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Goldsmiths UCU’s response to management's proposals to restructure five administrative departments
UCU
is sympathetic to the College’s desire constantly to improve its
systems of recruitment, student support and governance in order to
address any problems that may currently exist. We have, however, two
sorts of objections to the current proposals: those that question the
process by which the proposals were drawn up and the possibilities for
meaningful consultation; and those that take issue with the
implications of the proposals themselves.
The Process
- UCU
believes that senior management could have consulted more widely and
systematically with senior administrative (and academic) staff who are
best placed to consider the cause of any current problems and, perhaps
more significantly, to propose strategies for dealing with problems.
- There
is a perception amongst some of our members that senior management did
not carry out business process reviews of administrative departments
and are thus not 100% familiar with the detailed work of particular
sections involved in the restructuring.
- We wish to
know what evidence senior management have that the problems, to which
the current proposals are a solution, emerge from the Registry in
particular rather than from other College structures? Additionally, we
would like to know if the results of the most recent (and expensive)
review of the Registry were taken into consideration in drawing up
these proposals.
- We understand that substantial
consultation and analysis takes a lot of time but we are concerned that
these proposals have been drawn up too quickly and that the time
offered for consultation is insufficient. The document presented to
staff talks of a two-week period of consultation and it was only after
objections raised by the trade unions at the JNCC (15/10/2008) that a
possible extension was mentioned. While we welcome the further
extension of the deadline until 14 November, we believe that the
consultation should not finish until questions raised by staff have
been fully answered (although with a deadline of the end of the Autumn
term).
- As well as the lack of time for consultation,
there is a disturbing lack of detail in the proposals which makes
meaningful consultation even more difficult. Information such as the
grades at which the new heads of department will be appointed,
departmental structures, HR processes, full timetables concerning
implementation, details of the physical location of staff affected and
any plans for training – all of that is missing from the document. We
understand that job descriptions for the new head of department roles
have now been made available – but why were these not included with the
original proposals?
- We understand that other options were presented to SMT but not
to those affected by the restructuring proposals. This further
restricts the value of the current consultation as we are not in
possession of the full range of possibilities.
- We are
particularly worried that the proposals raise the possibility of
redundancies and we further note that at the last JNCC (15/10/2008),
the prospect of re-opening the College’s voluntary severance scheme was
raised.
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The Proposals
- Staff
from different administrative sections will be writing to senior
management with their concerns regarding specific proposals but there
is an overall feeling that the current proposals involve the divorce of
operational and strategic responsibilities (inside the Student Office
and Planning and Governance Office respectively) that may well
undermine the effectiveness of both.
- There is a
related point that roles that require day-to-day access to accurate
data are being moved apart, for example with the (presumably physical)
separation of presentation ceremonies, statistical returns and
programme approval from student records. This is of course not just a
matter of the separation of roles but of people.
- The
reasons why certain sections are included and others excluded are
somewhat opaque. For example, the Alumni and Development office might
well fit inside a Marketing and Communications department while there
is no obvious logic to the accommodation of Widening Participation
staff inside the Marketing and Communications Department. Indeed,
senior management’s proposals hint at this by not even mentioning
Widening Participation in the outline of the responsibilities of the
new department! Under the new structure, Widening Participation staff
would not only lose their link with admissions but would be based in a
department that does not have a focus on issues of retention, teaching
and learning, community links, college policy, and so on.
- While
there is much to be said for an effective ‘one stop shop’, it is by no
means clear that the coming together of prospective and current
students at an enlarged counter would do anything to improve service or
reduce waiting times. It could well achieve the opposite.
- Similarly, the relocation of
student fees to Finance, situated in a separate building and lacking a
student-focused culture, is likely to harm rather than improve the
student experience – the stated aims of the proposals. This is another
example of puzzling logic: why move a section that needs to interface
with enrolment and student loan processes into a department that has a
different orientation?
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Conclusions
- While
there is a need to ensure that current administrative structures are
fit for purpose, the current proposals are flawed in that there is
little logic for some of the moves and serious concerns about the
divorcing of operational and strategic responsibilities.
