Friday 25 July 2014

UNISON to ballot NHS workers for Industrial Action over Pay



UNISON members working in the NHS will be balloted for Industrial Action over Pay. The ballot will run from 28th August to 18th September.

The real value of NHS pay has been falling for five years.

Pay in the NHS has not kept in line with inflation and staff have not received an above-inflation pay rise since 2009. This year 60% of NHS staff will not get any pay rise and only those at the top of their bands will receive a 1% unconsolidated lump sum.

The 1% unconsolidated lump sum is a one-off payment which does not alter the hourly rate, so it will not count towards unsocial hours for evening, weekend or night shifts, it will not be added to overtime, it will not be added to any supplements (such as high cost area supplements, local recruitment and retention premia, or on-call arrangements) and it does not count towards pensionable pay.

If members vote ‘yes’, it is proposed that members will take action during a week in October. This is likely to start with a short stoppage followed by a defined form of action short of strike, such as insisting that members take their breaks.

Members will be sent a ballot paper with questions asking whether they are prepared to take strike action and/or action short of strike action.

We are urging members to vote yes for both strike action and action short of strike. However, we are also urging all members, whatever their view, to vote to ensure we have a high ballot turn out.

What do we want?

If UNISON members vote yes we will be taking action for an immediate 1% consolidated uplift for all and the Living Wage, to end the pay freeze for 2015-16 and increases in the future that will restore the value of NHS pay.

Health secretary Jeremy Hunt MP ignored the recommendation of a 1% increase

The independent Pay Review Body for the NHS recommended a 1% increase to all pay points for all staff across all four countries, however health secretary Jeremy Hunt MP ignored them in March and announced an unconsolidated payment for only a minority of staff in England.

A third of NHS staff do not get paid enough to live on

More than a third of NHS staff, who are non medical, are paid less than £21,000 a year and the bottom two pay points - bands 1 and 2 - are below the living wage. The government has failed to lift those staff out of in-work poverty. But this does not save money as people not paid enough to live on rely on in-work benefits.

Cutting pay affects whole families
Over half of UNISON members working in the NHS have school-age children, a third are carers for elderly relatives and 20% have infants.

The UK can afford to pay people enough to live on

The current living wage rates (from 4 November 2013) are £7.65 an hour outisde London, and £8.80 an hour in London. To bring the bottom two NHS pay points up to the living wage would mean an annual increase of £664 for someone on pay point one and £305 for someone pay point two.

To do that would cost:

£17.6m in England
approximately £240,000 in Northern Ireland
approximately £1.4m in Cymru/Wales
or around £19m to £20m in total across all four countries.

The total NHS budget for 2012-13 was £108.9bn and the Clinical Commissioning Groups are already reporting an under-spend of £97m for 2013/14 – enough to pay the Living Wage in England, Northern Ireland and Wales.

A pay rise for a minority is divisive

Giving an increase only to those who have reached the top of their grade is divisive and means that staff who are starting work now have to cope with increased workloads, more unpaid extra hours and fewer opportunities for promotion, but don’t get the same packages because they have not been there as long.

Cutting pay does not save jobs

Last year more than 10,000 jobs were lost as a result of the unnecessary restructuring of the NHS in England. The government has tried to argue that cutting pay means more jobs, but in fact it is making cuts to both pay and jobs. On top of that comes "downbanding", where whole grades of staff are re-graded for budget reasons.

Staff need to know they’re valued

Staff need to be treated well. The NHS is facing unprecedented challenges, telling more than half the workforce that they are not worth even a tiny pay rise will not help to engage them in meeting these challenges.

Thursday 24 July 2014

Petition for Ethical Care in North Somerset
















Please sign our petition to ask North Somerset Council to sign up to UNISON's Ethical Care Charter, to ensure better standards of care for our elderly and disabled people.

Click on this link: https://you.38degrees.org.uk/petitions/better-care-standards-for-our-elderly-disabled-people-in-north-somerset

Saturday 12 July 2014

Thursday 10 July 2014

10th July Strike - Picket Lines and Picnic for Pay

Here's some pictures from our picket lines and picnic today. Thanks to all North Somerset UNISON members who attended at both the Town Hall and Castlewood. At the Town Hall we were also joined by members of UNITE and the FBU, Paul from Birmingham UNISON on his holiday in Weston, and Manchester film-maker Loran Dunn, who is making a drama set in a seaside town. We were provided with water by a member of NAPO, provided with toilet facilities by DIAL, and free advertising on his amazing three-wheeler by Jason Winkworth. The sun shone all day. We had lots of public support and a great picnic on the grass outside the town hall.



















Tuesday 1 July 2014

10th July Strike - March and Rally in Bristol

Stand Up! For Fair Pay and Education

March and Rally
Thursday July 10
Assemble 10.30 am to leave at 11am - College Green Bristol
Organised by UNISON, NUT, GMB and UNITE

We are striking and protesting to:

Defend public services and state education
Recover the pay we have lost since 2010

We all expect and deserve high quality public services, but more than 400,000 jobs have gone in local government since 2010. This is affecting the quality of services provided to council tax payers. Our pay has fallen by 18% since 2010 and for our poorer members, the taxpayer is subsidising wages through benefits.

We demand a fair day’s pay for a fair day’s work. The results of the government’s attacks on state education are now being realised, with failing academies, massive overspends in the Department for Education and a thoroughly demoralised and angry workforce in schools. This is bound to affect the quality of education our children receive.

Poverty Pay is unacceptable in a growing economy!

The employer has refused to negotiate on a pay rise greater than 1% for council workers and is intent on breaking the agreement on teachers pensions. A 1% pay rise is a cut in real terms and follows a pay rise of only 1% last year and a previous 3 year pay freeze. We are left with no alternative but to take strike action. We are tax payers and voters too, and deserve decent pay and pensions - we’re worth it.