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UCU University of Leeds Branch

UCU University of Leeds

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Christmas carolling and guerilla baubling

UCU University of Leeds Branch Posted on 17 December 2015 by Alan Smith1 August 2017

The UCU anti-casualisation ‘choir’ has been out carolling on several occasions, despite the weather. Our alternative wordings seem to ring a bell with passing staff and students! Try singing along to your favourite Christmas CD with these splendid lyrics.

job security guerilla bauble at the wavy lines tree

job security guerilla bauble at the wavy lines tree

Our DIY anti-casualisation baubles have also been unexpectedly appearing on Christmas trees all over campus.

job securty Christmas bauble on Parkinson Court Christmas tree

Parkinson Court Christmas tree

If you’d like some for your own tree, here’s the template to download (best printed onto thin coloured card): job security baubles

Read more

Posted in Anticasualisation

Open meeting on University IT

UCU University of Leeds Branch Posted on 7 December 2015 by Alan Smith1 August 2017

We’re having an open meeting on university IT to discuss:

  • Manchester University UCU’s vote to strike over major outsourcing of IT services. Dr Adam Ozanne, president of University of Manchester UCU, is coming over to talk to us about the background to their dispute and what they hope to do.
  • Issues affecting IT staff and all IT users at Leeds.

Monday 7 December
1pm – 2pm, Roger Stevens LT03 (7.03)

Open to UCU members, all staff and students.

Posted in IT

Senior pay and the pay campaign

UCU University of Leeds Branch Posted on 23 November 2015 by admin23 November 2015
The UCU’s Freedom of Information request on VC and Principals’ pay revealed that in 2013/14, the average vice-chancellor salary for was £260,290. Eighteen vice- chancellors enjoyed a pay increase of more than 10%, with the largest being 70.2%. On average vice-chancellors were paid 6.4 times more than the average salary of staff. The union’s data also found that 20 institutions had more than 100 members of staff earning over £100,000 a year. This has roughly doubled in the last two years.
It is the trade unions’ view that the increases in reward and the increasing numbers of senior staff attracting six figure salaries, should be seen in the context of the perceived lack of fairness, transparency and balance when real-term pay cuts continue to be the experience of the vast majority of HE staff.
For Leeds senior staff pay, you can see the report of the remuneration committee 2014-15 online at papers.leeds.ac.uk Council > 2015-16 > Papers > Annual report from Remuneration Committee to see what the average increase in University of Leeds wages for those at grade 10 has been before the 1% pay increase. This paper is not yet public, at the time of publishing this blog, and will only be visible to UoL staff when it is. The pay of senior executive staff, including that of the Vice-Chancellor is published openly in the University’s annual reports.
Posted in Pay

Job security day of action

UCU University of Leeds Branch Posted on 19 November 2015 by Alan Smith1 August 2017

Gallery

Posted in Anticasualisation

Join UCU today

UCU University of Leeds Branch Posted on 19 November 2015 by Alan Smith1 August 2017

UCU University of Leeds local association is a strong branch with quite a high level of union membership. The more members we have the more effective we are as a union.

Please join UCU and help us to become even stronger so we all have the support we need at work.

You can join online ucu.org.uk/join

Or by phone 0333 207 0719

Posted in Joining UCU

Job security day of action

UCU University of Leeds Branch Posted on 19 November 2015 by Alan Smith1 August 2017

All I want for Christmas is…..
JOB SECURITY FOR ALL

Sing alternative carols & help decorate our anti-casualisation Christmas tree!
Write your own experience of not having job security on the back of a job security Christmas bauble an bring it along to decorate the tree.

Thursday 19th November
12:30 – 1:30
By the ‘wavy lines’ sculpture, the Refectory foyer if weather is bad

Followed by a meeting for academic & academic-related staff on fixed-term contracts at 1.30 in Clothworkers North Building LT (G.12)

Please put these posters up in your work area: SECURE WORK Anti-Cas Poster (003)

And please sign our petition: we all deserve security of employment

Posted in Anticasualisation

Petition: we all deserve security of employment

UCU University of Leeds Branch Posted on 18 November 2015 by Alan Smith1 August 2017

Posted in Anticasualisation

Car Parking and Pay

UCU University of Leeds Branch Posted on 16 November 2015 by admin1 August 2017

Those of you with a car parking permit will be handing your forthcoming 1% pay increase (December) back to the University (from January) in the form of increased parking costs, especially those on lower incomes who will pay a higher proportion of salary. Those of us who use the train will see a 1% increase in rail fares.

