Present tense: Award increases

Kendall Warren
Organiser

From 1 July, all award rates will increase by 5.75%, in line with the National Minimum Wage decision in June. This include those in the Educational Services (Post-Secondary Education) Award, which is the industrial instrument that applies across the private college sector.

For ELICOS teachers, this will see the casual hourly rate for a Level 3 teacher increase to $57.77, on Level 7 to $64.32, and on Level 11 to $71.48. The top of the scale (Level 12) for a permanent (non-casual) teacher is now $76,391.80. Meanwhile for admin staff, a Level 2 employee will now receive at least $52,865.70 at the top step, while a Level 4 employee can earn as much as $61,467.98.

These are historically high increases, and they will be welcomed by all employees across the sector. They have been made possible thanks to lobbying of the union movement (of which your union is a part), including in submissions to the Fair Work Commission. Members should check their pay in the first full pay period after 1 July to ensure these increases are being passed on.

What’s happening in Canberra?

The Albanese government continues to reform Australia’s industrial relations laws, with further amendments to the Fair Work Act passing in June. These changes boost flexible unpaid parental leave, guarantee superannuation as a right under the National Employment Standards (NES), and make payroll deductions (for things like union fees) easier for employers to manage, among other changes

These changes come on top of a suite of changes to the Act passed late last year, and the government has flagged that further changes are in the pipeline in the next six months (including better arrangements for casual employees).

Meanwhile, the government has also turned its hand to the operation of international student visas. Influential Labor MP Julian Hill has called for a “nuclear option” to force providers at “the bottom end of the VET sector” – so-called ‘ghost schools’, where students are really only enrolled as a front for cheap workers – to greatly improve standards or to close their doors.

Hill acknowledges that the vast majority of providers are doing the right thing, but argues that these rogue schools risk the reputation of the industry more broadly. There are no firm proposals from government just yet, but watch this space.

From the international desk

ELICOS teachers at British Council (BC) schools in Portugal held a highly successful strike in early June. The EL Gazette reports that teachers and non-teachers formed picket lines across BC schools across Portugal, with around 85% of classes cancelled because of the action.

BC is trying to argue that individual teachers receive 2-3% increments each year, but teachers point out that 50% of staff are at the top of the scale, and that the base rates have barely changed for a decade or more. They argue that the actual increase for most teachers has been less than 1% per annum at best. Further action is planned for September.

The IEU supports the rights of workers wherever they may be, and any union is always stronger the more workers join. Encourage your colleagues to join the union for private college employees, the IEU. They can join over the phone (8202 8900), via email (membership@ieu.asn.au), or at bit.ly/joinIEU, and union fees are tax deductible.