Staff strikers speak to AU students

Neges oddi wrth gangen Aberystwyth o Undeb y Prifysgolion a’r Colegau (UCU)

 

Galw pob myfyriwr! Dewch draw i gwrdd â ni ar fuarth Canolfan y Celfyddydau y dydd Llun yma rhwng 12.00 a 2.00! Bydd eich darlithwyr a’ch tiwtoriaid sy’n cymryd rhan yn y gweithredu diwydiannol yn cynnal stondin wybodaeth ddydd Llun 13 Chwefror lle y byddwn ni’n gobeithio cwrdd â chi ac ateb eich cwestiynau.

 

Hoffem roi cymaint o wybodaeth â phosib am y gweithredu diwydiannol dros yr wythnosau nesaf a hefyd pam rydym ni’n cymryd y camau hyn. Rydym ni’n awyddus iawn i glywed gennych chi hefyd: beth yw’ch pryderon, sut y gallem gyfathrebu â chi a chadw cyswllt â chi ac, os ydych chi’n cefnogi ein gweithredu, sut y gallwch chithau chwarae rhan i ddangos eich cefnogaeth.

 

 Message from Aberystwyth University College Union (UCU)  

 

Calling all AU students! Come and meet us on the Art Centre concourse this Monday between 12.00 and 2.00! Your lecturers and tutors who are taking part in strike action are holding a lunchtime info stand on Monday 13th Feb to meet you and answer your questions.

 

We’d like to let you know as much as possible about the industrial action over the coming weeks and also why we’re undertaking it. We’d really like to hear from you as well, what your concerns are, how we can communicate and keep in touch with you, and, if you support our action, how you can get involved in demonstrating your support.  

Why is this a national dispute …

… and not a local one?

 

This dispute is a national dispute. Negotiations over pay and working conditions are conducted and agreed between representatives of the university businesses (UCEA) and the representatives of their staff (UCU), NOT between staff and managers of individual universities.

 

The strikes can only be called off by national agreements.

We explain why we think we are where we are here …

Aberystwyth Union’s in solidarity

United – members of the UCU, NEU and PCS unions marched in numbers through Aberystwyth

It was windy. And there were a lot of us.

Covered in full in the Cambrian News here

The rally revealed our shared concerns and hardships over:

  • the long term devaluing of our sectors and skills,
  • high attrition rates of younger staff from our sectors,
  • the struggle felt in encouraging these careers to new entrants,
  • institutional reliance on goodwill to deliver our contracts,
  • our unsustainable workloads and the increasingly complex demands of our labour,
  • and the very real and immediate impact of inflation and precarious employment on less well reimbursed, junior and part-time staff (with associated differential equality impacts)

This is what our fight is about. Solidarity. And pushing for change for the better.

Rollicking Rally

There are seven trades unions taking industrial action across the country on Wednesday 1st Feb.

Many of them will be meeting up at 11.45am at the University entrance and marching to a rally at St. Paul’s Methodist Centre at 12.30.

Whether you are in UCU, another union or just feel a need to show support for public sector workers come and join us.

Datganiad gan Ben Lake AS

Statement of support for Aber UCU action from Ben Lake MP – 31/01/23

Diolch am y cyfle i gael dweud ychydig eiriau heddiw, ac mae’n wir ddrwg gen i na allaf fod yna gyda chi. Rwyf ar hyn o bryd yn San Steffan ac yn disgwyl pleidleisio ar Bil Seilwaith Banc y Llywodraeth (Government’s Infrastructure Bank Bill) yn hwyrach prynhawn yma.

Rwyf mewn undod llwyr gydag aelodau’r UCU, NEU a PCS sy’n streicio heddiw. Rydym yn gwybod bod yr anghydfodau sydd wedi ysgogi'r gweithredu diwydiannol hwn yn hen hanes. Ymhell cyn yr argyfwng costau byw presennol roedd staff y brifysgol wedi dioddef dirywiad parhaus yn eu cyflogau a'u hamodau gwaith, ac mae degawd o lymder wedi achosi straen tebyg i bob gwasanaeth cyhoeddus.

Rydym yn gwybod bod tâl y rhai sy'n gweithio mewn addysg uwch wedi gostwng 25% yn is na chwyddiant ers 2009, mae pensiynau wedi'u cwtogi, a dros yr un cyfnod mae llwyth gwaith wedi codi. Mae'r un peth yn wir am y rhai sy'n gweithio ym myd addysg a gwasanaethau cyhoeddus.

Credaf fod gofynion UCU yn ei anghydfod yn rhesymol, realistig, ac yn fforddiadwy – dyma’r lleiaf y mae staff ein prifysgol yn ei haeddu. Dylid a gellid cyflwyno codiadau cyflog parchus, rhoi diwedd ar gyflogaeth ansicr a darparu pensiynau teg.

Mae'r un peth yn wir am y camau a gymerwyd gan aelodau NEU a’r PCS, a gyda hyn mewn golwg mae'n bwysig nodi bod streic heddiw yn cyd-fynd â diwrnod 'diogelu'r hawl i streicio' y TUC. Mae aelodau undebau ar draws y DU yn protestio yn erbyn cynlluniau Llywodraeth y DU i gyflwyno mesurau gwrth-streic llym drwy'r senedd.

Mae'r hawl i streicio yn hawl sylfaenol, ac rwy'n gwrthwynebu'n gryf ymgais y Llywodraeth i gwtogi ar hawliau gweithwyr. Mae'n afresymol i'r Llywodraeth siarad am lefelau gwasanaeth sylfaenol pan fydd degawd o lymder wedi tanseilio ein gwasanaethau cyhoeddus yn ofnadwy, gan eu gadael wedi’u rhwygo’n ddarnau. Byddaf yn parhau i wrthwynebu'r ddeddfwriaeth niweidiol iawn yma a byddaf yn parhau i sefyll dros hawliau ein gweithwyr allweddol.

Rwy'n falch dangos fy nghefnogaeth i bob gweithiwr sy'n gweithredu i amddiffyn eu cyflog a'u hamodau heddiw; i amddiffyn ein gwasanaethau cyhoeddus a'r sector addysg uwch; a diogelu'r hawl sylfaenol i streicio

Strike Dates Announced

UCU have announced the date for industrial action over February and March 2023.

 

“70,000 UCU members will walk out.

The full dates of strike action are:

  • Week 1 – Wednesday 1 February
  • Week 2 – Thursday 9 and Friday 10 February
  • Week 3 – Tuesday 14, Wednesday 15 and Thursday 16 February
  • Week 4 – Tuesday 21, Wednesday 22 and Thursday 23 February
  • Week 5 – Monday 27 and Tuesday 28 February and Wednesday 1 and Thursday 2 March
  • [No action week commencing Monday 6 March]
  • Week 6 – Thursday 16 and Friday 17 March
  • Week 7 – Monday 20, Tuesday 21 and Wednesday 22 March

If the action goes ahead, it will be the biggest series of strikes ever to hit UK university campuses.”

 

Note the ‘IF’ in that quote.

 

Our hope is that action will not be necessary and the UK universities will make some more realistic proposals on pensions, workload, contracts, inequality in the sector and pay.

 

None of us want to disrupt the education of our students, or our important research and work in our communities. But many of us need to see meaningful change in our working environment if we are to be able to continue providing these things.