The Guardian Australia

Four private Australian universiti­es allowed to access jobkeeper payments

- Naaman Zhou

Four of Australia’s private universiti­es have been made eligible for jobkeeper, while three more public universiti­es have rejected a deal negotiated by the tertiary sector union to save jobs in exchange for pay cuts.

Notre Dame University, Bond University, Torrens University and the University of Divinity have been granted an exemption to the existing jobkeeper rules that currently exclude all of Australia’s public universiti­es from accessing the now $70bn support payment.

Australia’s public universiti­es are currently ineligible for the scheme because they must show a drop of revenue over six months, rather than over one month or one-quarter like other charities and businesses.

Under the current rules, a university must suffer a 50% drop in revenue over the past six months if their turnover is above $1bn, or a 30% drop for those with a turnover less than $1bn, to be eligible.

But on Monday, the federal education department confirmed the four “Table B” private universiti­es had been given an exemption from the six-month requiremen­t.

A spokeswoma­n said: “The government determined that it is appropriat­e to differenti­ate between Table A and

Table B universiti­es, given Table B universiti­es are private without implicit backing of government­s and typically have less access to support from commonweal­th sources in ongoing revenue.”

Labor MP Graham Perrett said that the government should now “extend jobseeker to all universiti­es”, and Greens senator Mehreen Faruqi said it was “an act of pure malice” to “continue to exclude public universiti­es” from the scheme.

More public universiti­es have abandoned a deal struck by the National Tertiary Education Union (NTEU) to respond to the financial hit from Covid-19.

The deal, which was agreed between the NTEU and the universiti­es’ representa­tive body, the Australian Higher Education Industrial

Associatio­n (AHEIA), aims to protect more than 12,000 jobs in return for up to one-year salary reductions between 5% and 15%.

But on Monday, Deakin University in Victoria announced it would not sign the agreement, known as the jobs protection framework.

Vice-chancellor Iain Martin said “each university across Australia is in a different position”, and that Deakin would pursue its own cost-cutting plan, which includes staff jobs.

The University of New South Wales and the University of Central Queensland said they would abandon the deal over the weekend, and the University of Melbourne also opted out last week.

Deakin University has estimated its operating revenue will decline by “between $250m and $300m in 2021”, and that cuts would remove 300 full-time equivalent jobs.

The UNSW vice-chancellor, Ian Jacobs, said in a letter to staff the university would reject the NTEUAHEIA plan because “we are concerned about being constraine­d in making important decisions”.

He also said the university recently completed a “voluntary wagereduct­ion process”, affecting the senior leadership team and more than 1,000 staff.

A national spokesman for the NTEU said the union still stood by the terms of the framework.

“They were difficult negotiatio­ns in very difficult circumstan­ces. In our view the framework is the best chance to save the most number of university jobs,” he said.

“Without further assistance, the sector is likely to lose up to 30,000 jobs this year. Surely the government would want to protect these jobs, and it now has an extra $60bn with which it can extend jobkeeper, so why won’t it?”

 ?? Photograph: Brendon Thorne/Getty Images ?? Notre Dame University and three others have been given access to jobkeeper, while public universiti­es are still excluded, something Greens senator Mehreen Faruqi describes as ‘an act of pure malice’.
Photograph: Brendon Thorne/Getty Images Notre Dame University and three others have been given access to jobkeeper, while public universiti­es are still excluded, something Greens senator Mehreen Faruqi describes as ‘an act of pure malice’.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Australia