There Is An Alternative Say No to Sixth Form College Cuts Support the NUT Action
Sixth form colleges under attack The sixth form college sector is recognised as successful but is under attack - colleges are implementing redundancies, increases in group size and reductions in courses offered Teachers have seen pay comparability with schools lost and now face a pay freeze Students and colleges are suffering from the cuts to teaching and the abolition of the EMA
NUT Action NUT members voted for action short of strike action and discontinuous strike action on pay, funding and working conditions NUT members and some NASUWT members in sixth form colleges commenced action short of strike action on 3 October 2012 The NUT pensions ballot is still valid.
Strike Action NUT Conference agreed at Easter 2013 that, if the Government does not enter into meaningful discussions on pay, pensions and conditions, NUT and NASUWT will extend the industrial action short of strike action and start a rolling programme of strike action on 27 June 2013 in North West England.
Action in the Autumn Term The programme of rolling action will continue with: Further strikes in other parts of England & Wales in September and/or October; A national strike before Christmas.
Teacher pay The sixth form college employers are again seeking to freeze pay in The pay award of only 0.75% was well below the 2.3% in schools The employers promised to restore comparability but are again offering no increase for teachers now face a further substantial real terms pay cut
NUT pay and funding campaign The NUT is at the heart of a joint campaign to defend education from the impact of the cuts We will continue to seek to work jointly with ATL, NASUWT and Unison on sixth form college issues and will continue to campaign against the Government’s public sector cuts
Action against the Government The Government is slashing funding for sixth form colleges The cuts have only just begun Students and teachers have already been hit The damage will be irreparable
Action against the employers We must resist the pay freeze and loss of comparability with schools The employers have a choice – and should honour their previous commitments Attacks on teachers are self-defeating
Why the cuts? Cuts to funding are part of the Government’s wider public sector cuts The cuts are being widely attacked, even by former supporters, as the economy recovers from a “double-dip” recession Cuts don’t solve problems, they create them
The long-term picture
A history lesson UK public debt is significantly lower than in many other major economies National debt is not new - it has been much higher in the past Between 1916 and 1970, UK debt was much higher than now - yet we could still fund the creation of the welfare state and the NHS
Cuts that don’t heal Treasury estimate: 600,000 public sector and 700,000 private sector jobs to be lost IFS: the deepest cuts since at least 1945 Cuts reduce spending power, increase benefit costs and reduce tax revenue The Government is doing nothing to promote growth – instead the cuts resulted in a recession and increased borrowing
College cuts don’t heal (1) Sixth form colleges face real terms cuts of almost a fifth by 2015 Funded guided learning hours (enrichment/tutorial funding) being cut by 75% education cuts are particularly severe Some transitional protection in and for the new funding formula from September 2013
College cuts don’t heal (2) The funding of 6FCs and school sixth forms has fallen in cash terms by 2.3% and 2.7% respectively in A new funding formula from September 2013 will add more problems Investment in sixth form colleges is essential to economic recovery – education cuts never heal
We’re not all in this together Inequality has grown since 1979 The Government prefers spending cuts to taxing the banks Tax and NI changes will compound the impact of pay cuts and pension increases It’s all about privatisation - but public spending is needed to secure growth
Education for growth A first class education system is essential for growth We need to invest in colleges & teachers to enable young people to access HE - but the Government is cutting teacher pay and pensions as well as college funding A Government that doesn’t value education doesn’t understand economics
What can we do? Continue to support the NUT action short of strike action against cuts in pay & funding in sixth form colleges Talk to NASUWT members about joining the strike action later in 2013 and talk to ATL members about possible joint activities We know there is an alternative – you can be part of the fight back!