The UKâs main higher education union has warned of âsustainedâ industrial action starting next month, including strikes and a possible marking boycott, as long-running disputes over pensions, pay and working conditions remain unresolved.
The University and College Union said that its higher education committee had authorised âcoordinated UK-wide and regional rolling strikesâ at 68 institutions, with specific dates starting in February due to be confirmed shortly.
The committee also âagreed to begin preparations for a UK-wide marking and assessment boycottâ, the union said, a step that would significantly increase the impact of industrial action on studentsâ academic progress.
This comes after a further 10 institutions voted to join the 58 institutions where members spent three days on the picket lines last month, with results of the reballots announced earlier this week.
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But it also comes amid apparent divisions within the union over how best to pursue the disputes, with low turnouts in the initial vote and the reballots seen by many as a sign of continuing fatigue among members from the pandemic and years of industrial disputes, and concern over the impact on undergraduates who have seen their on-campus learning significantly interrupted.
An by the UCU Left faction claims that âtotally different types of actionâ were likely to be pursued in relation to the two disputes â one on pensions provided under the Universities Superannuation Scheme (USS) and the other on last yearâs pay offer and working conditions.
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âThe wording of the decisions leaves considerable uncertainty as to the details of the action in both cases and how this would be finalised,â the blog says, adding that UCU Left supporters on the higher education committee were âvery concerned and angry about this outcomeâ.
°Őłó±đÌęlatest round of the pensions dispute focuses on Universities UKâs plan to reduce the benefits provided by the USS in a bid to stave off increases in contributions that it describes as unaffordable.
The UCU has estimated that the reforms could cut employeesâ guaranteed benefits by as much as 35 per cent, costing members thousands of pounds annually in retirement, but UUKâs figures suggest that the reduction is between 10 per cent and 18 per cent.
At the heart of the pay dispute was employersâ offer of a 1.5 per cent minimum rise for 2021-22, with unions demanding a £2,500 uplift instead, as well as action on inequality, casualisation and workload issues.
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Jo Grady, the UCUâs general secretary, said that time was ârunning outâ for vice-chancellors to avoid more disruption, with the marking boycott also on the cards.
âWe do not take this action lightly, but university staff are tired of falling pay, cuts to pensions, unsafe workloads and the rampant use of insecure contracts,â Dr Grady said.
âWe hope vice-chancellors finally see sense and address the longstanding concerns of staff. If they donât, any disruption will be entirely their fault.â
Raj Jethwa, chief executive of the Universities and Colleges Employers Association, highlighted that only a quarter of branches reached the legal threshold for industrial action in the UCUâs most recent ballot.
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âIn terms of staff participation and teaching lost, the impact of industrial action so far has been fairly low in most HEIs, and below the levels seen in the 2019 dispute. Rather than threatening further disruption, UCU should engage constructively in this yearâs (2022-23) multi-employer negotiating round which is planned to begin at the end of March,â he said.
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