Skip to content
Education Training

Government snubs Senate Committee

Australian Higher Education Industrial Association 2 mins read

The federal government is snubbing a Senate committee with a headlong rush to cap the number of international students wishing to study at Australia’s universities.

The committee is inquiring into the Education Services for Overseas Students Amendment (Quality and Integrity) Bill. The matter was referred to it by the Senate on May 16 this year and since there have been several public hearings with 70 submissions received.

“Such has been the desire to make representations to the committee the reporting date for it has been extended several times, including just this week and now is proposed for September 16, 2024,” the Executive Director of the Australian Higher Education Industrial Association (AHEIA), Craig Laughton, said.

Mr Laughton said a majority of the representations to the committee opposed the proposed international student cap of Education Minister, Jason Clare.

“The Minister ought to show courtesy to the committee and its members as well as all of those people and groups that have made a submission opposing the decision and put a stop to any movement on international student caps until the committee has reported and he and his department have considered its report. To go ahead before the report is a snub to the six-person committee, which is chaired by Labor Senator, Tony Sheldon,” he said.

AHEIA has made a submission to the committee and argued against the student caps.  It also has sought co-operation from the National Tertiary Education Union (NTEU) to push the government to drop the proposal.

“We wrote to the NTEU almost two months ago, suggesting we could work co-operatively to retain the international student market for our universities and prevent a number of negative impacts. 

“We have reached out to the union and pointed out that the caps:

  • will result in a significant reduction in university revenue at a time when the sector is experiencing major cost pressures through changes to industrial law;
  • would cut employment opportunities and impact the capacity of universities to appropriately reward higher education employees;
  • will limit student opportunities; and
  • will harm the country’s research capacity and therefore the status and global rankings of Australia’s universities.

“So far we have heard nothing.”

Mr Laughton said Australia stood to lose billions of dollars in revenue, while universities would suffer major cuts to their revenue streams, a drop in their international rankings, possible job losses and course cutbacks.

Ends


Contact details:

Craig Laughton | (he/him)
Executive Director | Australian Higher Education Industrial Association | 
phone: 0477 799 149
craig.laughton@aheia.edu.auwww.aheia.edu.au 

More from this category

  • Education Training, Immigration
  • 19/12/2024
  • 16:51
Independent Tertiary Education Council Australia (ITECA)

New Approach To International Education Inconsistent And Lacks Integrity

The Australian Government’s newly announced policy approach for the international education sector is causing significant frustration and uncertainty for members of the Independent Tertiary Education Council Australia (ITECA). ITECA is the peak body representing independent skills training, higher education, and international education providers. The approach, framed as a legal exercise under the Migration Act 1958 (Cth), follows Parliament’s failure to pass amendments to the Education Services for Overseas Students Act 2000 (Cth) after four days of public hearings through a Senate Committee that also included more than 260 submissions where the adverse outcomes of Australian Government policy were laid bare…

  • Contains:
  • Education Training, Industrial Relations
  • 19/12/2024
  • 16:35
Independent Education Union of Australia NSW/ACT Branch

Christmas win: New deal for independent school teachers and staff

Thursday 19 December 2024 In last-minute talks ahead of a hearing at the Fair Work Commission today, the IEU reached a deal with the Association of Independent Schools NSW (AIS) that includes substantial pay rises and improved conditions in new three-year multi-enterprise agreements (MEAs) covering about 30,000 employees in 244 schools across NSW and the ACT. The Independent Education Union of Australia NSW/ACT Branch, which represents teachers and support staff in non-government schools, has been negotiating with the AIS since May to distil 10 separate agreements into just three new MEAs, one for teachers and two for professional and operational…

  • Contains:
  • Education Training
  • 19/12/2024
  • 16:31
NSW Department of Education

Public high schools secure prestigious first in course places

Public high schools secure prestigious first in course places NSW public high schools across the State are celebrating the excellence of their HSC students after securing 51 First in Course awards at a ceremony earlier this week. Twenty-six students from 23 NSW public schools received a First in Course award and 25 First-in Course awards were secured by students at the NSW Education Department’s two specialist language schools – around half the language awards on offer. NSW Department of Education Secretary Murat Dizdar said he was thrilled to meet with public school students from across the State at Tuesday's First…

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.