Union
leader Sally Hunt says there are already strikes at individual universities in
response to swingeing redundancies and cuts
Lecturers have warned they
may strike over at least 14,000 job losses at universities across the country.
Sally Hunt, general secretary
of the lecturers' trade union – the University and College Union (UCU) – said
if discussions about redundancies broke down between academics and their
employers, there could be a national strike. She did not predict when this
could be.
Universities are grappling
with cuts of £1.2bn between now and 2013. She told the BBC that every day,
lecturers were reporting new redundancies at universities.
"We are getting almost
daily reports of redundancies from our officials and there's a point in time
when you can't actually carry on without a backlash," she said. "We
are in talks with the higher education employers and have been for the last two
years, requesting and negotiating for a job security agreement. We have got to
get some parameters between the universities and unions negotiating these
cuts."
There have been more than 15
strikes at individual universities since March.
Hunt said: "It's getting
to the point where there's a question mark in my mind – how long does this
remain a local action? Soon our members will want us to take this to a national
level and make a national response too."
Earlier, speaking at the UCU
annual congress yesterday, Hunt accused the government of promoting
"ignorance over education" and preserving university as a privilege
for the rich by pursuing swingeing new funding cuts.
She said culling another
£200m from already stretched higher education budgets proved that education and
learning had "gone out of fashion".
Universities were told of the
extra cuts – which will see the number of additional places available for this
autumn halved to 10,000 – last week. They come on top of those announced by the
previous government, expected to total around £1bn.
Hunt warned that universities
and colleges, too often first for the axe because politicians think the public
will let them "get away with it", were where doctors, nurses,
teachers, engineers and architects trained.
"What kind of government
would want to cut colleges and universities by £1.5bn while proposing to give
£8bn of tax giveaways to big business? Let me state for the record, I don't
agree with Nick. Or his new best friend, George. Or any other member of this
government which has decided to prioritise the rich at the expense of the poor.
"This government has an
ignorance policy where its education policy should be."
Hunt warned Liberal Democrat
MPs against reneging on their promise to vote against a rise in tuition fees,
if such a move is recommended by an independent review of fees led by former BP
boss Lord Browne.
Under the new coalition
agreement, Lib Dems can abstain from voting on the issue.
"Politicians who
campaigned on an anti-fees ticket, and then choose to abstain on any vote in
the House, will never be trusted again," she said.
On Sunday, UCU delegates
voted overwhelmingly to reject proposed changes to their pension scheme, amid concerns
they could lose thousands of pounds.
The universities minister,
David Willetts, said: "The public finances are in such a mess that there
are some very tough choices to be made. But young people have been the biggest
victims of the recession and we will work hard to give them more support.
"That is why we have
already announced 10,000 extra university places and why we are refocusing
£200m on delivering more apprenticeships and improving college buildings."
Source: Guardian.co.uk