- We
note senior management’s claim that these proposals are motivated by a
desire to deal with perceived problems in the current administrative
structures and not by a desire to save money.
However, without any guarantees that no jobs will be lost or existing
roles downgraded, there is a strong perception that the restructuring
is motivated by cost-cutting principles more than a genuine desire to
address fundamental problems.
- This is exacerbated by
the slim consultation period and the lack of detailed information
necessary to participate in meaningful consultation.
- We request that senior management:
- extend
the consultation period until all questions raised by staff
involved have been fully answered (though with a deadline
of the end of this term);
- provide to the trade unions the information mentioned in para. 5 above;
- address staff concerns about potential redundancies or downgrading.
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Postscript
- We
understand that letters have been sent out to staff who have been
ring-fenced for leadership posts in the proposed new departments. These
letters state that if they are unable to fill the new posts from inside
the College then redundancies may follow – a course of action to which
we are totally opposed.
- The letter mentions the
existence of a ‘later full review’ of the new departments. Surely, the
restructuring of departments depends on a full review in advance and not following any changes. This just compounds the confusion that surrounds the whole process.
- The
selection process of the new leadership posts refer to psychometric
tests. What is the justification for this and do you expect such
testing to become part of all selection processes in the future?
- What
was the basis for deciding which members of staff could be ring-fenced
for which position? Does this mean that staff are not eligible to apply
for posts for which they have not been ring-fenced?
- In
particular, we are very concerned that the content of these letters,
substantially affecting the employment prospects of the staff
concerned, was drawn up without consulting the union in advance. This
flies in the face of good industrial relations and is far from the
transparent process indicated to us at the last JNCC. Why did senior
management not invite UCU to have sight of and be involved in the
drafting of these letters?
- As a result of the
inadequate consultation, lack of detail and poor communication that has
marked the proposed re-structuring, we now have members of staff who
are extremely anxious about their positions and the period of
uncertainty that faces them.
- We will be taking
advice from UCU nationally to discuss the implications of the whole
process but seek an urgent meeting with senior management to clarify
the issues we have raised here.
30 October 2008
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Latest News on INTO
'INTO' privatisation rejected by 94% of voters at Goldsmiths College
(from UCU website 31 October 2008
http://www.ucu.org.uk/index.cfm?articleid=3589
In an online poll hosted by UCU, staff and students were asked what effect
they thought a joint venture would have on the academic reputation of the
college. A total of 764 staff and students at Goldsmiths participated with:
* 720 (94%) of those voting saying a joint venture with INTO would
adversely affect its academic reputation
* 702 (92%) saying they thought it would adversely affect the
College's reputation as an employer.
The online poll forms part of the campaign by 'Goldsmiths United Against
INTO' which unites staff and students' unions on the campus against the
threatened privatisation.
A similar poll at Essex University, in which 90% of voting staff said that
the university would be damaged by a joint venture with INTO led to that
university announcing on 7 October they would not be proceeding with a
joint venture.
A previous UCU campaign at Oxford Brookes also led to the withdrawal of
that university from negotiations with INTO.
Following the announcement of the result, Goldsmiths UCU president Des
Freedman has written to warden Geoffrey Crossick asking him to respect the
views of staff and students and call a halt to negotiations with the
company. To see the letter, follow this link.
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Commenting on the result at Goldsmiths, UCU general secretary Sally Hunt
said: 'This result shows that whenever and wherever university staff are
asked they are overwhelmingly against these joint ventures which privatise
academic departments and reduce staff working conditions.
'Goldsmiths is a special place with a unique ethos and I hope that the
warden will listen to the college community and join the growing number of
universities to reject privatisation.
'With staff and student opinion so clearly against privatisation it is now
time for those who aspire to lead the sector nationally like Universities
UK and employers' body UCEA to come off the fence and oppose privatisation
and the worsening of staff terms and conditions.'
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Archive of previous news items:
Nov 2009
Oct 2009
Sept 2009
July and August 2009
June 2009
May 2009
April 2009
March 2009
February 2009
December 2008 and January 2009
November 2008
October 2008
Any questions? email Kirsten Forkert, GUCU administrator at
gucu-admin@gold.ac.uk.
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