68 arrested at California student protest

A day of action against education cuts on Monday in California ended up with the arrest of 68 people after an occupation of the Sate Capitol building.

Earlier, thousands had demonstrated across the state to protest against rising fees and worse choice in California’s state Higher Education system.

Students are angry that fees have risen to $13,000 a year (about £7000) and many are concerned about an uncreasingly uncertain future.

The tuition fee rises are the latest in a string of policies passed in recent years which have cut the budget for the university system, resulting in lower quality education with higher costs for students.

The Governor of California, Jerry Brown, said the protests show why people should support a temporary tax increase on those earning more than $250,000 a year and a rise in sales tax by 1%.

However, this proposal is opposed by many students and the California Federation of Teachers who instead support a rival initiative sponsored by the University of California Student Association, which would tax millionaires and ringfence the money for education spending.

From Greece to Spain, Chile to the USA, students are leading the way in fighting back against austerity and attacks on public services.

Students in Britain sparked mass protests during the Winter ’10 movement, and now we need to continue fighting for joint action, uniting grassroots trade union campaigns like the Sparks’ with students’ unions and anti-cuts groups.

 

 

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Spanish youth march against austerity and police brutality

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Is Aaron Porter’s advice worth £150 an hour?

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1 in 5 graduates unemployed – what can students do?

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1 in 5 recent graduates unemployed – what can students do?

New figures show that 18.9% or 1 in 5 students who have graduated since 2010 are out of work. Of all those who have graduated in the previous six years, 36% are in unskilled jobs such as waiting, retail and bar staff, while 15% remain unemployed.

This means that just 50% of graduates since 2006 are currently employed in graduate jobs. Worse, the latest statistics, compiled by the Office for National Statistics (ONS) don’t take into account the huge number of graduates taking part in unpaid internships. Around 250,000 graduates undertake these internships every year. As the ongoing workfare scandal shows, there is a trend for these internships to replace paid jobs entirely as the rate of post-internship employment declines.

These statistics reveal a lot about the government attitudes to higher education. Under Labour the massive expansion in university places was partly engineered to disguise the stubbornly high rates of youth unemployment. Only now are people realising that education is still firmly subordinate to the market.

Figures like the ones above will be particularly worrying to students enrolling in 2012. With the Eurozone back in recession, there is no end on the horizon to the economic crisis. Yet at the same time that millions of jobs are destroyed, and banks, bosses and governments hoard their money, the futures of new students are being plundered to finance the crisis caused by the greed of today’s bankers.

Students are being made to shell out huge amounts of money to be packed onto overcrowded, understaffed courses, with plenty of spin about interview training, careers advice etc, before being sucked into a race-to-the-bottom in a declining graduate jobs market.

Conversely, more and more jobs are demanding degree-level qualifications for pay and conditions which aren’t worth the lifetime of debt packaged with almost every degree.

The prospect of nearly 1 million job cut in the public sector, and the knock-on effect for the private sector means students have every reason to resist the massacre of jobs which threatens the economic future of our generation.

The NUS has called for a week of action beginning on 12th May. We should use this opportunity to take action build and links with local anti-cuts campaigns and trade unions, publicising the major upcoming strikes by the NUT and PCS, which have the potential to reinvigorate opposition to the cuts.

By playing our part, students can put the education, jobs and future of millions of young people at the heart of a national campaign against the bosses crisis and the millionaire coalition.

This is why we should call on the NUS to call a national day of action alongside the PCS and NUT, and mobilise its resources 100%. We should pressure local student unions to call open meetings with students and delegates from trade union branches to plan joint action on the day. Where student unions can’t or won’t take part, we should take the initiative ourselves.

 

 

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Spanish youth march against austerity and police brutality

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Is Aaron Porter’s advice worth £150 an hour?

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NCAFC Conference 2012 – problems, but a step forward

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Porter charges YOUR university £150 an hour for his ‘advice’

Aaron Porter, the NUS President who refused to fight against the tripling of tuition fees, won’t have any worries about paying £9,000 a year for his kids.

It’s been revealed that his consultancy firm ‘Aaron Ross Porter Consultancy’ (give them a call 07984 576 890) is charging universities £150 an hour for his services. It’s no surprise that Porter wasn’t too keen to oppose the fee rise – at £8,500 for a two-week session with him, universities will definitely need to boost their income.

