The
University of Tasmania’s 2019 Annual Report has finally been released.
The
university reports on a calendar year basis. The Auditor General signed off the
2019 report in February 2020. The Board (known as the Council) adopted the
report in May and sent it to the government as required by its governing Act. It’s
been sitting in someone’s in-tray for the last 3 months. Another Covid victim
no doubt.
Apart
from the financials it’s a pretty skinny report.The overview for the year
occupied only six pages. Even then it was a cut and paste from previous
offerings, from the now outdated Strategic Plan 2019-2024 dated July 2019 for
instance. UTas is “not long-term economically sustainable and being
economically sustainable is no easy task…….At an operating level, we break
even. Still, there is no surplus to see our facilities renewed for the next
generation.” If there were sustainability questions in July 2019, they
would have been more evident when the Council signed the report in February
2020. Even more so today in a pandemic world.
Serious
as it was, sustainability didn’t get another mention. The rest of the overview
degenerated into a public relations pastiche with more proper nouns and
acronyms that you could poke a stick at…… The Ways of Working project, the
People Strategy and College People plans, the Academic Leadership Development Program,
which led to the Lean (sic) and simplification momentum continuing to build
across the University via a new process improvement tool called Go-See-Fix, the
unsuccessful attempt to satisfy the international Athena SWAN charter atho’
UTas did get a Bronze Award accreditation and is committed to continue commitment
to the SAGE initiative. It might as well have been written in Swahili. If a
student served up drivel like that in an assignment, you’d fail them. Irrelevant
twaddle especially when there are pressing matters of sustainability.
The
brief overview concluded with two pages describing UTas’ building program which
is fitting perhaps because more than ever UTas is a property developer with a
side hustle in education.
The
financials confirm this.