Education Policy | Post Primary | Preschool | Primary | Tertiary | Search

 


Students Open Letter To Victoria University VC

AN OPEN LETTER TO THE VICE-CHANCELLOR

Dear Professor Irving,

I am concerned about the drastic increase in fees you announced yesterday. Looking through the media release issued you seem unable to provide any real justification for these increases. As I am not yet a member of the University Council, I do not have any supporting documentation, so I would ask that you answer the following questions, on public record, for the benefit of the staff and students you are employed to serve:

1. In your media statement, you justify the fee increase on the grounds that total government funding at Victoria University has decreased by $2 million since 1998. Given that the University Council increased fees by $7 million last year, and your fee increase is estimated to generate an additional $5 million this year, can you explain where the unaccounted $10 million has gone/will go?

2. Given that the University Management recently sold internet company Netlink for many millions of dollars, can you please explain where this money is going to be spent? If it is to be spent on infrastructure such as new computer labs, as I understand, why are you using this expenditure as a justification for fee increases?

3. In your media statement you claim "Victoria University of Wellington has recommended to Council the setting of student fees for three years". According to legislation "The University" is defined as the staff, students, council and alumni. Upon what basis do you claim that this fees structure has been recommended and supported by "The University"?

4. In your recent statements about the current staff industrial action you claimed that any pay increase for staff would result in increased fees for students. Given that student fees are set to rise considerably, does this mean you are intending to make a reasonable pay offer to staff in order to end the current industrial dispute?

5. Recognising that overall the University Management must accept responsibility for ensuring students are delivered the courses they have been promised, if you are not intending to make a new offer to staff, can you explain what measures will be taken to ensure further industrial action will not disrupt students further?

6. Given that under the fee structure you propose students will pay considerably more money, can you please explain how the recent voluntary redundancies being promoted in the Humanities and Science Faculties will affect the staff : student ratios? If the staff : student ratio is expected to increase, how will this impact on the quality of education being provided?

7. Given that the Commerce Faculty at Victoria University is often held out as a model of sound financial performance to which other faculties should aspire, can you justify commerce students suffering at the hands of the largest fee increase?

8. You claim that major improvements in operating efficiency have been made. Can you please outline what the budget for Senior Management was before you arrived in 1998 and what has been budgeted for Senior Management in 2000? In addition, can you also provide similar information about the level of expenditure on consultants?

9. You acknowledgement and support for the notion that students expect and are entitled to better services and facilities is applauded. Can you itemise the improvements that will be made to student services and amenities as a result of the increase in fees proposed?

As an elected representative of students I ask you provide this information before or at the University Council meeting on Monday. Students are being asked to shoulder the burden of yet another massive fee increase without any real justification. If Victoria University is, as it claims to be, a "World Class, Student Centred" institution, you will have no hesitation in providing students with this information.

I look forward to your prompt reply.

Yours sincerely,

Chris Hipkins
President-elect
VUWSA EXECUTIVE


© Scoop Media

 
 
 
 
 
Culture Headlines | Health Headlines | Education Headlines

 
Werewolf: Katniss Joins The News Team

From the outset, the Hunger Games series has dwelt obsessively on the ways that media images infiltrate our public and personal lives... From that grim starting point, Mockingjay Part One takes the process a few stages further. There is very little of the film that does not involve the characters (a) being on screens (b) making propaganda footage to be screened and (c) reacting to what other characters have been doing on screens. More>>

ALSO:

Scoop Review Of Books: Ko Witi Te Kaituhituhi

Witi Ihimaera, the distinguished Māori author and the first Māori to publish a book of short stories and a novel, has adopted a new genre with his latest book. But despite its subtitle, this book is a great deal more than a memoir of childhood. More>>

Werewolf: Rescuing Paul Robeson

Would it be any harder these days, for the US government to destroy the career of a famous American entertainer and disappear them from history – purely because of their political beliefs? You would hope so. In 1940, Paul Robeson – a gifted black athlete, singer, film star, Shakespearean actor and orator – was one of the most beloved entertainers on the planet. More>>

ALSO:

"Not A Competition... A Quest": Chapman Tripp Theatre Award Winners

Big winners on the night were Equivocation (Promising Newcomer, Best Costume, Best Director and Production of the Year), Kiss the Fish (Best Music Composition, Outstanding New NZ Play and Best Supporting Actress), and Watch (Best Set, Best Sound Design and Outstanding Performance). More>>

ALSO:

Film Awards: The Dark Horse Scores Big

An inspirational film based on real life Gisborne speed-chess coach An inspirational film based on real life Gisborne speed-chess coach Genesis Potini, made all the right moves to take out top honours along with five other awards at the Rialto Channel New Zealand Film Awards - nicknamed The Moas. More>>

ALSO:

Theatre: Ralph McCubbin Howell Wins 2014 Bruce Mason Award

The Bruce Mason Playwriting Award was presented to Ralph McCubbin Howell at the Playmarket Accolades in Wellington on 23 November 2014. More>>

ALSO:

One Good Tern: Fairy Tern Crowned NZ Seabird Of The Year

The fairy tern and the Fiji petrel traded the lead in the poll several times. But a late surge saw it come out on top with 1882 votes. The Fiji petrel won 1801 votes, and 563 people voted for the little blue penguin. More>>

Music Awards: Lorde Reigns Supreme

Following a hugely successful year locally and internationally, Lorde has done it again taking out no less than six Tuis at the 49th annual Vodafone New Zealand Music Awards. More>>

ALSO:

Get More From Scoop

 
 

LATEST HEADLINES

 
 
 
 
Education
Search Scoop  
 
 
Powered by Vodafone
NZ independent news