Subscribe to Print Edition | Thu., January 17, 2008 Shvat 10, 5768 | | Israel Time: 20:07 (EST+7)
Haaretz israel news English
web haaretz.com
  Back to Homepage
Rosner's Domain
Diplomacy
Defense Jewish World Opinion National
Print Edition
Advertising
Books Arts & Leisure Business Real Estate Easy Start Travel Week's End Anglo File
Students protesting in Tel Aviv on Wednesday. (Nir Kafri)
Last update - 12:30 17/01/2008
Tamir expresses hope for imminent end to university strike
By Tamara Traubman and Shahar Ilan, Haaretz Correspondents
Tags: Yuli Tamir, Roni Bar-On 

Education Minister Yuli Tamir said Thursday she hoped for an immediate end to the university lecturers' strike, which has been ongoing since the beginning of the 2007-2008 academic year.

"I hope all sides would show readiness so that the strike could end today," Tamir said Thursday, regarding recent developments in negotiation over ending the strike which has threatened to topple the entire academic school year.

A source involved in the negotiations between university presidents and treasury officials said the professors were willing to meet with the head of the Histadrut Labor Federation, Ofer Eini, to work out a deal.
Advertisement
Eini has proposed a compromise which could serve as basis for future agreement, the source said.

The source said, however, that "attempts are still being made to convince Finance Minister Roni Bar-On to attend the meeting. The prime minister is likely to intervene in order to demand that Bar-On attend."

Meanwhile, university student organizations descended upon major highways and blocked traffic in the center of the earlier Thursday to protest the deteriorating state of Israel's higher education system.

The students have joined in calls for Prime Minister Ehud Olmert to personally intervene in the negotiations.

According to Eini's proposal, the senior faculty would receive a 15.5 percent increase to their wages, to make up for the erosion of their salaries over the 1997-2006 period.

For 2007-2009, the faculty would receive an additional 5 percent increase, and a further 1.5 percent to guard against further erosion of their wages.

Unlike the proposals offered by the heads of the universities, the Eini proposal does not condition the wage increases on the faculty accepting the recommendations of the Shochat Report regarding their terms of employment.

Neither the faculty nor the treasury have rejected the Eini proposal out of hand. Even though it promises lower increases than the strikers have demanded: They originally sought a 35 percent increase, a figure that later dropped to 21 percent. Similarly, the proposed increase intended to guard against further erosion of their salaries is unlikely to be sufficient.

However, in a letter to Tamir, Prof. Zvi Hacohen, of Ben-Gurion University, who heads the coordination committee of all the faculty organizations, wrote that "it seems to us that [Eini's] proposal... could serve as a basis for an agreement."

With regards to the Treasury and its stance on the matter, Finance Minister Roni Bar-On said Wednesday that "the faculty are those who are opposed to the Eini proposal."

A source at the Finance Ministry said that the treasury had not adopted the proposal, but said that it is still being "evaluated."

Meanwhile, the heads of the universities have decided to withdraw their calls to the labor court to issue back-to-work injunctions, though their threat to close campuses if an agreement is not reached by Friday midday still stands.

The appeal to the court for injunctions has contributed to a souring of relations between the faculty and the university presidents, which led to calls by the faculty for the dismissal of the university leaders.

The chairman of the university heads committee, Bar-Ilan University president Prof. Moshe Kaveh, said that if the closure does take place, the universities will only be reopened "after a solution is reached."

Throughout the crisis, the university heads committee has issued a series of ultimatums, which they have repeatedly chosen to delay implementation of.

The latest ultimatum has given students the greatest cause for concern. The exam period is due to begin at both Tel Aviv University and Ben-Gurion University on Sunday.

"We asked the presidents of the universities to close down the campuses two months ago, with us, in order to shake up the government," Gil Goldenberg, chairman of Tel Aviv University's student union, said Wednesday. "However, they decided to do this just when the exams are beginning."

Related articles:
  • University pres.: Campuses to close Sunday until crisis over
  • University presidents' chairman warns academic year may be canceled
  • Lecturers, university heads meet in effort to save semester
  • Bar-On: Lecturers holding 100,000 students hostage because of cash
  • Bookmark to del.icio.us  
     
    And the winner is
    Haaretz's Gideon Levy wins prize for cultural dialogue.
    The Amona syndrome
    Gov't fears it will pay the public price of removing outposts.
      1.   Culpability or Bar-on 11:01  |  Prof 17/01/08
      2.   students and professors: abandon Israel and its universities! 11:47  |  furious student 17/01/08
      3.   if the likud was in power.... 12:38  |  g 17/01/08
      4.   The public should know details of budget use 12:57  |  TEA 17/01/08
      5.   prof. strike 15:05  |  outside observer 17/01/08
      6.   Re G #3 15:15  |  Prof 17/01/08
      7.   outside observer. BINGO! 15:31  |  Joe Sixpack 17/01/08
      8.   Silly furious student 17:05  |  Not a student 17/01/08
      9.   To #5 Regular politics have their policies... 19:55  |  TEA 17/01/08
     Today Online
    IAF strikes kill five in Gaza; 40 Qassams fired at Israel
    Responses: 230
    Israel Harel: No point in talks if Arabs won't accept Jewish Israel
    Responses: 101
    PM: Israel won't end war on militants firing rockets from Gaza
    Responses: 87
    Na'ama Sheffi: New talkback law does not hinder public dialogue
    Responses: 43
    Amy Winehouse mulls album of 'cool' Hanukkah hits
    Responses: 41
    Rosner's Domain
    Brzezinski against the right of return (WTR)
    Secular Israelis don't care for American Jews' opinion on Jerusalem
    Poll: Can Joe Lieberman convince Jews in Florida to vote for McCain?
    Why Bush did not say "a Jewish State" (WTR)
    Rosner's Mailbox: And what if Obama's a Muslim?


    More Headlines
    20:02 IAF strikes kill five in Gaza; 40 Qassams fired at Israel
    20:07 Israeli civilian wounded in West Bank shooting attack
    16:18 PM: Israel will continue to wage war on militants firing rockets
    16:54 Hamas: Shalit in good condition, not in danger of being harmed
    17:39 City in Czech Republic bans neo-Nazi march slated for weekend
    18:30 Histadrut head says lecturers' strike could end Thursday night
    18:42 Security forces thwart Jihad plan to bomb T.A.-Jerusalem railroad
    17:06 PA: 40 percent of new international aid to be spent in Hamas-run Gaza Strip
    16:06 IDF successfully launches test of long-range missile
    15:44 Over half of Jerusalem children are living in poverty
    Previous Editions
    Special Offers
    Advertisement
    Dead Sea Salt
    Beauty and skin care from the Dead Sea. Coupon code HAARETZ for 10% off!
    Teach & Study Program
    make a difference in Israel
    FAREWELL ISRAEL New Film
    The Coming War for Islamic Revival - View Movie Trailer
    Inbal Jerusalem Hotel
    Unbeatable rates at the Finest hotel in Jerusalem
    Long-term Israel programs
    MASA is your gateway. More programs. More grants.
    Eldan Rent a Car
    Israel's leading car rental company offers you a 20% discount on all online reservations
    AMERICANS CHOOSE DEMOCRATIC NOMINEE
    U.S. citizen in Israel vote in Democrats-Abroad official global primary.
    Home | TV | Print Edition | Diplomacy | Opinion | Arts & Leisure | Sports | Jewish World | Underground | Site rules |
    © Copyright  Haaretz. All rights reserved