annual Accounts 2010 £62,0004 + £198,0003
Annual Accounts 2009 £248,0004

Notes:

  1. Professor Richard A Williams
  2. Professor Julian Jones (Acting Principal)
  3. Professor Steve Chapman
  4. Professor Anton Muscatelli