Saturday 02 November 2024
Select a region
News

Gov: Teachers will get promised pay deal – if ALL action stops

Gov: Teachers will get promised pay deal – if ALL action stops

Tuesday 05 September 2023

Gov: Teachers will get promised pay deal – if ALL action stops

Tuesday 05 September 2023


Teachers will get the pay deal they were promised if they agree to end all industrial action – including working to rule, the Assistant Chief Minister has said.

It was announced yesterday by unions NASUWT, NEU and NAHT that strike action by both teachers and headteachers would be taking place in the opening weeks of the new school term: on 12 September, 18 October, and 19 October.

Teaching union NASUWT said this was because talks over reversing a real-terms pay cut over the last 15 years had broken down, and accused the Government of reneging on a promise to make a backdated pay award of 7.9% for 2023 as an interim move while negotiations continued.  

This move had had initially prompted the NASUWT to withdraw plans for strike action announced in July, although they said that members would continue refusing to carry out additional duties as part of a protest against “spiralling workloads”.

Constable Andy Jehan, who is Vice-Chair of the States Employment Board, which is the official employer of all public sector workers, yesterday hit back at the unions' strike action and claims.

Andy_Jehan.jpg

Pictured: Constable Andy Jehan, Vice-Chair of the SEB, said that the Government only learned about the strike action through the media.

“We are disappointed to learn of strike days through the press, and not through the accepted channels," he commented.

"This is an unnecessary disruption to children and parents after a long summer break."

The Constable continued: “Teachers have already had a 7.9% increase in their pay, which the States Employment Board paid, even though the unions were undertaking industrial action. We did this in good faith. 

“We wrote to the NASUWT in July saying we are willing to back date the pay award to January 2023, if they and the NEU agreed that this would finalise the pay deal for 2023 and all industrial action would end. This is not an unreasonable position. We have continued to offer mediation or conciliation, both unions have declined the employer’s offer of binding arbitration meaning we can’t proceed.”

 

Video: The Chief Minister giving a speech to striking members of the NEU earlier in July.

He added that SEB believed the solution to be “very simple”: “…Both the NASUWT and National Education Union have to write to us accepting the backpay and the end of the pay dispute in 2023, and we will make this payment at the earliest opportunity.

“With pay discussion due to start soon for 2024 where the unions are expecting to negotiate a multi-year deal, it is important we start them with a clear field and a constructive and mature approach.”

Many other public sector workers have agreed a 7.9% pay increase, with teachers and nurses the only pay groups yet to settle.

In July, the National Education union staged a one-day strike.

READ MORE...

Headteachers join strikes after Gov promise "cynically withdrawn"

Teaching union agrees pay deal – but workload fight continues

Good news in the ongoing teacher pay row?

Autumn of school strikes? Union fires warning at Gov after "nothing" talks

Teacher recruitment 'working groups' to be set up after union talks

WATCH: Chief Minister met with booing as teachers protest heats up

POEM: "It  seem we’re out for the money"

Assistant Minister denies teacher recruitment "crisis" ahead of protests

Teachers latest: Can strike be avoided... or are we "out of goodwill"?

Pay row escalates as Jersey headteachers say “enough is enough”

LIST: Which schools are affected by strike action?

Disruption expected as Jersey teachers cut back on cover in pay row

Teachers to vote on strike action after Gov "unwillingness" to negotiate

Sign up to newsletter

 

Comments

Comments on this story express the views of the commentator only, not Bailiwick Publishing. We are unable to guarantee the accuracy of any of those comments.

You have landed on the Bailiwick Express website, however it appears you are based in . Would you like to stay on the site, or visit the site?