End Unnecessary Redundancies at Newcastle University!

A petition is being circulated to halt a programme of redundancies at Newcastle University. Academic staff positions are being cut while the University, like so many others, suffers Death by a Thousand Managers. I understand that staff in Physics are directly threatened by the plans.
Here is the description of the issue you can find on the petition:
Newcastle University staff are in dispute with their senior management over the threat of ill-considered and unnecessary redundances that are imperilling the future of our institution. We call on the University Executive Board (UEB) to abandon this destructive policy.
On Thursday 8th May 2025, 153 academic colleagues were summoned at short notice to meetings with UEB where they were told they have been placed in ‘redundancy pools’ with 38 of them to be laid off. In an unpleasant twist, they will be forced to compete against each other in an academic equivalent of ‘The Hunger Games.’
To add insult to injury, on the day staff were threatened with redundancy they were also invited to a ‘Doodling for Wellbeing’ session. ‘Let your pen dance across the page,’ they were told, as ‘a perfect escape from the everyday hustle and bustle.’
Such crassness is emblematic of the disregard for genuine staff wellbeing that has dogged this unhappy episode. For example, for migrant staff members recruited only months previously, after paying for skilled worker visas, the NHS surcharge, and moving young families from abroad, dismissal threatens the loss of all that, and even deportation.
For many more, these redundancies will be career-ending. But even for those not immediately at risk, the climate of uncertainty and fear unleashed by UEB is demoralising. As one academic put it, this ‘callous’ policy shows ‘no thought to people as people; we are just figures on a spreadsheet.’
We recognise that this is a tough financial environment for universities. But Newcastle has a relatively strong cash and borrowing position. Through voluntary redundancies and other cost-cutting measures, we have achieved £15.8m of savings against a target of £20m. Nevertheless, UEB is pressing ahead with compulsory redundancies, even though other institutions have stepped back.
There are other options. Debts could be renegotiated and the pace of cuts slowed. Recently announced capital expenditure projects – including a £274m student accommodation block replete with luxuries like a cinema and gym, and even plans for a campus in India – should be reviewed or delayed.
Costs could also be cut by pruning management salaries and structures. Since tuition-fee rises in 2012, the number of staff drawing six-figure pay-cheques has mushroomed.
Worried about their own futures and the future of the university, hard-working frontline staff are taking industrial action. As a result of the turmoil unleashed by what the UEB euphemistically calls ‘Workforce Resizing,’ many academics are looking for jobs elsewhere and students are seeking to transfer to other universities. Reputational damage will make future staff and student recruitment harder. Current redundancy plans risk forcing our great university into a death cycle.
We urge the University Executive Board to abandon these cuts and work with all their colleagues to secure the future of Newcastle University.
Please sign the petition here.
May 26, 2025 at 11:52 am
I think the scale of what is happening in UK Higher Education has not been yet been fully appreciated.
There are about 100 universities announcing job losses, with the average job loss around > 200
So the UK HE sector is losing around 20,000 jobs this year. This does not included fixed term contracts that are not renewed
To put in context, the miners strike in 1984-5 was called over 20,000 job losses
May 26, 2025 at 11:56 am
Indeed.
Other news I missed until now is Edinburgh, where it looks like strike action is on the cards.
https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cm266dn4qljo
May 26, 2025 at 1:29 pm
As far as I can work out from the material in the public domain, Edinburgh University is not even running a deficit at the moment. (unlike e.g., Cambridge University).
Of course, some job losses are ‘under the radar’, as someone retires but is not replaced because of a hiring freeze.
Job losses in UK HE are not in astronomy so far. But, it still looks like the subject will shrink by 5% or so over the next few years.
It’s a grim time to be a young scholar.
May 27, 2025 at 1:55 pm
There are astronomers targeted for redundancy as of a couple of weeks a go.
May 26, 2025 at 7:37 pm
I hope the avcademics at Newcastle will propose their own program of cuts in place of the present proposals, squarely targeting ‘Management’.
May 27, 2025 at 10:35 am
We have had a voluntary redundancy scheme but I don’t know of anywhere else (apart from Newcastle now) that is doing a compulsory one. Also the petition mentions 135 academic staff – are support staff also going to be made redundant?
May 27, 2025 at 11:34 am
I don’t know. There may be, but they are not represented by UCU (most are probably Unison), so may not be covered by UCU action.
May 27, 2025 at 12:23 pm
Yes both academic and professional staff were targeted. There was 4 rounds of voluntary severance, during which the they got at least twice as many applications as they aimed for from the professional staff, which is why this petition is focusing on the academic staff.