Obviously Aaron is only a low-rent consultant, the type of ex-NUS bureaucrat pushing their ‘advice’ in a swamp of jumped-up pen-pushers hustling for a safe Labour Party parliamentary seat. As such, his fees are cheaper than more reputable consultancy firms (presumably run by people without reputations as cowardly, scheming, traitors).

Nevertheless, the point remains: universities run by unnaccountable, vastly overpaid managers are spending millions on consultancy firms to advise them on how to attract students… why not just let our universities be run by those consultancy firms then?

Aaron rescued by cops... from his own students

In office, Aaron Porter distinguished himself by his single-minded determination to wreck the campaign against higher fees. After denouncing those who occupied Millbank, shopping students to the police, playing the victim of (false) anti-semitic attacks, and generally being himself he became one of the few NUS presidents to be forced out after only 1 term.

Given his record, is he worth YOUR uni paying him £150 an hour, while they sack lecturers, raise fees and mark your work 3 months late?

A sensible university management would avoid hiring him if they didn’t want a world of shit to fall on their heads.

 

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NUS ducks united action – let’s make it happen

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NCAFC Conference 2012 – generalise resistance!

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NCAFC Conference 2012 – problems, but a step forward

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A report from Birmingham Uni Take Back Your Campus demo

Sally Turner, from REVOLUTION and NCAFC reports on the Take Back Your Campus demonstration and occupation at Birmingham uni.

Wednesday’s protest was called in response to a court injunction which uni bosses were using to ban all ‘occupational protest action’ for 12 months.

The protest was held to coincide with the disciplinary hearing of 2nd year student Simon Furse, victimised for his part in an occupation in November.

200 students from around the country assembled outside the Birmingham Guild of Students, to hear students speaking about the attacks we are all facing on our right to protest and democracy on campus.

There was a buzz of excitement as the march set off around the uni on an agreed route. At the end of the ‘official’ route, we marched to Simon’s disciplinary hearing, making so much noise they had to postpone the meeting.

After this we marched on the Corporate Conference Centre, ignoring the Student Union stewards threats about breaking management’s injunction.

Over 100 students occupied the Centre, and agreed a statement of demands for the Vice-Chancellor.

Two students were arrested and later released without charge.

We mustn’t allow our protests and campaigns to be shackled by the universities or police.

Uni bosses want students to be complacent service-users whose biggest concern is the price of beer in subsidised bars.

The NUS shamefully did nothing to defend the dozens of school and college students who were expelled or disciplined for their part in the 2010 student movement; it’s up to us to make sure that police and state repression has no place in our schools, colleges and universities.concern is the subsidised union bars. It’s vital that ordinary students stand up against those of us who are singled out and victimised.

 

 

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Defend the right to protest – Birmingham demo

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Kettle this!

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Police: only doing their job?

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Defend the right to protest – Birmingham demo

On 15 February, Defend the Right to Protest, NCAFC and EAN are holding a ‘Take Back your Campus’ demonstration and rally at Birmingham University.

The demo is being held to protest against the University’s attempts to ban protests on campus.

The 12-month ban was granted by courts after the Uni cracked down on a peaceful occupation last November.

We are appealing to students across the country to join us in making a stand for the right to protest, defend student rights, and show solidarity with victimised occupier Simon Furse.

With the shameful collaboration of the Birmingham Uni Student Guild president, management have singled him out, and he faces expulsion at a misconduct committee.

That uni bosses, paid for with our fees and taxes, can threaten to destroy someone’s future because they stood up against privatising education is bad enough.

But this action is also intended as a warning to the rest of the movement, hoping to intimidate us into silence. If the management at Birmingham uni succeed then it will boost the confidence of other universities to take similar measures.

We all have an interest in defending the right to protest.

February 15 will show the government that we refuse to be intimidated, persecuted and silenced by their paid servants in the courts, police or uni management.

Their repression will come back to haunt them, as more and more people rightly fight back against this injustice.

Defend the right to protest on Feb 15!

When: 15 Feb 2012

Where: Birmingham Guild of Students

Time: 1pm

 

UCU suspends March 1 strike

On Tuesday 2nd Feb, the UCU decided to suspend its strike action set for March 1st.

The decision was taken by delegates to the Higher Education sector conference, in return for further negotiations over attacks to their USS pension scheme.

The motion to suspend action was passed by 3 to 2.

