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Strike ballot at University of the Highlands and Islands (UHI) in row over job cuts


By Gregor White

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Staff in UHI's Executive Office, based until recently on Inverness's riverside, are to be balloted on industrial action.
Staff in UHI's Executive Office, based until recently on Inverness's riverside, are to be balloted on industrial action.

A ballot for strike action opens this week at the University of the Highlands and Islands (UHI) in a dispute over job cuts and compulsory redundancies.

The ballot will run until September 20 and could pave the way for strike action at the university in the new academic year.

Members of the University and College Union (UCU) Scotland at UHI are being asked if they are willing to take part in strike action and action short of strike.

The union says that in an email to all staff yesterday the university confirmed plans for drastic cuts to the staff budget of £3 million which will include compulsory redundancies.

It says job losses are expected to be in the university’s Executive Office which employs staff involved in teaching, research, management and administration for the university and student support.

UPDATE: University 'responding to the challenges of the current economic climate'

The university recently boasted about their placing in the national student survey, the annual ranking of universities by students based on their experience, saying the excellent results were due to the ‘talented and student-focused staff’. The union said that the very same staff the university were congratulating last week will now be hugely worried and demoralised by these savage cuts.

University of the Highlands and Islands UCU branch president, Dr Heather Fotheringham, said: ‘The UHI principal and senior managers need to urgently reconsider these brutal plans to cut staff and vital services and instead work with staff and the union and commit to no compulsory redundancies.

"Cuts will have a devastating impact on the people made redundant and their families, but also to the university’s reputation and the student experience.

"UHI is well loved in this area providing access to education up to PhD level to the geographically dispersed population of the Highlands and Islands.

"Anything that reduces its ability to function means that students and young people across the region will have fewer educational opportunities.”


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