The UCU and other unions petitioned the University about the hikes in car parking fees, but we have not been invited to any consultation on the matter before minor adjustments were made to the proposals. We have been invited now to discuss ‘reasonable adjustments’ processes.

The day rate is now going up to £7. The argument will no doubt be that this is the market rate. We would respond that we are not the market, we are staff driving in our expertise to the workplace. The Woodhouse Lane car park offers a day rate at £6.

Be in no doubt, you are regarded by your employer as a source of income. The car parking increases will raise in the region of an additional £300,000 in one year alone.

Posted in Car parking, Pay

Minutes of the Committee meeting 20 October 2015

UCU University of Leeds Branch Posted on 13 November 2015 by Alan Smith13 November 2015

University of Leeds Local Association Committee

1pm-2pm, Tuesday 20 October 2015

Venue: Baines Wing G.03

Minutes

Present: Mark Taylor-Batty (President), Ben Plumpton, Mark Walkley, Nick Efford, Steve Lax, Tim Goodall, Paul Steenson, Lesley McCorrigan, Elwyn Isaac, Neil Maughan, Brendon Nicholls, Hugh Hubbard, Alan Smith (administrator)

  1. Apologies: Malcolm Povey, Steven French, Ann Blair, Jeremy Toner, Andy West, Vicky Blake, Gabriella Alberti, Nigel Bubb
  2. Minutes agreed with following amendments: Mark Taylor-Batty, Andy West and Alan Smith were present
  3. Matters arising
    Co-option of anti-casualisation rep: no nominations received
    Website: exploring options available in UCU hosted site
    Motions to the October General Meeting: committee motions on the refugee crisis and Prevent were carried. Lesley to work with the action group to progress actions.
  4. RIS (Research Innovations Service)
    Mark Taylor-Batty reported on issues. Possible concerns raised about fixed-term contracts, HEIF funded. To review the position in November.
  5. Annual leave
    Update on employer proposal to take 8 days annual leave from small number of former Bretton Hall staff who came to University of Leeds with TUPE protected conditions, to ‘normalise’ their contracts. No apparent problem that this proposal is needed to solve. UCU will oppose.
  6. Facilities money
    Approved use of facilities for: mobile phones for union use by Brendon and Alan; approved previous use for funding for unique situation where there was a problem with facilities money not being passed by the management from one University department to another; spare banner poles; current Law At Work books for caseworkers; a tablecloth for recruitment stalls.
    Committee resolved to ensure that the list of equipment purchased with facilities money over the last year was up to date.
    Discussed whether rules for approval of facilities spending should be changed to prior approval by committee. The committee agreed to return to this at the next meeting to consider a form of words.
  1. USS
    The latest issues were discussed.
  2. Promotions
    A paper has been put to the university senate by management which UCU has not been consulted on. Mark has written to management to express our dissatisfaction with this. Management have replied that only the ‘direction of travel’ was agreed by senate.
    Agreed we will put University of Leeds forward as a test case to UCU on job roles.
  3. Pay campaign
    Discussed pay campaign. Suggestions include continuing to focus on lower pay grades, putting pay briefings out as mini leaflets and short campaign videos, and a question about whether we should push for salaries to be open.
  4. ‘Customers off campus’
    Agreed to run a low-level campaign that we are ‘colleagues’ and ‘students’ not ‘customers’.
  5. Newsletter
    Agreed to print small pile for reps to leave on coffee tables.
  6. Spare banner poles
    Agreed to explore suppliers and purchase.
  7. Recruitment stalls
    Agreed Ben and Alan will do stalls preferably with departmental reps. To seek approval of local manager where appropriate. Agreed to buy a tablecloth in a UCU colour for this.
  8. Any other business
    Concerns raised over extra-procedural performance management activity in one area. Brendon to raise concerns.
Posted in Minutes

Leeds Migration Research Network open letter

Members of the Leeds Migration Research Network have written an open letter to the university’s vice-chancellor (below).

