TAFE jobs lost as enrolments tumble

Bendigo Weekly | Bendigo Weekly | 16-Feb-2012

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By ANTHONY RADFORD, ROSEMARY SORENSEN

The seven jobs cut from Bendigo TAFE’s business and hospitality courses this week may be in addition to planned cuts of up to 30 more.
“At the end of last year we were made aware that Bendigo TAFE was looking at between 20 and 30 redundancies as a result of budget cuts,” Australian Education Union deputy vice-president Greg Barclay said yesterday.
“We believe the job cuts announced this week are in addition to the ones they were proposing.”
The jobs cut from business and hospitality are in response to lower-than-expected enrolments.
Acting Bendigo TAFE chief executive officer Maria Simpson said a drop in demand has “affected the jobs of a few people”.
   “We are looking to put those courses off-campus and online,” she said.
Ms Simpson said further redundancies are possible in response to low enrolments.
“There are two other areas that are looking shaky in terms of enrolment numbers,” she said.
Ms Simpson confirmed she was in discussions with unions about other possible restructures.
Australian Education Union Bendigo organiser Michael Claven said the union is anticipating further cuts.
“We are engaged in intensive discussions with management and our objective is to minimise any potential redundancies,” he said.
“It may be at the end of the day there has to be redundancies.”
Mr Claven said state government policy was behind the enrolment and funding shortfalls.
“The driving force is the significant downturn in enrolments.
“(That has been caused by) the opening up of TAFE to private providers who can afford to offer courses of arguable value at a significantly reduced cost because they don’t have infrastructure costs and may employ teachers of lesser quality.
“Also, there are increased costs being hoisted onto students, making a large number of courses much more expensive.
“All this is a disincentive for students to go to TAFE.”

The former Labor Government introduced a new scheme that resulted in students returning to TAFE to undertake a course that was below the level of qualification they already had, even if it was in a different field, losing their government subsidy.

Late last year, Bendigo TAFE closed its Castlemaine engineering program and merged it with its Bendigo course.
Mr Barclay said further cuts to TAFE budgets are likely under the Skill Reform policy.
“The public does not know what’s happening,” he said.
“Our research suggests only 20 per cent of the community understands the difference in TAFE funding now.
“They see the building there, and see the advertisements for courses, but the actual state of where we are up to is not known.”
Mr Barclay said Victoria was being used as the “pilot” for the cost-cutting reforms.
“All the other states and territories are being encouraged to adopt the Victorian model,” he said. 

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