The Press and Journal (Aberdeen and Aberdeenshire)
Why Aberdeen University staff are being forced to strike
This week, members of the University and Colleges Union (UCU) will initiate industrial action against our employers, UK universities, following a vote.
More than 80% of those who voted instructed UCU to call a strike and almost 90% promised to participate in action short of a strike.
We are taking action because of the deterioration in our salaries. Since 2009, UCU members (we are not only academics, but also university and college employees working in IT and administration) have seen a 25% drop in what we can buy with our earnings. Compared to 2009, this is the equivalent to us having to work more than one full day extra every week to pay for mortgages, rent, electricity, food, transport and much more.
Our jobs are not secure. Up to twothirds of research staff and almost half of university researchers are employed on fixed-term contracts. Some universities fire and then rehire
staff on poorer contracts and some use outside agencies to supply teaching staff. This insecurity means that many of our members do not know for certain they will be able to afford rent, bills or other expenses from one year to the next.
We are taking action to close the national gender pay gap. On average, across the UK, women members of the UCU are paid 15% less than their male colleagues.
Because of increasing demands relating to administration, pastoral support for students, and increasing student-staff ratios, our members work an average 52 hours a week.
This is the same as working an extra two days every week for no extra pay.
Finally, there is the pensions issue. Our union has, time after time, argued our pension plan is not in such dire financial straits as the evaluations suggest. Our pension plan is actually currently in surplus – a position forecasters told us two years ago would not happen until well after 2050.
Our employers have refused to join forces with us to demand that our pension provider pay back this surplus, created when our payments were increased, based on a flawed methodology.
We have not taken the decision to strike lightly. Universitas, the Latin root of the English word “university”, also means “community”. We are aware that our action will mean students will have to take increased responsibility for their own education.
We have carefully considered how to achieve maximum impact with the view of winning and ending this dispute as quickly as possible. We hope you will support our action.
Dr Frederik Pedersen is a senior lecturer at Aberdeen University and chairman of UCU’s Aberdeen branch