Friday, 19 April, 2024
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UK nurses demand pay rise

Unions representing more than 1m nurses and other National Health Service staff have written to the UK’s Chancellor of the Exchequer to demand a 3.9% pay rise. Personnel Today reports that 14 unions came together to ask for the increase, and are also demanding a further £800 to make up for the real-terms cut they have seen to wages in recent years.

The unions that include Unison, the Royal College of Nursing, the Royal College of Midwives and the Chartered Society of Physiotherapy, claim that pay has fallen by 15% since 2010, when the pay cap was introduced, once inflation is taken into account.
Sara Gorton, head of health at Unison, said: “Health workers have gone without a proper pay rise for far too long. Their wages continue to fall behind inflation as food and fuel bills, housing and transport costs rise. NHS staff and their families need a pay award that stops the rot and starts to restore some of the earning that they have been missing out on.”

Niall Dickson, CEO of the NHS Confederation, said in the report, however, that requiring the NHS to fund the increased pay rise – as has been asked of the police and prison service – would be a “disaster”. “At the NHS Confederation we have made clear that we do not believe that the 1% pay cap is sustainable and that our members have mounting concern about both recruitment and retention of vital front line staff. Staff morale is also a serious issue, and while pay is by no means the only or even the critical issue, it is clearly important that those who deliver care feel valued and adequately rewarded.

“For many of our members workforce is now their number one challenge. But we have also made it clear that any attempt by the Government to make the service meet the cost of any pay increase would be a disaster – the pressures on NHS organisations are unprecedented and funding has been at historically low levels.

“Current plans for funding health and care services over the next two years are already unrealistic and any further cost on the pay bill must be matched with additional funds. We recognise that extra money for healthcare has to come from somewhere, but we believe there would be public support for making this a priority.”

The report says a government spokesperson responded to the request by saying: “Public sector workers, including NHS staff, do a fantastic job and the government is committed to ensuring they can continue to deliver world-class public services. The government will continue to ensure that the overall package is fair while also being affordable to taxpayers as a whole. The detail of 2018-19 pay remits for specific pay review bodies will be discussed and agreed as part of the budget process and will be set out in due course.”

[link url="http://www.personneltoday.com/hr/nursing-nhs-unions-demand-3-9-pay-rise/"]Personnel Today report[/link]

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