Edmonton Journal

U of A students, staff protest education cuts

Province accused of ‘destabiliz­ing the whole system’ with changes

- SHEILA PRATT spratt@edmontonjo­urnal.com

Students, professors and support staff formed a united front Tuesday at the University of Alberta to protest budget cuts.

They said mandate letters from the government “threaten” academic independen­ce, turning universiti­es into businesses.

The unusual alliance — leaders of graduate students, undergrads (33,000 at U of A), about 700 researcher­s (postdocs) and 4,400 professors and support staff — called on the government to call off its agenda of “radical change” which is “destabiliz­ing the whole system.”

Meanwhile, most top leaders at the U of A, including the president, vice-president and deans, have agreed to take five days in personal leave without pay. It amounts to a 1.92-percent salary cut for next year, though all academic staff, including the executive, is due to get a 1.65-per-cent salary increase in July, says the announceme­nt on the U of A website.

Also, university president Indira Samaraseke­ra has not taken a salary increase for the past three years to ease the budget crunch, the website noted.

While the University of Calgary and MacEwan University implemente­d a salary freeze on top positions, that’s not possible at U of A because those top managers are all within the contract negotiated with the Alberta Academic Staff Associatio­n. The U of A executive wants to honour that agreement, so came up with the alternativ­e of voluntary days off. The offer is open to all staff.

The U of A has to cut $42 million, about seven per cent of its spending, under last month’s provincial budget.

The budget cuts and mandate letters are under fire from more than 7,600 U of A graduate students. They have warned that the mandate letters send a “negative signal” about academic independen­ce, said Ashlyn Bernier, president of the U of A Graduate Students Associatio­n. “Just the idea that government could dictate some research will discourage some students from applying.”

The graduate student associatio­n sent a letter to Advanced Education Minister Thomas Lukaszuk, calling for more consultati­on if he wants to proceed with plans to reforming post-secondary education.

The letter also raises concerns about the loss of U of A’s identify under Campus Alberta and loss of diversity in programmin­g.

Many of the 700 post-doctoral researcher­s will likely find themselves out of jobs when the budget cuts kick in and current contracts run out, said Ravi Gaikwad, president of the post-- doctor fellows associatio­n.

In the legislatur­e, Lukaszuk tabled documents, previously reported in the Journal, showing that discussion­s focusing on closer collaborat­ion under Campus Alberta have been ongoing since November with college and university presidents.

Lukaszuk said no institutio­n should be surprised at the call for closer collaborat­ion under Campus Alberta, nor the proposed mandate letters. That has been the plan for years, he said.

Wildrose education critic Bruce McCalliste­r the government has ignored the need for consultati­on. “They didn’t invite the stakeholde­rs and that’s obviously the giant frustratio­n if you want to redefine how research should play out in our province.

“In the House, I asked the minister — ‘What is so wrong you have to take the hatchet and redefine what they do?’ I never got an answer. ”

New Democrat critic Rachel Notley said Lukaszuk’s mistake is trying to reform the system while imposing severe budget cuts. “You don’t negotiate change and then announced a seven-per-cent budget cut. That creates a crisis.”

Liberal Leader Raj Sherman said the Campus Alberta model looks like a centralize­d model imposed on health care, a model that is costly and doesn’t work.

Lukaszuk will meet Thursday with the presidents of all 26 institutio­ns to discuss the draft mandate letters.

 ?? EDMONTON JOURNAL FILES ?? U of A students and staff argue the integrity of the school is threatened by provincial budget cuts.
EDMONTON JOURNAL FILES U of A students and staff argue the integrity of the school is threatened by provincial budget cuts.

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