Events, advocacy, welfare and care packs are just a small part of what we deliver for students every year, and we are always working hard, behind the scenes, to deliver key initiatives to improve the student experience at RMIT, and to fight for the support students need, when they need it most.
RUSU has fought for RMIT to direct additional funding to the Student Hardship Assistance Grant program to ensure it can continue to support students facing financial hardship in semester 2. This means more students who are facing tough times will get the financial support they need. You can find out more about the Student Hardship Assistance Grant here: Student Hardship Assistance Grants.
RUSU knows that students all over Australia are doing it tough right now. Whilst we are continuing to push the University to expand its financial hardship program we are also filling in the gap ourselves by making sure we are offering free food to students in more places than ever before - increasing the number of places we offer free breakfasts, offering a free VE lunch every single week, partnering with the Just Food Collective to offer zero waste meals and groceries to students and even bringing free fresh fruit to overlooked corners of the university whenever we can. Find out more here.
Student unions all over Australia responded to the federal government's University Accord process. RUSU's submission called for changes to make students lives better that were delivered in the most recent Australian budget. Thanks to the advocacy of student unions the government has introduced paid placements for students and changed HECS indexation to reduce student debt. RUSU will keep fighting for the other recommendations in our submission such as a National Student Charter and Student Ombudsman, and reversal of the Job Ready Graduates program.
In May this year RUSU called on RMIT and the federal government to support semester one graduating international students to apply for their subclass 485 visas before new rules came into affect that would shorten their visa duration. After raising this issue with the university, eligible RMIT students were able to request the necessary paperwork to apply for their extended visas before the cutoff date.
We have been making life a little sweeter in the City North precinct by expanding our Welfare on Wheels program to include the Carlton Library, offering a free weekly VE lunch, pushing for the new extended hours available at Carlton Library, and even bringing free fresh fruit to Building 51 twice a week.
We know areas of uni can become tired, rundown or broken and when it is the student spaces that get neglected it can be hard to get them fixed. RUSU called for the university to introduce a new snap, send, solve type solution for students to easily report facilities issues. RMIT has now introduced Fix-It to tackle this very problem, allowing students to quickly report maintenance problems direct to the Property Services team.
The Library have taken on our request to extend library hours before and during the assessment period at RMIT. We know students like to study late in the runup to final assessments and exams and with the cost of utilities like heating/cooling, lighting and internet increasing students often choose to study later in the library. From the start of this year the library has trialled extended hours from week 10 of semester.
RUSU joined our voice to other student unions up and down the country in responding to the federal government's University Accord process. Our submission called on the government to end placement poverty, establish a National Student Charter, increase the rates of Austudy and Youth Allowance, and hold universities accountable for not supporting and protecting students in crisis. You can read our submission here.
Clubs are essential to a vibrant student life on campus and we love it when clubs are supported to run fantastic events and activations. RUSU has been campaigning hard to make it easier for clubs to bring student life to campus, scoring a streamlined update to room bookings for our club leaders. Things aren't perfect yet though, so we are continuing to push the university to make it easier for clubs to book and pay for services that support the delivery of on campus events too.
After years of campaigning RUSU has successfully advocated for consent training for all students at RMIT. Students have been calling for years for better and more comprehensive consent training at RMIT and we are proud to be part of the team developing the most wide-reaching training yet. We will be taking the voice of students directly to the development team ready for a 2024 rollout of a new training offering.
RUSU has been working to deliver upgraded Womens and Queer Spaces on the City campus. The new Women’s Room and Queer Lounge are open and ready to provide a safe and welcoming spaces for students. You can find details of your closest safe space here:
Queer Lounge:
Womens Rooms:
RUSU has joined forces with the Library, ELS and Study Support to deliver weekly neurodivergent study sessions for 2023. The sessions are designed to create conditions that are conducive to study for neurodivergent students. RUSU is now advocating for the establishment of a permanent library space that is designed to support neurodiverse students in their learning.
With the ongoing cost of living crisis continuing to impact students RUSU has been campaigning to end period poverty on campus. Our End Period Poverty Campaign has had two main streams. Firstly, free period products are now available at 8 different locations across RMIT, including in all-genders bathrooms and in bathrooms close to libraries that are open late. These are restocked regularly to ensure students have access to free products whenever they need them. We have also been working closely with Kotex to distribute free period undies to students, to provide students with a more sustainable choice.
After repeated campaigning all semester, RUSU submitted a paper to academic board at the end of semester two, 2021 calling for any fail grades to be converted to withdrawn grades in recognition of the prolonged lockdown students enduring that semester. Our paper was approved by the Board and no fail grades appeared on transcripts for that semester.
After trying to get RMIT to run a week promoting respectful relationships at the start of semester 1, RUSU decided to do it ourselves! Let’s Get Consensual week welcomed students to learn more about consent, interact with key outreach organisations (thank you Thorneharbour and Sexual Health Victoria!), and enjoy free cupcakes, fries, performers, merch and much more.
