Union members have overwhelmingly voted to strike over London South Bank Universityâs plan to split its academic workforce into two âcareer pathwaysâ.
Eighty-nine per cent of University and College Union (UCU) members backed strike action in a ballot, while 97 per cent supported action short of a strike â which could include a marking boycott, with the potential to disrupt graduations â on a turnout of 61 per cent.
The vote was called after LSBU announced plans to move many of its existing academics into a new âteaching and scholarshipâ role, with only some being kept in a âteaching and researchâ position.
UCU claimed that staff would have to compete against each other in a redundancy selection process and said that the new contracts would âincrease working time without any corresponding increase in payâ.
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LSBU also plans to employ new staff via a subsidiary firm, denying them access to the Teachersâ Pension Scheme, amid ongoing concerns about its affordability for employers.
UCU said the reforms raised serious equality issues. It claimed that the bulk of the female-dominated workforce in the School of Nursing and Midwifery would be moved on to teaching contracts, while staff in the male-majority School of Engineering and Design were likely to be retained on research terms.
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Federica Rossi, the secretary of LSBUâs UCU branch, said the ballot âshows our membersâ will to fight to protect LSBUâs futureâ.
âIt is frankly scandalous that the universityâs leaders are showing such callous disregard for our work [and for] the gender equality implication of the cuts,â she said.
âLSBU educates a quarter of Londonâs nurses, yet senior management thinks we donât deserve the same pay and pensions we can get at other universities across the country. These cuts donât just threaten staff and students, they could have profound implications on the NHS and the capitalâs health.â
LSBU said that it was âdisappointedâ that UCU had âchosen to disrupt our studentsâ education before the consultation to reorganise the universityâs academic workforce is completeâ.
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âLSBU is proud of its staff, which is why the changes we propose protect most academic jobs despite the challenging financial landscape across higher education,â said Tara Dean, the universityâs provost.
âLSBUâs plans will deliver additional teaching and student-facing support every week. The proposals will also create consistent contracts that are fairer to all academic staff and meet the needs of our students. Existing staff who continue to conduct research that has a real-world impact or choose to focus on teaching excellence and scholarly activities will also retain their TPS pensions.
âTo continue to transform our studentsâ lives and enable the employers, organisations and local communities we work with to prosper in an uncertain world, LSBU has to refocus and deliver the highest-quality professional and technical education and contact time for our students.â
LSBU joins a growing list of UK universities facing industrial action over job cuts and contract changes.
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Jo Grady, UCUâs general secretary, added: âOur members have overwhelmingly backed industrial action because they refuse to stand by as management lights a bonfire under the academic standards of the university.
âSenior leaders now need to halt the cuts and get round the negotiating table and work with us. If they refuse to do so, we will have no choice other than to shut down graduations.â
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