Skip to content
Education Training

Devastating staff cuts at University of Southern Queensland will severely impact research and learning

National Tertiary Education Union 2 mins read

###REISSUING WITH CORRECT CONTACT NUMBER###

 

 

Staff cuts at the University of Southern Queensland will devastate research and learning, the NTEU has warned.

 

The cuts will eliminate 150 full-time equivalent positions, approximately 10% of the university's workforce. The National Tertiary Education Union (NTEU) strongly condemns these cuts and is calling for their immediate reversal.

 

This reduction comes on top of 109 positions already lost last year, continuing a troubling pattern of deterioration in working conditions and educational quality at the institution.

 

"These cuts are an unprecedented attack on the university's capacity to deliver quality education and research," said Professor Andrea Lamont-Mills, NTEU USQ Branch President. 

 

"Coming on top of 109 positions already lost last year, these additional cuts will devastate the university's research capabilities and teaching standards that regional communities rely on."

 

The restructuring plan includes:

  • 150 full-time equivalent positions to be eliminated (10% of workforce)

  • Reduction in the number of Schools from 12 to 8

  • Threat of forced redundancies if voluntary targets aren't met

  • Voluntary redundancies to be finalised before the end of the financial year

 

Alarmingly, when staff accessed the university's redundancy calculator, they were able to view which other employees had previously used the calculator for a short period of time.

 

"This is deeply embarrassing but it's also potentially a serious violation of staff privacy rights," Professor Lamont-Mills said. "It underscores the mismanagement and carelessness with which this entire restructuring process is being handled."

 

Further raising public interest concerns, the appointment of the Acting Vice-Chancellor to the Vice-Chancellor position has created a governance controversy. The Acting Vice-Chancellor was appointed to the VC position pending a search for a permanent VC. The process by which this appointment was made has not been made clear to staff. Staff have also not been informed of this change.

 

"We are deeply concerned that another non-transparent appointment process may be underway to permanently install the current acting VC, bypassing proper governance protocols that should be expected at a public institution," said Professor Lamont-Mills. "The public deserves better"

 

"You cannot cut 10% of your workforce on top of previous reductions and expect to maintain quality research and teaching. The university's capacity to produce world-class research and deliver high-quality education will be severely compromised," Professor Lamont-Mills added.

 

The NTEU calls on the university to immediately reverse the damaging cuts, genuinely consult with staff and their union, and provide full transparency around financial justifications for these decisions.

 

For media enquiries, please contact: Professor Andrea Lamont-Mills 0409639148

More from this category

  • 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…

  • Education Training
  • 11/12/2025
  • 13:30
La Trobe University

Globe co-founder to receive La Trobe Hon Doc

**All information is strictly embargoed to 1.30pm, 11 December MEDIA INVITATION Globe co-founder to receive La Trobe Hon Doc TOMORROW, THURSDAY, 11 DECEMBER, 1.30PM AEDT Skateboarding pioneer turned global entrepreneur, social activist and media producer Stephen Hill OAM will be awarded a prestigious Honorary Doctorate by La Trobe University for his influence in shaping skateboarding culture, fashion and media, as well as his contributions to community, business and the creative industries. Stephen, a La Trobe Business School alumnus in the early 1980s, will skate through the Bundoora campus one more time, not only receiving a Doctor of Letters but a…

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.