Uni student fees plan in disarray
By David Rood and David Wroe
October 12, 2005
THE Federal Government appears set to abandon its proposal to ban compulsory student unionism from next year in the face of unbending opposition from key Nationals senator Barnaby Joyce.
Education Minister Brendan Nelson has conceded he may have to postpone the controversial changes because the legislation may not be passed in time for the 2006 academic year.
This would mean that university students have at least another year of paying mandatory fees to student unions while the Government tries to win Senate backing for the the proposal.
Senator Joyce yesterday took credit for the political impasse, saying the Voluntary Student Unions bill would not be passed this year because the Nationals had blocked it. "The National party has been very upfront. We've said that we won't accept this bill," he said.
Dr Nelson confirmed to The Age that he did not expect the legislation to even reach the Senate before December, saying the Government's industrial laws would take priority.
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And Dr Nelson said even if the legislation was passed this year, he was considering delaying the introduction of the changes until 2007.
"I'm concerned that the crowded legislative agenda that we have, may make it difficult for universities to actually implement it barely a month after its passage through Parliament," he said.
The Age believes Dr Nelson has told vice-chancellors he will not impose the legislation on universities on short notice.
The VSU laws have met concerted opposition from universities, students and opposition political parties, while dividing the federal Coalition. Senator Joyce said the Nationals wanted to get rid of compulsory student union fees "as much as anybody else" but universities had to be allowed to maintain vital infrastructure.
"If (Dr Nelson) wants to get it through, he'd better have an alternative model. If he doesn't have an alternative, he'd better get one," Senator Joyce said.
However, Dr Nelson said he had no intention of amending the legislation, and he still intended to pass it this year. "The Government's position is that industrial relations reforms and a number of other legislative measures we've got, take priority over the VSU," he said.
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