The letter calls for the University to provide an effective response to the current international migrant crisis and highlights a series of priority areas. In particular it calls on the Vice Chancellor to:
• establish a set of scholarships for asylum seeking students,
• remove overseas charges for students in the asylum system.
• deliver the aims and objectives of the Access Agreement with special reference to refugees and asylum seekers.
• publicly support the Action for ESOL campaign and promote appropriate ESOL provision for adult migrants
• actively encourage and resource the building of links between University Faculties and Schools and refugees charities

The network want to encourage all staff and students to add their signatures to the letter to increase pressure on the university to do more.
To add your name to the letter follow this link: https://docs.google.com/forms/d/1Tm0Q-WhOZXUBqN9GRxDPg_fIUEm7aaCY9-edXbyVzZc/viewform?c=0&w=1

OPEN LETTER FROM STAFF TO THE UNIVERSITY OF LEEDS

Dear Vice-Chancellor,

With this letter we call for the University to provide an effective response to the current international migrant crisis and highlight a series of priority areas where we expect the VC to follow up on his recent pledge. We are writing to you as a group of staff and students of the University of Leeds concerned and engaged at various levels through our research, educational and civic engagement with the plight suffered by the many migrants and people seeking asylum that are currently fleeing their countries affected by war and serious hardship. As demonstrated by the dramatic images arriving from the Southern and Eastern borders of Europe, the mass movement of migrants and refugees is far from seeing a solution in the short-term.

As you highlighted in your letter on the 17th of September, as an international institution with a population of staff and students coming from all around the world, we have a moral duty to take urgent and substantial action on this matter in a way that involves the different groups of members of this University.

We received extremely favorably your letter sent to all members of staff on the 17th of September 2015 where you detailed the series of activities that the University plans to or is engaging in, including collaboration with the City Council and the Student Union to welcome refugees and asylum seekers and facilitate their settlement in Leeds. We are thankful that the VC has helped to publicize and promote the many grass root volunteering initiatives and opportunities already ongoing to provide immediate support to new arrivals in Leeds.

However, after more than six weeks since the release of your letter we regret that we have not heard from you what activities have been followed up. We call for the senior management to start a discussion with academic staff and students in this University to explore ways in which the university can effectively provide short- and long-term assistance for refugees/asylum seekers. In particular we believe that urgent action should be taken in the following areas:

1. Bursaries.

We were pleased to hear that the University has already in place a fund to support students that have been affected by catastrophic events in their home countries. You also wrote that in additions to the existing fund “we are examining ways in which we might provide a number of funded scholarships”.

We are concerned that until now we have not heard of any scholarship being released by the University of Leeds and consider this with embarrassment considering the proportionally little impact that such initiative would represent for a wealthy university like ours. The University of York offered a scholarship package of £500,000 to those escaping the humanitarian crisis. Other UK universities such as the University of East London have committed to offer at least ten postgraduate scholarships to Syrian refugees. We think that however symbolically one might interpret the provision of a limited amount of scholarships to meet the needs of the many bright students escaping their countries, such financial resources will make a real difference in the life of student refugees as well as that of their families. We thus call for the VC to establish a set of scholarships for asylum seeking students, ideally doubling the numbers of those offered by these other universities.

2 . Outreach and Access

The University can develop a more considered approach to how to reach out to the migrants and asylum seekers who are looking for educational opportunities. Action is necessary to promote the image of this University to reflect the spirit of your recent statement, namely, the desire ‘to recruit high quality students from diverse backgrounds and [to] provid[e] affordable access to higher education for all who can benefit’.

Our work as researchers engaging with civil society highlights that refugees and people seeking asylum find many hurdles in accessing the University of Leeds. There are lower barriers of entry to other institutions in our area such as Leeds Beckett, Bradford and Huddersfield. We are positive that the University of Leeds can take action to reverse this and promote itself as a ‘University of by taking more substantive action to facilitate access to asylum seekers and migrants from disadvantaged backgrounds. We call on the VC to remove overseas charges for students in the asylum system.

3. Widening Participation

The University already has some structures in place and policy priorities that offer an avenue to expand the basis for welcoming refugees and migrants in our institution. For instance the Access Agreement’s core programme of outreach states ‘a key element in our strategy to widen participation is our suite of Extended Degree Programmes which include a foundation year. These are designed for applicants of all ages who do not have the required entry tariff but demonstrate the potential to succeed’ (p. 22).

