Australian Education Union members reject Victorian government agreement over pay issues
On June 19, 2026, 58 percent of Australian Education Union members rejected an agreement with the Victorian government, citing inadequate pay and workload solutions. Teachers expressed concerns over burnout and the union’s disconnect with member needs. The decision highlights a growing crisis in public education, as staff demand urgent reforms to improve conditions.
Summary by OZbrief Editorial · SMH · Source
Take it further — get the full app and never miss a moment of what's happening in Australia.
This publisher's site can't be shown here due to their security settings.
Open full article →No source link available for this article.
Published 19 Jun 2026, 01:09 UTC · Updated 19 Jun 2026, 01:20 UTC
Summary by OZbrief Editorial. Original report: SMH. Editorial policy · Corrections
Related stories
- Ghost of far-right paramilitaries hovers over Colombia’s presidential runoff vote
- Did you pay attention at school? Let's see about that
- Comedian Dave Hughes blasts Prime Minister Albanese over broken tax promises
- South Fremantle snaps losing streak with decisive 39-point win over West Perth
- Bathurst champ fumes over 'dangerous' move
- Bolivia declares emergency over blockade crisis
Trending
- Nollamara backyard development under investigation by City of Stirling amid neighbours’ concerns
- Royal Ascot 2026: horse racing updates from day five – live
- Andy Burnham wins Makerfield byelection, emerges as Labour leadership contender
- Transport Accident Commission faces scrutiny over costly legal battles and delays
- Man charged with child grooming after detectives pose online as child
- Europe's AI complacency risks economic collapse by 2031, warns think tank



