Sacked fundraisers raise hell
Sacked fundraisers raise hell
)

The email came through at 3:40pm on Friday, 5 October: all 53 of us employed at the University of Sydney’s fundraising call centre had just lost our jobs. The “regrettable” closure of the centre, the message told us, was to occur the following day, meaning we had less than 18 hours until our final shift and no time at all to find an alternate source of income.

The fundraising call centre is a huge revenue raiser for the university. Through aggressive and mandated selling techniques, student callers had clocked up donations worth almost $300,000 this year alone. 

The sackings came just weeks after tens of thousands of dollars were raised as part of the annual fundraising campaign, Pave the Way. 

On the phones we were expected to promote the “University of Sydney philosophy” of “giving back” to the community in order to convince alumni, parents and others to donate. Good though it was for public relations and to channel private money into the university, this “spirit of giving” clearly does not extend to call centre workers. 

We were told in a meeting before our last shift that we should accept the sackings because we are casuals and therefore have no rights. Perhaps in order to reinforce this point, we were later told by management that the time spent in the meeting would not be paid. 

University management was able to get away with this because of our particular employment arrangements. Rather than being hired by the university directly, we are on the books of a US company, Ruffalo Noel Levitz. RNL specialises in soliciting funds from individual private donors, and it pays its workers an hourly wage $10-15 lower than the union-won minimum at the Sydney University campus. 

The flexibility that is a purported benefit of such work all goes one way. While the bosses have the flexibility to sack us at will, RNL workers are required to adhere to onerous rules, including having to give notification well in advance of holidays, having to find replacement workers for refused shifts and working a mandatory six shifts per month. 

On news of the sackings, workers immediately got together to plan a challenge to the decision. We raised an outcry about what was going on, talking to the student newspaper and organising collectively before meetings with management. 

We vocally challenged the RNL bosses to justify what they had done. Their response was to repeat continually that the sackings were necessary for “operational reasons”. 

We demanded that the university end its practice of outsourcing to third party operators that put workers on shoddy casual contracts. This practice undermines the conditions and wages of university workers by undercutting hard-won standards. 

By kicking up a fuss, we were able to win some concessions. Management offered us 10 more shifts, effectively two weeks’ notice, and, unusually for casuals, severance pay worth a week’s average wage for each “active” employee. 

The union covering our call centre, the National Union of Workers, was able to argue that RNL had breached the award by not consulting with the workers, which helped wrench concessions from the management. 

A further demand we will continue to fight for is to be reinstated as in-house employees of the university.

Read more
Australia's most nefarious spies
Mick Armstrong

In the latest outburst of national security hysteria, ASIO spy chief Mike Burgess declared, in a speech on 28 February, that an unnamed former Australian politician had betrayed our beloved country by clandestinely working for an evil foreign spy network—which he called “the A-team”—to provide secret information to a rival power.

Capitalism’s trash
James Plested

Measured by the sheer volume of stuff produced, capitalism is a very successful system. According to World Bank data, in 1960 global gross domestic product (GDP)—which measures the monetary value of goods and services sold—was just under US$1.4 trillion. By 2022 it had risen to $101 trillion. The world’s population has increased a lot in that time, but the volume of stuff produced has increased by far more.

When workers’ struggles shook the Middle East
When struggle shook the Middle East
Jordan Humphreys

As Israel’s latest brutal war against the people of Gaza drags on, the need to challenge the Zionist state and all those who facilitate its genocidal campaign couldn’t be clearer.

Another council calls for Gaza ceasefire
Council calls for Gaza ceasefire
Marty Hirst

Banyule City Council has become the eighth metro council in the Melbourne area to formally call for an immediate ceasefire in Gaza.

Uni Melb union betrays Palestine
Luca Tavan

In a monumental betrayal, Melbourne University’s Students’ Council last month voted to rescind a motion supporting the Palestinian struggle for self-determination and the global Boycott, Divestment, Sanctions movement.

Capitalism’s permanent horror
Ben Hillier

The military ordered hundreds of thousands of people into a designated “safe” zone. On reaching it, they were shelled by the army and the air force. The generals said there was another safe zone; if the people kept moving, respite would be found. It wasn’t. Again they were attacked. The scene repeated, but now, corralled onto a tiny stretch of beach and trapped against the ocean, there was no way out.