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Five day strike begins at University of Chester

Staff at the University of Chester begin a five-day walkout today (Monday) over deteriorating pay and working conditions. Staff are picketing the main university entrances.

Staff will also be attending a rally with local MPs on Friday from 11am at Chester Cross.

The UK wide strike action involves staff at 67 universities. It started last week when staff at 40 universities downed tools for five days. This is the third round of strike action this academic year.

The University and College Union (UCU) also warned of a staff exodus from UK universities after a majority of university staff said they are considering leaving the sector. The finding comes from a new UCU report ‘UK Higher Education – a workforce in crisis’ based on a survey of almost 7k (6,761) university staff at over 100 institutions. 

The survey found:

·        Three out of five respondents said they are likely or very likely to leave the university sector in the next five years over deteriorating pay and working conditions.

·        Almost nine in 10 (88%) of respondents said they are not optimistic or not at all optimistic about the future of higher education in the UK

·        A majority (57%) of respondents said they are unhappy or very unhappy about spending the remainder of their career in higher education

Industrial ballots also opened at 149 universities this month, including at Chester. They will run until Friday 8 April. Successful ballots pave the way for action to continue to be called throughout the remainder of 2022.

New inflation figures mean UCU estimates staff pay is now down by more than a quarter in real terms since 2009. Over 70k academics are employed on insecure contracts. The gender pay gap in UK universities sits at 16%, whilst the disability pay gap is 9% and the race pay gap is up to 17%.

The union is demanding an end to race, gender and disability pay injustice; a framework to eliminate zero-hours and other insecure contracts; and meaningful action to tackle unmanageable workloads; as well as a £2.5k pay rise for all university employees.

The union said universities can more than afford to meet the demands of staff. University finance figures show total income across the sector is around £41.9bn with reserves of £46.8bn. Students have been supporting striking staff and the National Union of Students joined the previous round of action with a student strike on Wednesday 2 March.

UCU general secretary Jo Grady said: ‘University staff are striking over falling pay and brutal working conditions. They have been pushed to breaking point again and again by vice-chancellors and are now saying that they are ready to leave the sector entirely. This is a damning indictment of the way staff have been treated.

‘If vice chancellors continue to ignore the longstanding concerns of staff, they will threaten the future of higher education in the UK. Universities generate income worth tens of billions and sit on huge reserves. They can afford to treat their staff better and would benefit their institutions by doing so.

'The toxic working culture that has been created by vice-chancellors cannot be allowed to continue, which is why university staff are on picket lines yet again.’

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