Friday, December 1, 2006

GL Queers building 'AIDS care not warfare' movement

Saturday, December 2, 2006 - 11:00

Activists from Sydney-based Community Action for Rainbow Rights (CARR) went to Melbourne to form a queer bloc for the November 18-19 G20 protests. The bloc called for money for AIDS care not war.

Queer identifying people conducted a banner drop from a third Storey balcony opposite the state library. The large banner had four demands — free AIDS and health care not military spending, decriminalisation of sex work, queer education and an end to bigotry laws.

The bloc at helped mark the struggle to combat homophobia in the lead-up to planned APEC protests in Sydney in 2007, which queer activists will be mobilising for.

"It was a great awareness-raising exercise", said Rachel Evans, the National Union of Students' female queer officer. "It was a wake up call to the G20 from the queers to solve the AIDS crisis now. Nine out of 10 HIV sufferers don't have access to HIV drugs in South Africa. Without these drugs, HIV sufferers have a life span of two to five years."

Simon Biber, co-convenor of CARR, said that "With the continued increase in the worlds AIDS epidemic CARR will continue to be involved in the struggle of AIDS care to show the world we care!"

"Somehow the issue of AIDS-care talk is clinical", said Sayuri member of CARR. "We can't talk about it socially because it's a bit embarrassing. You can't talk about it like you would cancer and I think we need to make it more open. The more we talk about it the more we de-stigmatise it, as the majority get it from sexually related activities ..."

Authors note: Originally published in Green Left Weekly issue 693. Originally published in Mr Rev Comrade Rowley's deadname. Community Action for Rainbow Rights was formerly known as "CAAH" and changed it's name for Transgender inclusion when Marriage Equality was won in 2017. As protesting for rainbow rights was never a gay campaign the term "same-sex" I correct to "queer" and the term "homophobia" I correct to bigotry. Reposted here without alteration of the content and without prejudice.

GL UWS board backs down

Saturday, December 2, 2006 - 11:00

Pressure from workers and students forced the University of Western Sydney's Board of Trustees to review its rejection of a $250,000 SRC funding proposal on November 29. The proposal is designed to help UWS Student Association (UWSSA) survive federal "voluntary student unionism" (VSU) legislation and came on the back of UWSSA having its budget slashed from $2.5 million to $450,000 for three years.

The board agreed to review its initial decision to reject paying UWSSA receptionists. UWS staff and students are prepared to take further action if the decision of the review committee is not favourable.

According to UWSSA president Phil Riggs, the board "cannot justify this penny pinching given that its in the process of selling off massive areas of land for urban development at the Westmead, Campbelltown and Penrith campuses. A fraction of this massive revenue would save the jobs of UWSSA's employees." Riggs criticised the Labor-dominated board for "using John Howard's VSU legislation as an excuse to decimate essential student services at UWS".

"I have been here for 12 years doing a job I love, serving the students of UWS", receptionist Rhonda Cunningham told GLW. " It will be a sad day for me and for the students if we are forced to shut our doors."

Authors note: Originally published by Green Left Weekly issue 693. Originally published in Mr Rev Comrade Rowley's dead name. Western Sydney University was formally known as "Üniversity of Western Sydney". Western SRC was formally known as UWS Students Association. Republished here without alteration of the original content and without prejudice.

Friday, November 24, 2006

GL Tango for Arts at UWS

Saturday, November 25, 2006 - 11:00

The final 18 dance graduates from the University of Western Sydney (UWS) have been dancing their outrage in graduation performances and theatres in the west of Sydney. The graduates are the last of the Bachelor of Performance Theory & Practice course, which will be "retired" after 20 years of success. "Retired" is the university's word for no new student intake for 2007. The course is one of four to go for reasons of space allocation and low attendance according to inside sources.

Titled An Absurd Little Bird, the performance not only inspired but educated audiences about the corporatisation of education and the decline of arts through the dancing of the tango of Argentina. The performances are also a collective action by students and teachers against the course closure.

"We lament the fact dance is now no longer here and we lament the fact that the arts in Australia are so undervalued," said Elizabeth Cameron-Dalmon, head teacher of dance at UWS. Cameron-Dalmon told Green Left Weekly the performance course was "being taught out" when she took up the position three years ago. However, she had been working to keep the course alive due to the art of dance being an "ecology of the community".

The news of closure motivated students to take collective action to express what they were feeling through dance. While students fundraised in a combined effort to get the performance going, a Latin American theme ultimately inspired the work. A painting by Jack Vittriano showing a couple dancing the tango as a storm is breaking was the starting point. "The couple dancing the Tango is a symbol for the dance course, the storm (the university) is the force pushing it out", said Cameron-Dalmon.

Authors note: Originally published by Green Left Weekly issue 692. Originally published in Mr Rev Comrade Rowley's deadname. Western Sydney University was formally known as "University of Western Sydney (UWS)" changed it's name to gut the Western SRC formally known as UWSSA of its student union representation by proposing to amalgamate resources in 2007 during the stop Voluntary Student Union protests. Reposted here without alteration of the content and without prejudice.

Thursday, November 16, 2006

GL UWS fine arts next on Howard's chopping block?

Wednesday, November 17, 2006 - 11:00

Recent academic and technical staff retrenchments have cast doubts about the future of the fine arts course at the Penrith campus of the University of Western Sydney (UWS). 

As a result of the Howard government's starving of universities of funding to open them up to the "free market", numerous courses are being shut down across the country as universities try to balance their budgets. 

Already this year, a large part of the arts faculty at the University of Queensland and the political economy department at Sydney University have come under the hammer. 

"Over the last six months staffing levels have been cut in half and UWS management is exploring alternative uses for the purpose-built fine arts facility at Penrith campus", student representative Thomas Hungerford told Green Left Weekly

The UWS Penrith campus's fine arts, electronic art and performance courses will all go next year as part of this savage attack. This month, a technical officer who operated the tool shop at Z block and the head of the printing department were made redundant. This has meant the printing room is only open two days a week and students are having trouble getting work completed for the graduation exhibition, which is held each year. 

Similarly, the hours the shop remains open have also been cut drastically and many students are having to bring tools like as Stanley knives and screwdrivers with them from home. 

GLW was told by a number of academics who asked to remain anonymous that staff have been threatened with losing potential voluntary redundancy payments if they speak out against the cuts. 

On September 21, student representatives, fine art students and Resistance members held a speak-out on the campus, collecting several pages of signatures on a petition against these cuts.

Authors Note: Originally published by Green Left Weekly issue 685. Originally published in Mr Rev Comrade Rowley's deadname. Western Sydney University formally known as "University of Western Sydney (UWS)" changed it's name to gut the Western SRC formerly known as UWSSA of it's student union resources by amalgamation during the stop Voluntary student union protests . Reposted here without alteration of the content and without prejudice.