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100 jobs to go at Education Ministry

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100 jobs to go at Education Ministry

3News NZ

Staff were assured that the changes would not add to already heavy workloads

Staff were assured that the changes would not add to already heavy workloads

One hundred jobs are to be cut at the Ministry of Education before next June, the public sector union says.

Ministry staff were told today about the job cuts, on top of about 300 vacancies not being filled, and were assured that the changes would not add to already heavy workloads, Public Service Association national secretary Brenda Pilott said.

"The ministry appears to have no strategy for how these cuts will be made; all it has said is that vacancies will not be filled.

"This means some teams will be hit harder than others and workloads will explode due to them being under-resourced," she said.

The redundancies would not improve services or bring greater efficiencies.

"The prime minister says he wants more schools to teach Mandarin yet, as a result of its approach to not fill vacancies, the ministry's national office team supporting the learning languages area of the curriculum has shrunk from three people to one."

Staff were also unsettled and uncertain as a result of the reviews.

"The ministry has been through a dozen reviews in the past three years, some of which are ongoing. One would have thought that after so many endless reviews, the ministry would be an effective and nimble beast," Ms Pilott said.

"Yet it has been criticised as one of the worst government departments in a recent trans-Tasman report."

Education sector union the New Zealand Education Institute, which represents 800 staff at the ministry working with special needs children, said the staff cuts must not target frontline jobs or compromise services to vulnerable students.

Cutting 100 positions would further risking the quality of New Zealand education, Labour MP Grant Robertson said.

The Government had made an election promise to cap public service jobs, not to cut them.

"While I understand that in the current economic climate it may be necessary for the Government to find efficiencies within our state sector, we need to ensure that kiwis continue to receive a high standard of public services," he said.

"It won't be long before the number of staff being cut from Ministry of Education will be reflected in student achievement."

NZPA

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Comments

25/08/2010 4:45:14 p.m.

Dan wrote:

The level/standard of education before national came to power was pretty high, which is now disappearing. I think Mr.Keys needs a rethink about this education minister as she has pissed off the entire education fraternity and frankly does not know her a--e from her face.

22/08/2010 1:05:26 a.m.

Greg wrote:

More destruction by this idiotic greedy National party,,the nats like having a huge pool of unemployed so they can force down the wages and take away benefits and social services,,,chuck the clowns out we dont nee a National gov`t, mr key is just a shiney faced liar for the rich sods who rule him

21/08/2010 6:24:13 p.m.

Smiley wrote:

I reckon that the government will merge the Ministry and the Tertiary Education Commision, with a further 100 jobs to be lost at the Ministry and I think there will be further job cuts at the Tertiary Education Commission before the end of the year.

20/08/2010 9:09:30 p.m.

Andrew wrote:

We need strong leadership right now. Could we install someone like Sir John Kerr in Government House, please?