Students hit by 14-day university staff strike
- Published
Staff at 74 universities across the UK are beginning a 14-day strike over pensions, pay and conditions.
The University and College Union is holding strikes between 20 February and 13 March and has estimated more than a million students will be affected.
The union described this latest strike as "solid". It follows eight days of action in November and December.
Action also took place in February and March 2018, meaning some students face disruption for the third time.
The universities say strikes are not the way forward and have promised to do all they can to minimise the impact of industrial action on students.
The UCU says 50,000 of its members will take the action over workloads, pay, a 15% gender pay gap, a black and minority ethnic pay gap, increased casualisation and changes to pensions for staff in the Universities Superannuation Scheme (USS).
The union is angry members are now having to pay 9.6% in pension contributions, up from 8%, and wants universities to pay the full increase instead.
In addition to striking, union members are taking other forms of industrial action, including working strictly to contract, not covering for absent colleagues and refusing to reschedule lectures lost during the strikes.
217,065academic staff were employed in 2018/19
72,750 or 34%of lecturers were employed on short-term contracts
29,150 or 13% were paid by the hour
4,240were on a zero hours contract
General secretary Jo Grady said: "This unprecedented level of action shows just how angry staff are at their universities' refusal to negotiate properly with us."
But the Universities and Colleges Employers Association (UCEA) says it has invited the union to further talks and is "dismayed" by "damaging strike action".
University of Southampton president and vice-chancellor Prof Mark Smith, who chairs the UCEA, said: "We are very sorry for the impact industrial action has on students' study.
The association says employers have increased their pension contributions from 18% to 21.1% of salary, paying in an extra £250m each year.
Oxford Brookes University vice-chancellor Prof Alistair Fitt, a member of the Employers Pensions Forum for Higher Education, said universities were doing all they could to lessen the impact on students and many had opened telephone support numbers, special web pages and strike helpdesks.
An online survey, external, published by The Student Room earlier this week, suggests 47% of students think it is right for lecturers to strike.
And many students affected by the strike last term told BBC News they understood why lecturers' were taking action, even though they were missing out.
But many students are angry they are losing out on lectures and tutorials in the run-up to exams.
Students hit by 14-day university staff strike
Sarah Howlett, a final-year English student at Exeter University, told BBC News the strike was "a bit of a setback", not least because her dissertation was due in in April.
"It's the feeling that if I encountered a problem or needed feedback, I can't get that - it would be nice to pop round to their office or send an email but I won't be able to do that," she said.
"I do sympathise with why they're striking but it feels like they've done quite a few strikes and that there could be a less disruptive and more effective way to get their desired outcome."
'Critical time'
Her friend Emma Crawford, a third-year geography student, said she was anxious because her final-year dissertation was due in in March.
"I understand why they're striking but the time they're doing it is a critical time for me," she said.
"I'm angry that we've paid over £9,000 a year and we're missing lectures and contact time - to me, it's a waste of money."
Students at a number of universities, including York, Newcastle and Sheffield Hallam, have started petitions asking for money back from their universities because of the loss of contact hours.
The Sheffield Hallam petition has about 14,000 signatures and is asking for £863.33 reimbursement per affected student for 14 days of disruption, based on the amount of fees paid.
Third-year student Tom Barton, who set up the petition, told BBC News he felt frustrated by the strikes last term.
"I missed out on a lot of tuition in a crucial period and it definitely affected my grade for some modules," he said.
"So when we found out they were doing another strike which would be even longer, we felt like we had to do something to get our voices heard, because no-one has ever listened in the past."
However, Tom said, he was supportive of the lecturers' action.
"We definitely support the strike, that's something that I have tried to make as clear as possible throughout all of this," he said.
"We stand with our lecturers on this. However, we shouldn't be disadvantaged."
Francis Clarke, of Birmingham University, said he and colleagues were not "relishing the prospect of having to take more strike action" but the overall mood was one of "determination and defiance".
"Nobody takes strike action lightly - after all, it takes us away doing the jobs we are proud to do and it means we won't get paid for up to 14 days," he said.
"Sadly, though, these problems have been building for years and despite the best efforts of our local [UCU] branch, as well as national UCU negotiators, university employers have consistently failed to address these serious concerns."
He and his colleagues did understand students' concerns and were "disappointed that we are in this position", he added.
What do the official statistics show?
Statistics, external from the Higher Education Statistics Agency (Hesa) show there were 217,065 academic staff working in UK universities in 2018-19.
Of these:
72,750 (34%) were on fixed-term contracts.
29,150 were paid by the hour
4,240 were on zero-hours contracts
Universities also employed 222,885 non-academic staff in 2018-19, such as managers, student welfare workers, secretaries, caretakers and cleaners.
When is the action?
The UCU has set out 14 days of action over a period of four weeks:
Week one: Thursday 20 and Friday 21 February
Week two: Monday 24, Tuesday 25 and Wednesday 26 February
Week three: Monday 2, Tuesday 3, Wednesday 4 and Thursday 5 March
Week four: Monday 9, Tuesday 10, Wednesday 11, Thursday 12 and Friday 13 March
Which universities are affected?
A total of 47 universities have staff taking part in action over both pensions and pay and conditions:
Aston University
Bangor University
Cardiff University
University of Durham
Heriot-Watt University
Loughborough University
Newcastle University
Open University
University of Bath
University of Dundee
University of Leeds
University of Manchester
University of Sheffield
University of Nottingham
University of Stirling
University College London
University of Birmingham
University of Bradford
University of Bristol
University of Cambridge
University of Edinburgh
University of Exeter
University of Essex
University of Glasgow
University of Lancaster
University of Leicester
City University
Goldsmiths College
Queen Mary University of London
Royal Holloway
University of Reading
University of Southampton
University of St Andrews
Courtauld Institute of Art
University of Strathclyde
University of Wales
University of Warwick
University of York
University of Liverpool
University of Sussex
University of Aberdeen
University of Ulster
Queen's University Belfast
Birkbeck College, University of London
Soas, University of London
University of Oxford
University of East Anglia
Staff at 22 universities are taking action over pay and conditions:
Bishop Grosseteste University
Bournemouth University
Edge Hill University
Glasgow Caledonian University
Glasgow School of Art
Liverpool Hope University
Liverpool Institute of Performing Arts
Queen Margaret University, Edinburgh
St Mary's University College, Belfast
Roehampton University
Sheffield Hallam University
University of Brighton
University of Kent
Bath Spa University
Royal College of Art
University of Huddersfield
University of Winchester
University of East London
Leeds Trinity University
UAL University of the Arts London
De Montfort University
University of Greenwich
Staff at five institutions are taking action over pensions only:
Scottish Association of Marine Science
Institute for Development Studies
Keele University
King's College London
Imperial College London