Lecturers in the UCU took strike action on twice in March, and on June and November 30th last year.

Although the decision to suspend action is unfortunate, there were no branch motions in support of the negotiators’ position. The conference passed all amendment to the negotiators’ position.

These included:

  • imposing a time-limit on the suspension of action
  • placing minimum conditions before the dispute could be settled

and

  • sacking the chair of the joint negotiating committee

Defence of final-salary pension schemes has not been dropped from negotiations.

With Unison and Unite doing their best to wind-up the pensions dispute, thousands of people are looking to the PCS and UCU to take a lead in fighting back.

The determination of grassroots UCU members to continue the struggle is inspiring. So are the efforts by the electricians organising through the Sparks’ campaign in Unite.

Building a powerful movement of grassroots members in the unions is key to preventing a sell-out. Today’s battle over pensions will decide the pensions for the next generations. We think it’s vital for young people to support strikes against pension cuts, because we refuse to let Tories or Union bureaucrats sell out our futures.

The economic crisis was caused by capitalism, and the debt was caused by bailing out the banks. Pensions, jobs and education shouldn’t be cut to fix a system which is rotten to the core.



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New GCSEs will penalise dyslexic students

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NUS ducks united action – we can make it happen

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Barclays sinks millions into education gold-rush

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New GCSE’s will penalise dyslexic students

Dyslexia groups have condemned a government proposal to improve ‘communication skills’ by awarding 5% of marks for spelling, punctuation and grammar.

Charities and campaigners say the move will make it harder for hundreds of thousands of young people with a genuine learning disability to get the grades they need.

The government said the new marking scheme – due to come into effect from September – will make no allowances for students with dyslexia.

Furthermore, many teachers and parent are becoming concerned at the exodus of specially-trained teachers and assistants from our schools. While students with recongnised learning disabilities can get up to 25% extra time in exams, the application process is complicated and without specialist staff in schools, many students do not benefit.

A £10m scheme launched by Labour in 2009 to train 4000 specialist dyslexia teachers has been shredded by the coalition. Many of the teachers are being made redundant from new ‘academies’ and ‘free schools’ who don’t want the cost of shelling out for specialist teaching.

Government policy is fusing perfectly with the interests of big business who want to exploit the profit potential within the education system.

Paying for the intensive, specialist services that a proper education requires is not a priority for these businesses. Instead they want to cream off the top students, packing them into grade-factories, whose schools hover at the top of the league tables, ensuring plenty of cash-flow and credibility for the ‘sponsor’.

We oppose the government’s attempts to dump its responsibility for education. We have a social responsibility to provide the best education possible. To do that we need to put our schools, curriculum and exam boards under the democratic control of teachers and students – not subjecting education to the profit-logic of the market.

 

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Disability in an age of austerity

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NUS ducks united action – we can make it happen

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Barclays sinks millions into education gold-rush

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Student Loans boss in tax-dodge scandal

For 18 months the chief executive of the Student Loans company has been avoiding tax – with the inside help of George Osborne.

Ed Lester’s pay is diverted through a subsidiary company, in a scheme signed off by universities minister David Willets. The whole thing was sanctioned by Danny Alexander – George Osborne’s Lib Dem minion in the Treasury.

Unlike other public sector workers and student loan repayments, this dodge allows Lester to avoid having income tax and national insurance deducted at source, giving his accountants plenty of time to conjure up an ‘arrangement’.

David Willets (the one who hates students) probably could’ve come up with a better excuse than ‘money-saving’ – the idea being that if Lester had to pay tax like everyone else, then his wages would rise, costing the state more money.

This stupidity needs no further comment.

The Lib-Dems claim to be acting as a good influence on the Tories. But Danny Alexander’s actions show they are either too incompetent to oversee the Tories, or else totally complicit in their corruption.

This whole affair makes a mockery of the government’s claims to be tough on tax avoidance. From Vodafone to bank bonuses, the Con-Dem’s record in power has been consistently to look after their interests, and the interests of their class, first.

Everyone else has to make do with a government that is robbing their pensions to pay bonuses to bankers, letting inflation and pay freezes destroy our living conditions, and breaking up what’s left of our society’s safety net and flogging it off to the highest bidder.

They’ll sweeten the deal by offering a cheaper workforce – one with no pensions. They’ll pour in a generous public subsidy to attract the sharks. And finally they’ll shrug their shoulders when private companies rip apart our education, health and welfare, ditching unprofitable areas and demolishing jobs and conditions.

