On Friday, 14 February, Students and staffs from Goldsmiths gathered in front of the Deptford Town Hall, where the warden’s office is located, to voice their opposition out against the austerity. So many people showed up that the pavement was blocked shortly as there were estimated more than a hundred protesters attended the demonstration.
Outrage started from the renovation on 302, 304 and 306, New
Cross Road that 2 shops was forced to make ways for a new “Enterprise Hub”, a
place which schools claiming to use as an
incubator that will bring more than 150 start-ups and 80 local job opportunities.
On the early February, the school announced Club Pulse Gym, the on-campus gym, will end its 14-year service in order to “explore how the gym space could better serve our students and the university by being used for teaching and learning”.
Although the press office insisted that the move has nothing to do with the Evolving Goldsmith, an initiative that wish to cut the university’s expense, they provided no further detail how the closure of the gym could increase the overall well-being for all.
That leads to resentment in the university as 12% of
students – more than 1000 people, are active users of the Club Pulse Gym, and
they were not asked before the decision was made. Meanwhile, teaching staff are
strongly opposed initiative that includes “a cost reduction target for
professional and academic service areas of 15% over the next two academic
years” and create a new way to allocate and execute teaching budget, which they
believe is detrimental to each schools’ autonomy.
This protest is the second action carried out by students in
Goldsmiths. On Feb. 11, a few students interrupted 2 minutes in a meeting where
Frances Corner, Goldsmiths’ warden, was attending with banners about gender pay
gap, inequality, and their deep concerns about the austerity under the Evolving
Goldsmiths plan.
The Evolving Goldsmith plan has become the epicenter of a
series of controversial moves from renovation, closing the gym, and the
long-standing dispute on the USS Pension Scheme. The demonstration might have
just been a warm-up, as a 14-day strike for teaching staffs’ pension and
welfare high-likely to take place from February 20th to March 13th.
The post Staffs and students protest against Evolving Goldsmiths appeared first on Eastlondonlines.
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