Waiariki TIASA union will vote on whether or not to strike due to pay disputes today.
About 130 of the institute's allied staff - which includes non-academic staff such as human resources, administration, payroll and ground staff - voted unanimously at a stopwork meeting on Friday to reject the bargaining position they say Waiariki has taken.
They instructed their union, TIASA, to hold an urgent vote on strike action, which was due to happen today.
The union said members were seeking a $900 (with a minimum of 1.3 per cent) flat rate increase to salaries and an extension of the collective agreement so that it also covered 10 union members who worked at Waiariki's's Holiday Park.
However Waiariki Institute of Technology said they had been in close dialogue with TIASA for a number of weeks regarding the pay offer under the collective agreement which has culminated in what they say is a fair offer that extends to all TIASA members.