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 Hunter apprentices hit as TAFE blows budget 

Hunter apprentices hit as TAFE blows budget

10 Mar, 2010 03:00 AM
THOUSANDS of Hunter TAFE students could be affected by a budget blow-out at the institution's largest faculty.

The industry and natural resources faculty, which offers manufacturing, engineering and construction trades at 13 campuses, is more than $1 million in the red.

Its students, who are mainly apprentices, have complained teaching hours have been reduced, or tried to be reduced, and there were more students in fewer classes.

The teachers union said it had received reports that part-time and casual staff hours had been cut, putting more load on permanent teachers.

The TAFE on Monday initially blamed industrial action by teachers but went quiet on the subject yesterday following developments in wage negotiations at a state level.

Hunter TAFE acting director Christine Warrington said a number of factors had contributed to the faculty's budget position.

"In second semester 2009, the faculty had additional unexpected enrolments in apprenticeship programs," Ms Warrington said.

"In semester 1, 2010, some courses have been running with class sizes below capacity [increasing costs]."

She said the faculty was over its budget for the year-to-date but management was working with staff to bring their expenditure into line by the end of the financial year.

The financial woes come after Hospitality students at Maitland Campus complained last week that course time had been cut from 10 hours to three hours a week, which the TAFE said was a separate issue.

The institution was also accused last year of inflating fees for new workplace courses in 2010, which it said was because they were not government-subsidised.

NSW Teachers Federation Hunter TAFE organiser Chris Freestone said the budget blow out was a symptom of TAFE under-funding in general.

‘‘Governments haven’t been taking their funding of TAFE totally seriously – they’ve been holding back,’’ he said.

? TAFE teachers have had a breakthrough in their pay dispute with the NSW Government.

Teachers are expected to meet around the state tomorrow to consider a revised offer from the Government.

NSW Teachers Federation Hunter TAFE organiser Chris Freestone said Hunter teachers would meet at Adamstown.

‘‘With any negotiated settlement no sides achieves everything they want,’’ he said.

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Date: Newest first | Oldest first
Vote Liberal, Labor is not helping it's own people, the workers.
Posted by Jimbob, 10/03/2010 5:36:05 AM, on The Herald
TAFE needs to be given adequate funds because the skills they deliver are the building blocks of our community.
Posted by Bigfeller, 10/03/2010 6:33:58 AM, on The Herald
There are more part time teachers in Tafe than permanent. Part time teachers are on over $60.00 an hour and Tafe management wonder why there is a budget blowout, duh!
Posted by Angrydad, 10/03/2010 6:48:42 AM, on The Herald
Last year the Federal government transferred funding of its Productivity Places Program (PPP) over to the States. The NSW government subsequently offered the funding to Registered Training Organisations (RTOs)through tender. TAFE won the bulk of that funding and many small RTOs who had previously received the funding through the Federal government were locked out and did not get refunded. TAFE then offered a huge number of its normal courses as PPP courses. What happened to that money? What happened to the State funding that would have originally paid for those courses?
Posted by Puzzled, 10/03/2010 7:09:14 AM, on The Herald
The TAFE pays for itself in other ways than just a profit at the end of each financial year. I currently attend an engineering course that does not have many students in the class at all and at the start , TAFE were considering not running this course due to low numbers which would have been very disappointing to me as I am embarking on a new career in my late 30's, learning at night whilst working full time during the day. The TAFE provides good value , accessible education to people as an alterative to UNI or for entrance into a new industry thus providing our short staffed industries with well trained local people which improves our economy. Look at the bigger picture and it's not all about dollars and cents.
Posted by kmayb, 10/03/2010 8:14:02 AM, on The Herald
Whiteanting of TAFE funding has been going on for over a decade. When will all levels of government realise that TAFE funding is totally inadequate and there is far too much requirement for"private" funding to prop it up? Far too much has been taken from TAFE and given to Schools who have had to train their existing teachers (with virtually no on hands industry experience) to get them up to speed to teach subjects they are unfamiliar with - let along the huge capital cost of providing equipment when TAFE had it all along! There's always a catch up game going on when there is a boom in employment which happened a year or two back. The budget was probably blown way back then. As for ratio of part time to permanents - part-timers are usually more up to date with industry trends so give me a part-timer any day, rather than an out of date permanent, which, when you add up all the holidays and oncosts are probably costing the same as part-timers per hour. Add a bit of complacency about job security and what you end up can be less than dedicated staff.
Posted by maybalene, 10/03/2010 1:33:53 PM, on The Herald
TAFE, the beginning of my working life start at the Ncle campus in1963 thru to 1969 and again full time in 1991 and part time 1993 and 1994. Many thousands more have also commenced their careers at TAFE. This facility must remain the training and educational centre of our region.
Posted by intouch, 10/03/2010 1:59:06 PM, on The Herald
So much for investing in the Knowledge Nation, the Clever Country, blah blah.... Talk big, fund small !!
Posted by ColT, 10/03/2010 4:34:26 PM, on The Herald

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