Fred Goodwin, Ed Lester, and all the other spongers growing rich off the crisis are merely the individual symptoms of a system which doesn’t work.

The economic crisis is forcing the bosses to demand new markets in which to make profit. The Con-Dem government, composed, financed, and elected by big business, is doing its best to help, trailing kick-backs in a trail of sleaze and corruption.

The government is rotten. The system which it defends is rotten. And those who defend it most convincingly, are those who gain the most by the exploitation of others. Those who are trying to take us all for fools.

Millions of us have no interest in a future of Tory sleaze and Labour betrayals; we say another world is possible - join us.

 

 

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Exposed! How big business buys influence in government

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How Balfour Beatty profits from death

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Barclays sinks millions into education gold-rush

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NCAFC Conference: Despite the problems, a step forward

Anyone reading the #NCAFC Twitter feed over the weekend will have got the impression that the National Campaign Against Fees and Cuts conference in Liverpool descended into an uncontrollable orgy of bickering and sectarianism.

Of course the conference had its moments, and there were some lessons to be learned in terms of both individual behaviour and conference organisation, but on the whole, it was a positive experience and brought over one hundred activists together from across Britain and Ireland to discuss important issues in the fight against fees and cuts.

In fact many comments about the conference were made by those who had not attended, and seemed designed to cause unnecessary tension and antagonisms. It was the Twitterati who were most responsible.

@swiftnotswallow I’d say 60% of the NCAFC conference was mega-good and 40% was mega-bad #banthetrots

Agenda

In reality, most of the conference was very positive. It brought together lots of activists from a wide geographical spread, including a sizable delegation from Scotland, from different campaigns and from different student union and political activist backgrounds. Interesting workshops took place on a range of issues, looking in depth at H/E privatisation, democratising student unions, as well as a range of sessions on LGBTQ, Disabled, and BMS group liberation.

Where the agenda fell short was that there were no workshops, let alone plenary sessions, to discuss and debate how the student movement can go forward and relate to a potential wave of struggle in March, which could see public sector strike action as well as an NUS-backed ‘week of action’ against privatisation.

The conference agenda geared discussion too far away from the all-vital conversation about tactics that is needed to revive and rebuild the student movement in Britain and that can unify it in action.

This meant that the only discussion over what the campaign actually does over an important next few months took place during motions – with a one-for-one-against format with no amendments allowed from the floor that was always going to be messy.

It naturally resulted in more discussion taking place around the disagreements, rather than the huge amount that the conference could agree on – in short it magnified division whilst appearing to shrink levels of agreement.

That said, motions calling for the widest possible working class and anticuts mobilisations on 1st March were very well received, as well as the ‘Action for Education’ resolution from Mark Bergfeld and Sean Rillo Raczka. A call to ‘broaden out’ the slogans of the NCAFC to the growing number of unemployed youth who have been forced out of education also won a majority vote.

Argument

Despite what the social networks are saying, everything was actually fairly pleasant and well-meaning until we discussed some motions that were always going to be controversial.

One of these was a proposal for an NCAFC slate for NUS elections. It was proposed by, and called for a slate made up of activists from the outgoing NCAFC national committee including Workers Liberty, but none from other groupings.

This was clearly taken in bad faith by some groups such as Student Broad Left and the Socialist Workers Party who understandably saw the motion as a manoeuvre, given a breakdown of trust between the two groups and Workers Liberty after the June conference debacle. The motion also upset some outgoing members of the NC who had not been consulted about it beforehand.

Other controversy occurred as the conference needed to make a choice between continuing with a motions discussion on Sunday afternoon, or attending workshops due to an overrunning timetable and forwarding undiscussed motions to the incoming NC.

Interventions by Student Broad Left against the ‘disgraceful’ proposal to have some motions on racism and oppression discussed by the national committee, and a motion against war on Iran proposed by Counterfire that did not criticise the Islamic regime, did not help matters either. NCAFC is strongest when it is a united activist organisation, and weaker when it acts like an NUS faction and takes too many policy decisions on different topics – perhaps the conference would have worked better if it had focussed discussions more upon education issues and public sector cuts.

