Employment arrangements at Australian universities are entering uncharted territory, as new laws make it easier for casual staff to demand permanent appointment.
Under an ââ provision, which takes effect from 26 August, casual workers can seek permanent employment after six months on the job. It replaces âcasual conversionâ arrangements that give casual staff the automatic right to ongoing employment after 12 months, so long as they worked regular, ongoing patterns of hours for the past six.
This requirement excludes most casual academics because of the sessional nature of their work. A 2021 analysis found that very few university staff had benefited from casual conversion.
The new approach, however, precludes universities from engaging casual academics on fixed-term contracts. Consequently, administrators wanting to lock down teachers for the semester cannot rely on insecurely employed staff to provide certainty.
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Gwilym Croucher, deputy director of the University of Melbourneâs Centre for the Study of Higher Education, said the âfull impactâ of the change was hard to predict.
âUniversities will need to think carefully about why they are employing casuals and how they describe the type of employment,â he said. âCasual employment is likely still appropriate in many instances, butâŠwhere there is a regular pattern of work, a fixed-term contract might be more appropriate. Some universities are already looking at new models for some employees.â
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Another change requires employees seeking casual conversion to apply for it in writing. Universities must respond to such requests in 21 days and have limited grounds for refusing.
Dr Croucher said casual staff were likely to remain âa prominent part of university workforcesâ but âthe full implications of the legislationâ would take time to sink in. âIf nothing else, the changes will keep the discussion alive about what fair terms of academic employment look like.â
Casual employment is a fraught issue in Australian universities, where tens of thousands of highly qualified workers struggle to buy property or start families because of the paucity and insecurity of their pay.
University leaders acknowledge this but say they are caught in a bind because of tight funding and volatile student numbers. Industrial agreements oblige them to allocate permanently employed academicsâ time to research and pay substantial redundancies if declining enrolments force retrenchments.
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Macquarie University vice-chancellor Bruce Dowton told the Australian Financial Review Higher Education Summit that the detail and complexity of industrial instruments had become a âreal hindranceâ to universities that wanted to accommodate societyâs changing needs. Shadow education minister Sarah Henderson said the sector needed âmore flexibilityâ to achieve the âhigh participation modelâ recommended by the Universities Accord.
âThere needs to be some wholesale reform,â she said, adding that the âregressive new lawsâ on casual employment would hamper universitiesâ ability âto engage sessional experts â practising surgeons to teach medical students, barristers to lecture law students and so onâ.
The National Tertiary Education Union defended the ârelatively minor changesâ to industrial arrangements. âThese laws have nothing to do with universities casually hiring professionals like doctors and lawyers â we canât see how that could possibly be affected,â said national president Alison Barnes.
âUnaccountable vice-chancellors are making unfounded complaints about industrial laws while their A$400 million [ÂŁ205 million] wage theft bushfire burns out of control and precariously employed staff struggle to put food on the table. In this context, flexibility and innovation are code for even more casualisation.â
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