UPDATE: In 2020, RUSU was firm that RMIT should respect student privacy and not allow online proctoring of exams. RUSU continues to speak out against online proctoring. RMIT has now discarded plans to launch an e-proctoring trial in the CoBL and has no plans to explore online proctoring options at present. As more Australian universities introduce some form of remote exam surveillance, RUSU will continue to stand up for students rights and fight for privacy.
After agreeing to a 10% fee reduction for international offshore students in semester one, 2021, RMIT increased the scope of the bursary in 2022, continuing the fee reduction and widening the eligibility criteria to include all international students.
2021 marks the start of the RMIT Multifaith and Wellbeing Centre project. Improved multifaith spaces for students at RMIT has been a priority area for RUSU since 2018. Our campaigning has been in direct response to feedback from students and driven by the collaboration between our staff, clubs and students.
RUSU has long been advocating for greater representation for our students with a disability and/or caring responsibilities. We are proud to announce that this position has been funded for 2022 and look forward to working with this this student rep to advocate for and run events with students with disabilities.
At the start of the August 2021 lockdown RUSU advocated to secure academic support for students impacted by the lockdown. The seven day rolling extensions were introduced in response. Our work in this area is ongoing and we are currently pushing RMIT to introduce further support that recognizes the impacts of ongoing lockdown.
RUSU raised the issue of our offshore students inability to access RMIT’s counselling services during COVID 19 as a significant risk to student safety and wellbeing multiple times throughout the duration of the pandemic. RMIT has now engaged a global counselling service to provide much needed support to these students.
RUSU has campaigned for RMIT to have a clean investment portfolio for many years. In 2021 RMIT announced that it was 100% divested from fossil fuels. RUSU will continue to push RMIT to embrace sustainability and become a sector leader in sustainable practice.
RUSU made a medical hub on campus a priority in 2019. We worked hard with RMIT to ensure it would be staffed with medical professionals with a deep understanding of our diverse student body. As part of our ongoing work the medical hub has welcomed specialist LGBT+ doctors, as well as student mental health specialists and doctors with multiple languages. Since the start of 2021 the medical hub has been vaccinating eligible RMIT students with flu shots, Astra Zeneca and Pfizer shots.
In 2021 the RMIT University Student Union Council was proud to declare a climate emergency and will continue to assess our role in creating a sustainable student experience. RUSU President, Akshay Jose, also utilised part of his yearly presentation to RMIT Council to urge them to solidify RMIT’s commitment to sustainable practice by declaring a climate emergency on behalf of the University.
Our RUSU departments are responsible for creating events and advocating on behalf of different student cohorts at RMIT. Our Community Art Projects reflect this work at a University level through the creation of a student artwork that stands in solidarity with a marginalised student group. In 2019 the ‘Blooming Now’ artwork celebrated an inclusive definition of women at RMIT. 2022 will see the completion of the ‘Journey of Mapiyal’ artwork, communicating the value of respect and solidarity for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander communities and for people from all backgrounds on campus.
Student Staff Consultative Committees are a key mechanism for including the student voice in decision making at RMIT. These committees have been inconsistently resourced for years and as a result opportunities for continuous improvement at the program level have been missed. Improving SSCC was a priority for RUSU this year and we are proud to say that training for SSCC reps has been centralised, SSCC rep enrolment and engagement is high and committee administration is being standardised for consistency across programs.
Our VE Department identified regional students accessing insecure accommodation when they travel to Melbourne for assessments as a clear risk to student safety. Their advocacy work has led to the introduction of heavily discounted student accommodation being made available to students travelling to campus for assessments.
Here when you need it most, our Compass team work tirelessly to support students. Since the start of the pandemic RUSU has distributed over 29,000 meals to students through our online Compass Marketplaces, Healthy Breakfast and Heat and Eat programs. Semester 2 2021 also sees the return of a virtual version of our hugely popular Welfare on Wheels program which will deliver healthy snacks to students during SWOTVAC.
With new measures in currently place at RMIT to manage contact tracing, RUSU has advocated for some form of swipe card access remaining in place to reserve key RMIT spaces, such as the Library, for RMIT students only during peak periods.
After years of paper-based timetables on student noticeboard, the College of VE has taken on feedback from RUSU to move timetabling online. This has the dual benefit of increasing the likelihood that students will be informed of their timetable at least 7 days before the start of their classes and creating greater timetable consistency for VE students.
We all deserve to be free from harm at university and RUSU has been campaigning for change at RMIT to keep us all safe. As a result of our advocacy RMIT has introduced the following measures: Introduction of consent training micro-credential, introduction of bystander training for students and the rollout of safe spaces across all campuses.
Students have continued to highlight to RUSU the need for counselling appointments during the pandemic and we have been ongoing proponents of students needing access to more appointments and more timely appointments. RMIT has determined to keep the current counselling appointments available to each student capped at six but the wait time for an appointment has dropped significantly from an average wait time of one month to eight days.
RUSU ran a campaign to say no to library cuts and save the Makerspace during the financial cuts to key student services during the pandemic. The support from students was overwhelming and with the voices of students behind us we saved this vital student space. The creativity and imagination of RMIT students' lives on in the Makerspace.