It was around this very difficult point in the meeting where the chairperson slightly lost control and some activists felt she was ignoring their raised hands and picking the same people to speak too often. Visibly upset and understandably resigning the position following some heckling, other activists were angered by what they considered to be poor conduct and oppressive behaviour towards the chair on the floor of the conference that violated a “safe space” policy.

Prospects for Unity

Losing the conference chair no doubt created a bad atmosphere in the room. But the conference did not erupt into chaos as some suggest.

It is equally not true that any bad feelings that did arise are completely down to the “Trot factions” – as some activists have opportunistically suggested.

In fact up until the June “Reinvigoration conference”, called in a way that alienated many activists in the campaign, particularly from London, the NCAFC had been an organisation and network that facilitated discussions between different organisations and pushed for the broadest possible unity in the form of student assemblies during the winter of 2010.

After that breakdown of trust, this conference was always going to be more difficult – but positively, the incoming NC election elected using an STV system did result in representatives of many different groups and individuals getting elected, which could be an encouraging prospect for re-uniting or at least better coordinating the campaigns around the country.

A Revolution motion calling for a conference to unify the movement in the summer was subject to an unfriendly amendment and summarily voted down, but only by a slim majority – showing that many activists in the movement would still like to see one strong united campaign to bring all students together against the Tories.

All-in-all NCAFC conference was a positive experience, and activists who were present for the whole weekend will likely recognise this, as the Twitter-talk dies down, and those creating antagonisms for their own ends– not just “the trots” – move on to other things. The rest of us will be busy preparing for a spring of struggle to defend our education. All out March 1st!

 

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NUS ducks united action – let’s make it happen

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NCAFC Conference 2012 – generalise resistance!

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Revolution motions to NCAFC Conference

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Birmingham school defies privatisation pressure

A primary school in Birmingham has become the latest to join a growing tide of strikes and industrial action by teachers opposed to the privatisation of schools through the Academies programme.

Staff at Montgomery Primary school first took action in December when NASUWT, NUT and GMB members were on strike and the school was closed.

The school is in one of the most deprived areas in Birmingham and is one of the schools on Gove’s hit list of ‘underperforming schools.’ In reality, like most of the schools being targeted it is a school handicapped by the effects of poverty on its intake, which is doing its best to improve.

Today the picket line was even bigger than previously with over 100 people there, including parents, students and members of the public.

Teachers and parents recognise that what is needed is an investment in support and resources to improve the school – not flogging it off to the highest bidder.

With three outstanding schools in the area, teachers believe they could offer support through the local authority to Montgomery who received a ‘satisfactory’ in their last Ofsted report of 2009.

As usual many of the school governors are sitting on the fence, with Councillor Victoria Quinn (Labour, Sparkbrook) saying she would ‘oppose the idea of academies in theory.’ She added they were trying to buy time by looking for a sponsor themselves but that the Department of Education has the power to appoint one.

DavidRoom, deputy general secretary of Birmingham NUT argued there was no pressure on the school to become an academy.

He said: “There are other means of supporting schools and raising standards.”

The unions have asked for further negotiations and parents have handed in a petition calling for proper consultation signed by more than 700 people, but both have been ignored. The purpose of this is to avoid giving people a public forum where they can voice their opposition and expose the councillors and governors who back this sell-off.

The head-teacher and majority of the governors believe that if they refuse to become an academy then Education Secretary Michael Gove will send in Ofsted and fail the school. This is what Gove is relying on – bullying schools into becoming academies.

The determination showed by the staff and parents in Montgomery school in Birmingham and Downhills School in Haringey show that there is alternative to this.

Schools need clear structures linking parents, students, teachers and the governing body together to improve standards of education. Academy status takes school out of Local Authority oversight, meaning that specialist services become more expense and are quickly ditched, as the sponsor focuses on boosting league table rankings.

Private sponsors have no incentive to improve support for students with the most problems, since their investment in the school is calculated on its ability to produce a direct profit, or reinforce a business’s ‘community-friendly’ credentials.

The withdrawal of the White Paper on Higher Education shows that mass opposition can achieve results. So far schools have been left to fight Academy proposals alone – this is a strategy doomed to failure. We need to make the campaign against Academies part of the wider resistance to cuts and austerity.

Only in this way can we bring our maximum collective strength to bear against those who are determined to tear up our social inheritance and flog it to their rich friends.

 


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Privatisation bill rolled into ditch – for now

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NUS ducks united action – we can make it happen

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Barclays sinks millions into education gold-rush

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