RUSU Priorities

Championing Quality, Equity, and Student Voice

RUSU is passionate about creating a better future for students at RMIT. Our campaigns team advocates directly to the university for high quality education and assessment experiences, inclusive practices, fair policies and procedures, excellent facilities and student spaces and a vibrant campus community.

2025 Priorities

Each year RUSU presents a list of priorities it believes are necessary to enhance student experience at RMIT. Over the year the student union will advocate strongly for change to deliver these priorities, often working in collaboration with the University to make positive change that supports students.

Changes to improve Equitable Learning Plan Processes

Consistent implementation of Equitable Learning Plans (ELPs) across the University and the introduction of interim ELPs for students finalising diagnostic paperwork or waiting for appointments.

Opt-in to Adobe Access

An opt-in system for students who would like to regain access to Adobe Suite privileges, to broaden and strengthen the skills of our graduates and provide essential publishing and design resources to student run clubs.

Changes to the Assessment and Assessment Flexibility Policy Suite

RUSU has been advocating for significant changes to the assessment policy suite to ensure students who are struggling are identified early and offered proper support and to allow students to return to good standing after being placed first stage at risk. Read our submission into the policy suite review below.

Food Access for Students

Expand our own food access program to deliver more health breakfasts and lunches to students in every part of RMIT and further develop the program to include partnerships with external organisations to provide more accessible, nutritious food to students. RUSU will continue to advocate for permanent spaces for students to access affordable food and prepare their own food, such as food hubs and community kitchens on campus.

More free period products

RUSU is pushing for free period products to feature in 15 more female, accessible and all-genders bathrooms across all campuses.

Multi-faith centre access

Ensuring students have access to the multi-faith centre that reflects when students are most likely to be on campus and aligns with times when high usage of the centre is most likely, e.g. prayer times.

More neuroaffirming spaces

Creation of more neuroaffirming study spaces and lounge spaces across all campuses, co-located with library or other student facing services.

Free Parking in Bundoora

Free parking in Bundoora to ensure students can continue to meet their essential needs and attend classes. UPDATE: Thank you to the 450 Bundoora students who completed our survey on transport to Bundoora. RUSU will be submitting a final report to the University shortly.

Changes to Student Cards

RUSU would like to see students offered the opportunity for students to choose to have a preferred name on their student cards. This is especially important for trans students who do not want to be deadnamed or First Nations students who would like their student card to display a traditional name.

Universal Submission Deadline for VE Students

RUSU is working with the college of VE to implement 11:59:59pm submission deadlines for all submitted assessments. This will provide greater consistency for students and allow students engaging in work-based learning such as placements and apprenticeships, to submit to a deadline that falls outside of their work based learning hours.

Upgrades to outlying campuses

RUSU would like to see some upgrades to the Bundoora East Campus and Brunswick campus to better support student life such as microwaves, hot water taps and sinks. Reinvigorating safe spaces in Bundoora East is also a priority for us this year. UPDATE: RMIT has approved the installation of additional facilities in Brunswick by 2026. The Bundoora East Women's Room Safe Space is currently undergoing safety and risk assessments prior to reopening.

Smoother booking processes for student clubs

Allowing student run clubs improved access to services that support on campus events such as cleaning, security and room bookings.

RUSU works for YOU!

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. Here is just a snapshot of what we have achieved:

We’ve expanded Healthy Breakfasts and Chill n Grill to more campuses, and our pop-up markets deliver fresh fruit and veggies all through semester. With our Just Food Collective collab, Compass Marketplaces and Cost of Living Week, students get even more free groceries and produce. Still hungry? Realfoods café now offers $6 curry and rice on Tuesdays and Wednesdays, plus $4 meals on Tuesday nights to fuel late study sessions.

RMIT has introduced interim ELPs for students who engage with the Equitable Learning Service. After RUSU raised the issue at Academic Board, RMIT is investigating ways to ensure that students on ELPs get reasonable adjustments to assessment when requested or are supported to have meaningful discussions with academics to determine how they can participate equitably in assessments.

RUSU takes another step to end deadnaming at university by advocating for trans and gender non-conforming students to be able to have their preferred name on their students cards as opposed to their legal name. First Nations students can also request a student card with a traditional name/cultural name too.

After RUSU joined their voice with other student organisations and advocated strongly to the University Accord process for federal support to end placement poverty, 2025 saw the start of the Commonwealth Prac Payment putting an extra $330+ a week into the pockets of students on placement in select programs.

Our VE Officer has worked hard this year to secure a universal submission deadline for VE assessments, a huge help for the thousands of students who had deadlines which clashed with their in-person learning or apprenticeship hours.

Thanks to RUSU’s advocacy free period products are now available in more bathrooms across all campuses, including disabled and all-genders bathrooms.

We heard how disappointed students were to lose access to Adobe Suite last year. We advocated for RMIT to re-instate access for students who wanted to use Adobe again. Students can now fill in a short form to opt-in to access and regain use of the software.

RUSU was clear that student access to the Multifaith Centre was essential during Ramadan. We worked with RMIT to ensure the opening hours matched key prayer times throughout Ramadan. We are now working with the University and student groups to ensure that opening hours going forward reflect when students are most likely to be on campus and need access to the centre.