Skip to content
Education Training, Federal Budget

Federal budget first step in desperately needed university reform

National Tertiary Education Union < 1 mins read

The National Tertiary Education Union has described the federal budget as a first step on the road to major reform universities desperately need.

 

The federal government has earmarked $1.1 billion in funding over the next five years to implement recommendations from the Universities Accord. 

 

NTEU National President Dr Alison Barnes said more investment would be needed to combat a sector in crisis.

 

“This budget must be the first step on the road to the major reforms needed to combat the explosion in insecure work, rampant wage theft and a broken governance model,” she said.

 

“It’s clear the government takes the Universities Accord’s final report seriously, but we’ll need to see a much more ambitious response to properly address the deep problems in higher education.

 

“Staff must have a seat at the table in overseeing what must be the most significant university reforms in a generation.

 

“We have proudly fought alongside student unions for measures to ease student debt so it’s welcome to see those calls beginning to be answered in the budget.

 

“We need the government to be upfront about what its plan to slow the growth of international student numbers means for university funding.

 

“Already-stretched university staff simply can’t afford more funding cuts after a disastrous decade under the coalition.

 

“The Australian Tertiary Education Commission has the potential to improve our sector but only if staff are truly represented when it is established in mid-next year.

 

“The NTEU will ramp up its fight for better universities, which serve Australia’s best interests for generations to come.”


Contact details:

Matt Coughlan 0400 561 480 / [email protected]

More from this category

  • Energy, Federal Budget
  • 14/12/2025
  • 06:00
Rewiring Australia

Battery boost welcome but loans are the missing link to slash bills for everyone

Rewiring Australia says the expansion of the home battery subsidy is a positive step, but accessible finance will be critical to ensure lower power bills are shared across the community. The Federal Government yesterday announced an expansion of its Cheaper Home Batteries program, which provides an upfront discount on eligible home battery systems to reduce installation costs for households and small businesses. Rewiring Australia CEO Francis Vierboom has welcomed the expansion while highlighting the need to ensure more households are able to participate as rebates reduce over coming years. “This announcement reflects the growing role household batteries play in an…

  • Education Training, Telecommunication
  • 12/12/2025
  • 07:30
Monash University

Monash experts: Supporting students’ mental health at school and online

The Victorian Government has released new resources in schools to help students, teachers and parents navigate the impacts of social media and screentime. Deputy Premier and Minister for Education Ben Carroll announced the new ScrollSafe resources – designed to help secondary school students look after their mental health and stay safe online – will be available at schools across the education state. Available to comment: Professor Mary Ryan, Dean of EducationContact: +61 9903 4940 [email protected] Internationally recognised education leader and researcher with major contributions in teacher education, reflexive learning, writing pedagogy, and the design of innovative programs that enhance education…

  • Education Training, Union
  • 11/12/2025
  • 14:59
National Tertiary Education Union

University Senate report highlights landmark reform options: NTEU

The National Tertiary Education Union (NTEU) has urged the federal government to implement the recommendations from a historic Senate inquiry into university governance. The Senate Education and Employment Legislation Committee on Thursday released its final report, which has a further eight recommendations building on the 12 from September’s interim findings. The final report calls for measures to address major crisis points in the sector including casualisation and wage theft. The bipartisan committee recommends: Enhanced power for academic boards to set the staffing profile for courses so they are guided by pedagogy not profits Mandatory reporting of the proportion of teaching…

Media Outreach made fast, easy, simple.

Feature your press release on Medianet's News Hub every time you distribute with Medianet. Pay per release or save with a subscription.