Skip to content
Education Training, Industrial Relations

Fears university eyeing unprecedented tactics to drive down pay and conditions

National Tertiary Education Union 2 mins read

The National Tertiary Education Union has expressed serious concerns the University of Newcastle is preparing to game new workplace laws to drive down pay and conditions.

The University of Newcastle has applied for the Fair Work Commission to deal with a bargaining dispute after NTEU members rejected management’s settlement offer. 

The scope of the university’s application is broad, and includes key workplace rights of University staff.

The NTEU fears this is proof management wants to use new intractable bargaining processes to gut staff working conditions. These new laws come into effect from June 6.

 

NTEU members at the University of Newcastle will strike for 24 hours on Thursday when there will be a community rally in Newcastle CBD.

 

To access an intractable bargaining determination, disputes must have been previously referred to the Commission.

 

The Australian Higher Education Industrial Association (AHEIA) gave advice on how employers can access intractable bargaining processes in a strategy roadmap leaked in March.  

 

University of Newcastle Vice-Chancellor Alex Zelinsky sits on the executive of AHEIA, which highlights intractable bargaining disputes as a way to “redress poor clauses”.

 

NTEU General Secretary Damien Cahill said:

 

“Universities that pursue unprecedented anti-worker tactics in an attempt to cut pay and gut conditions will meet strong resistance.

 

“Pay and conditions being decided through arbitration will likely leave staff worse off than an agreement between the NTEU and management.

 

“Universities that find common ground with the NTEU always reach deals which benefit staff, students and the institution.

 

“Instead, the University of Newcastle is determined to undermine pay and conditions by using the bosses’ association’s disgraceful industrial game plan. It’s little surprise the Vice-Chancellor sits on AHEIA’s executive committee.

 

“University of Newcastle’s last attempt to sideline the union from bargaining led to a humiliating defeat when staff overwhelmingly voted against a substandard pay deal in December.

 

“That vote sent a loud and clear message to management that staff want the union to negotiate a fair outcome with management. But they have ignored that message and appear hellbent on using every last tactic to avoid enterprise bargaining.

 

“The NTEU is drawing a line in the sand. We will fight tooth and nail against any attempt to use workplace laws to sideline workers.”


Contact details:

Matt Coughlan 0400 561 480 / [email protected]

More from this category

  • Education Training, Government SA
  • 02/03/2026
  • 17:28
Independent Tertiary Education Council Australia

The Boyer-Hood Debate: Future of Skills in South Australia at ITECA Business Summit

Key Facts: Education Minister Blair Boyer and Shadow Minister Dennis Hood to debate future of skills training at ITECA South Australia Business Summit on 11 March 2026Event to be held at Adelaide's Playford Hotel ahead of state election on 21 MarchSummit aims to address unprecedented skills needs across various sectors including infrastructure, healthcare, and hospitalityLive debate will allow sector stakeholders to hear both major parties' visions for skills training and workforce developmentEvent features full-day programme with speakers and panel discussions from industry and workforce leadersMinister for Education, Training and Skills, the Hon Blair Boyer MP and Mr Dennis Hood MLC,…

  • Education Training, LGBTQIA
  • 02/03/2026
  • 14:38
Independent Education Union of Australia NSW/ACT Branch

Union backs MP’s call to scrap exemptions to anti-discrimination law

2 March 2026 The union representing teachers and support staff in non-government schools in NSW and the ACT backs Sydney Independent MP Alex Greenwich’s call during Mardi Gras to scrap religious exemptions that make it legal to discriminate against school staff and students. “We welcome Mr Greenwich’s commitment to end the exemptions that permit non-government schools to target and punish LGBTQIA+ teachers and students,” said Independent Education Union of Australia NSW/ACT Branch Secretary Carol Matthews. “However, the problem is even worse than Mr Greenwich has identified.” At present, the NSW Anti-Discrimination Act allows faith-based schools to discriminate against people because…

  • Contains:
  • Education Training, Food Beverages
  • 02/03/2026
  • 12:07
STEPS

STEPS launches free hospitality course in Caloundra to boost Sunshine Coast workforce

STEPS has launched a free, nationally recognised SIT20322 Certificate II in Hospitality course in Caloundra to help people on the Sunshine Coast enter the…

  • Contains:

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.