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4 NOVEMBER 2013, WEEK 7
LEWES BONFIRE PREVIEW THE ROYAL ISSUE: QE2 OPENS £19M ARCHIVE SUSSEX SAYS
The etiquette of clothing in clubs
FEATURE
Miriam Steiner Page 3 explores religiosity on campus Page 8 Page 5
THE BIG DEBATE
SCIENCE
Is The Queen an Page 14 figurehead appropriate to open The Keep? Page 11
EU plan to ban menthol cigarettes by 2020 Page 12
ARTSTUNE IN ONLINE Mos Def reviewed at Concorde 2
Page 15
Resistance in the rain Trade Unions take a stance on wage deflations with student support on the picket line
Daniel Green & Jack Williams News Editor Striking trade unionists and student sympathisers defied treacherous weather conditions to partake in industrial action centred on a pay dispute. Members of Unite, Unison and UCU took the decision to strike in response to being offered only a 1% pay increase by the University and College Employers association (UCEA) after two months of negotiation earlier this year, a significantly lower offer than the Unions’ demand of a 3.2% increase. An estimated 100 demonstrators formed four separate pickets across entrances to the University of Sussex campus, attempting to dissuade others from entering. Notable figures such as Owen Jones, as well as Brighton Pavilion MP Caroline Lucas, have expressed sympathy with strikers and their struggle to receive a better deal on pay. Reiterating the Students’ Union’s support for industrial action, Emily Holliday, Students’ Union Operations Officer, explained: “The Students’ Union supports the strike as we have made clear in our statement and I personally feel it’s completely unfair that lecturers and tutors are being offered a cut in real term pay whilst the management’s salaries rise. It’s a reflection of what’s going on in society at the moment”. Tim Carter, a tutor and member of UCU, was adamant that the University would “have to listen”, in the face of orchestrated industrial action, commenting: “It’s not just lecturers and tutors that are striking, its support staff, professional service workers and some of the lowest paid people in Higher Education. “At a time when Universities are in
surplus, they can afford to invest in their staff, but they neglect to do so.” Earlier in the day, a temporary barricade was erected by rogue sympathisers outside of Falmer house, but was later kicked down by someone entering campus. Jeremy, a Unite member, predicted that constant below inflation wage increases would have detrimental effects on the living standards of junior higher education employees. He said: “We’ve all got bills and energy prices are going up; everything is more expensive. Universities are making significant amounts of money and we’re getting a pay cut year after year. We’re down 13% since 2008. It’s ridiculous.” Insisting that he was prepared to participate in further bouts of industrial action, he continued: “A one day strike is good for raising consciousness but as far as I’m concerned you’ve got to show management we’re not prepared to sit around and be ignored. Enough is enough.” Echoing these sentiments, a senior member of a striking Union, said he was ready to do “whatever it takes”, adding: “I am prepared to do a two day or three day strike. This is the only route we have left. Negotiations have got us nowhere”. Questioned why they made individual staff members declare if they intended not to strike, a University of Sussex spokesperson stated: “We wanted to ensure that, as far as possible, services could continue to run as normal for our students, staff and campus visitors, so we needed to make an assessment of staff attendance.” They continued: “We did this by asking them to report in advance that they would not be taking strike action. This is the same approach we have taken in previous industrial action.”
Summer Dean
‘Long may she rain...’
Halloween had a royal flavour as HRH The Queen visited on Thursday. Her Majesty, last seen at Sussex to open the library in 1964, toured the local area and opened The Keep, the new home for the University’s state of the art archive collection, across the road from the campus. The vast collection includes thousands
of historical resources and archive materials, available for use by academics in all fields. The Queen arrived just after 2pm, meeting staff volunteer groups and unveiling a plaque to commemorate the occasion. The £19m facility, situated across the
Summer Dean road from Falmer campus, will open to the public next month. Michael Farthing, the Vice-Chancellor, said in anticipation of the occasion: “The University of Sussex is proud to be a partner in creating this remarkable new resource for the region. It is a fitting home for our internationally-acclaimed Special Collections.”