In the institutional Equality and Inclusion Strategy the Equality Mission for Leeds highlights that ‘one of the four priority areas is to ensure we successfully embed equality into all aspects of University business. Priority 4: ‘Ensure a world class student experience through inclusion and academic excellence’ addresses fair and equal access to recruitment, attainment and progression opportunities and highlights the importance of integrating the diverse needs of a diverse student population into the governance and practice of student education. (p. 22) The Access Agreement seems to contain the basis for expanding opportunities for asylum seekers, who are not only escaping war and persecution but are often also among those in our communities facing harsh economic conditions. The Life Long Learning Centre, Communities Work and Educational Engagement seem to be very well placed to help in this endeavour. We thus call on the VC to deliver the aims and objectives of the Access Agreement with special reference to refugees and asylum seekers.

4. Collaboration with CSOs’ and ESOL provision

We would like to see the VC supporting initiatives to improve access and provision of English for Speakers of Other Languages classes across Leeds, for instance working with the Leeds Migrant English Support Hub to enable outreach work. While a series of high profile volunteering activities have been organized by the students (and especially STAR) are well established.We believe that the University has a moral duty to support those affected by cuts in the existing ESOL provisions. We call on the VC to publicly support the Action for ESOL campaign and promote appropriate ESOL provision for adult migrants including those who aspire to higher education.

5. Placements

In order to increase awareness and engagement for current students on the significance of the current crisis and challenges of providing a ‘welcome’ to refugees beyond the initial days of arrival, we believe the University should promote collaboration with organizations in civil society. We call on the VC to actively encourage and resource the building of links between University Faculties and Schools and refugees charities, for example, by promoting work placements for their students within these organisations (some of which you have included in your letter such as Leeds Asylum Seeker Support Network, Positive Action For Refugees and Asylum Seekers, St Vincent de Paul Society, The Northern Refugee Centre, Leeds Refugee Forum).

6. Finally we think that it would be a significant gesture by this University to make available one of the large lecture theatres on campus to host the 3rd meeting of the Leeds City of Sanctuary

We believe this is a momentous opportunity for the University of Leeds to demonstrate concrete action, generosity and decisive leadership on one of the most dramatic issues of our time.

We look forward to hearing from you

Signed

Members of the Leeds Migration Research Network:

Dr Gabriella Alberti (LUBS)
Dr Mette Wiggen (School of Politics and International Studies)
Professor Chris Forde (LUBS)
Professor Robert MacKenzie (LUBS)
Dr Louise Waite (Geography)
Professor Mike Baynham (School of Education)
Dr James Souter (POLIS)
Meenkashi Sakar (LUBS)
Dr James Simpson (School of Education)
…

Posted on 13 November 2015 by Alan Smith1 August 2017

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Contact

The branch office is currently closed because of the covid-19 pandemic. Please use email if possible.

ucu@leeds.ac.uk

Emails will be received by the branch administrator/organiser and some of the elected branch officers.

Phone 35904 (external: 0113 343 5904) (please use email if possible while the office is closed)

Post: UCU, Room 7.51, EC Stoner Building, University of Leeds, Leeds LS2 9JT. (The office is currently closed – if you need to physically post something please contact us by email or phone to discuss.)

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    • Joining the unionJoining Leeds UCU All academic and academic-related staff of the University of Leeds, permanent or fixed-term, are eligible to join Leeds UCU. This includes students studying to teach in further education who are eligible for free membership. For further information contact the Leeds UCU Office. The quickest, easiest and safest way of joining is online via the UCU website http://joinonline.ucu.org.uk/. Subscriptions The subscription is payable monthly, quarterly or annually by direct debit, and is made up of anational subscription and local subscription, both on a sliding scale. This table shows the main national and local rates:   Employment income: Current monthly subscription for full UCU members National Leeds TOTAL Code £40,000 and over £17.99 £2.40 £20.39 F1 £30,000 – £39,999 £16.36 £2.40 £18.76 F2 £20,000 – £29,999 £15.43 £2.40 £17.83 F3 £10,000 – £19,999 £9.41 £1.20 £10.61 F4 £5,000 – £9,999 £4.26 £0.60 £4.86 F5 Below £5,000 £2.43 £0.60 £3.03 F6 Tax relief Members are entitled to tax releif on 67% of their National Subscription. See further details by following this link Further Information For further information please contact the UCU Office.
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