Petition: Put lost strike wages into mental health services & the student hardship fund

Staff at the University of Bath and other UK universities are taking strike action to defend their pensions. For each day we are on strike, we lose a day’s pay. We believe that our lost wages should go into a hardship fund for our students and towards improving mental health support for students and staff.

All staff and students are invited to sign this petition to university senior management.

To find out why staff are going on strike, see “Background: Why are we striking?” below.

The Petition

Dear Professor Lambert (Pro-VC Learning & Teaching),

The same marketisation agenda that sees universities cutting staff pay and increasing their workloads and job insecurity has led to ever-increasing tuition fees, ballooning rents, and growing numbers of students having to work part-time jobs simply to get by.

When staff are forced to take strike action to defend their pensions, their lost wages should go directly into a fund to support students and staff worst hit by university marketisation, including those hit by financial hardship and mental health problems. Lost wages should not be allowed to disappear into general university budgets or into senior management pay.

We call on you as the Pro-Vice Chancellor for Learning and Teaching to commit to ensuring that all money saved on the wages of striking staff goes into the University of Bath Hardship Fund and towards improving mental health support for staff and students.

Put lost strike wages into mental health services & the student hardship fund

Dear Professor Lambert,

The same marketisation agenda that sees universities cutting staff pay and increasing their workloads and job insecurity has led to ever-increasing tuition fees, ballooning rents, and growing numbers of students having to work part-time jobs simply to get by.

When staff are forced to take strike action to defend their pensions, their lost wages should go directly into a fund to support students and staff worst hit by university marketisation, including those hit by financial hardship and mental health problems. Lost wages should not be allowed to disappear into general university budgets or into senior management pay.

We call on you as the Pro-Vice Chancellor for Learning and Teaching to commit to ensuring that all money saved on the wages of striking staff goes into the University of Bath Hardship Fund and towards improving mental health support for staff and students.

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Background: Why are we striking?

University Vice Chancellors are trying to take away our guaranteed pensions and cut our retirement income by an average of £10,000 per year. Our union, UCU, has tried to negotiate for months, but the employers will not listen. Professor Glynis Breakwell, our outgoing Vice Chancellor, is also paid £50,000 per year to be a Director of our pension scheme!

We desperately want to avoid strike action but have been left with no choice – we simply cannot allow Vice Chancellors, who have already taken so much from staff and students, to take away our security in retirement as well.

University staff have accepted pay levels that are lower than comparably skilled professions, partly because we had a decent pension. Now our right to security and dignity in older age is under attack. If employers get their way:

  • Final pensions would depend on how the stock market performs not on how much we pay in.
  • Our pension (i.e. retirement pay) would be cut by between 20% and 40%.
  • We will have the worst pensions in the education sector and universities like Bath will face a recruitment and retention crisis as staff seek better financial security elsewhere.

There is more information about the attack on our pension scheme and our strike action at the UCU national website.

We are grateful for the support of our students and for this message from the National Union of Students (NUS).

If you are a student and would like to support your staff, please contact the Bath UCU Secretary. If you are a Postgraduate student, you can join UCU for free!

Update: VC Pay & Governance

It has been several months since HEFCE launched an investigation into the University of Bath. The investigation is ongoing and is expected to conclude later this month.

Recent developments:

  • There have been reports of a “very significant” drop in undergraduate student applications. These match feedback from staff across the academic departments that prospective students and parents are frequently raising questions and concerns about senior management pay and governance.
  • University Council (the governing body) announced the removal of the Vice-Chancellor from the Remuneration Committee. However, the Vice-Chancellor will still attend meetings of the Remuneration Committee and UCU have described the announcement as a “worthless stunt to try and stem the tide of damaging media stories“.
  • Council have revealed some details of the long-awaited university governance review. The joint unions are concerned that staff and students will not be able to meaningfully participate in the review.
  • Staff, students and Emeritus Professors who are members of University Court have requested an urgent meeting to discuss senior management pay and governance. They have received a letter to inform them that this request has been blocked by University Council.
  • Film director and University of Bath honorary graduate  Ken Loach is the first external speaker to publicly cancel an event at the University over the scandal. He joined students to demand “the resignation of the vice-chancellor and senior governors”, introduction of a 10:1 pay ratio, cuts to student rents and governance reforms “to give students and staff more control” of the university.
  • Four Members of Parliament have now resigned from the University, citing unacceptable senior management pay and inequality. The MP for Bath, Wera Hobhouse, has also condemned university governors for the Vice-Chancellor’s “morally indefensible” £451K salary, which she said had “brought the university into disrepute“.
  • Freedom of Information requests have revealed that last year almost £19K was claimed in expenses for the Vice-Chancellor’s Lansdown Crescent residence (including bills, Council Tax and a housekeeper), and that the Vice-Chancellor has also received a £31K interest-free car loan from university funds.

Many of these developments have been summarised in a timeline article by the Bath Chronicle.

Union Action

The unions at the University of Bath have long fought to address staff and student grievances about failures of the governing body to tackle pay inequality and excessive senior management pay rises.

In early July, the unions sent a letter to members of University Council about these issues. Four months later, the letter remains unanswered. It is clear that despite everything that has happened, there remains powerful resistance from the very top of the university to any meaningful dialogue with staff and students about the problems of pay inequality and university governance.

Last month the unions invited national UCU Vice President Doug Chalmers to Bath to discuss the crisis of governance. He was able to provide some insights and advice from his experience with governance reforms in Scotland. The unions will now be meeting to agree a way forward in a joint campaign for a more open and democratic university that is accountable to its students, staff and the wider community.

The joint unions will continue to provide students and staff with updates and will be consulting with members about how we should proceed with the campaign. This is your university and it is important that you have a say in how it is run. If you would like to offer suggestions or take a more active role, please contact your union branch President or Chair by replying to this message.

University of Bath UCU
The SU, University of Bath
Unite, University of Bath
UNISON at the University of Bath​