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100% pay penalty fails to see staff in round

November 13, 2014

I am writing to complain about how the University of Surrey is handling the University and College Union marking boycott. I am a final-year undergraduate and feel ashamed of the university that I have, up until now, loved attending.

It has come to my attention that Surrey feels it necessary to fully dock the wages of all participating staff and has even suggested that they stay at home or they may be sent home.

To send staff home without pay ensures that I not only receive no marks for work submitted, but also receive no feedback, have no access to their expertise for tutorials and, most importantly, have no lectures to attend.

I understand that the position Sir Christopher Snowden, Surrey’s president and vice-chancellor, holds as president at Universities UK would compromise Surrey’s ability to publicly condemn the upcoming changes to pensions, and nor would I expect it to condemn them; however, taking such a hard line against those who are participating in legitimate union action is a step too far.

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I urge all involved to reconsider pay withdrawal and, if docking pay is deemed necessary, to ensure that it is done appropriately, ie, stopping an amount of pay that correlates with how much time is spent marking versus other roles – such roles are not voluntary and should still be paid as usual.

I will not be complaining about the lack of marking in my module evaluation questionnaires, but will do so in the National Student Survey. I can only hope that doing this will make it clear that I do not hold the lecturers responsible for taking part in valid industrial action, but rather that I hold the university and UUK responsible for not trying to come to an agreement and advocating what is in essence union-busting.

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Milly March
Final-year undergraduate, University of Surrey

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As I come from one of the universities taking a very hard line against staff threatening action short of a strike in protest against pension reforms, I am very pleased to be able to offer a neat solution.

A few simple measures are all it takes: some 10 years ago, our staff common room (the College Club) was converted from a boozy, smoky den to a pristine sandwich bar, offering fat- and gluten-free fayre, fruit and tasty herbal teas. It is now prohibited to serve alcohol at official lunches, and colleagues (even academics!) are banned from drinking during working hours, even off campus. Of course, smoking in public has been banned as well. Life expectancy will no doubt have shot up because of this exercise in social engineering.

It would cost only some tens of thousands of pounds to refurbish the College Club, an expense the university will earn back very quickly in alcohol sales. I would suggest encouraging sales through a happy hour from 10am to 11am, thus setting us all up for a bibulous day. Stalls could be set out for a quick dram between classes, and of course, if the government could be persuaded to remove the unhelpful ban on smoking in public, ashtrays provided in offices and teaching rooms.

Younger colleagues, who don’t remember the good old days, may need some initial orientation, but, seeing the stress that they are under to perform about three times as many onerous admin roles as I was at their age, while producing world-class research at a rate of knots, I am in no doubt that they will find these new habits a welcome addition to their stress-management portfolios.

We can all go back to the happy times when it was common for people to retire in bad health and survive their leaving parties by only a few short years. Problem solved!

Name and contact details provided
Senior lecturer, University of Glasgow

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We are academics at different higher education institutions who have had a connection with the University of East Anglia or who are actively engaged in collaborative work with colleagues at that institution. We are writing to deplore the UEA’s decision to withhold 100 per cent of pay from those participating in the marking boycott called by the University and College Union in a dispute over pensions. We believe that the UEA’s response to this action is disproportionate and punitive. Moreover, we are concerned that the response of the university in this matter will seriously harm its reputation. We therefore call upon the UEA to reconsider its decision as a matter of urgency.

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