Let’s have calm and rational discussion about the higher education amendment bill
In certain quarters any discussion of government intervention in universities is twisted and used to inflame panic about threats to university autonomy. But our current laws provide, as they must, for points at which government must intervene, when there is a breakdown in the management of a public university.
Much has changed since 1997, when the act which currently governs the South African university system was passed (Higher Education Act 101 of 1997). For example, we no longer have Technikons; the Act still reflects the existance of these institutions. Many lessons have been learnt by universities and government, and in particular, problems have been experienced with some aspects of amendments which were passed in 2012.
In response to concerns from the university sector as well as to the White Paper on Post-School Education and Training, published in October 2013, and after extensive consultation and discussion in the sector, a Higher Education Amendment Bill is on the Parliamentary agenda for February and March 2016. The Portfolio Committee on Higher Education and Training heard the first presentation of the Bill on the 28 January 2016.
The proposed amendment deals, amongst other issues, with institutional breakdowns. Perhaps because of this it has triggered concern amongst some stakeholders and other interested parties. But this concern is unwarranted; the current amendment is not aimed at a rash snatching of power, but in fact brings better coherence and clarity to the existing rules, which have been variously criticized within the sector as clumsy, cumbersome to read and apply, giving the Minister too much power over universities and National Institutes of Higher Education, and inadequately consulted. Some of the provisions of the earlier amendment did not fully comply with the Promotion of Administrative Justice Act of 2000 (PAJA).
The current amendments consolidate various measures whereby government must intervene in universities into one chapter, to make them easier to understand, and to make it clearer what kinds of interventions should happen when. They also provide greater clarity about the mechanisms available for the Minister to intervene, as already prescribed in the Act.