‘Co-ordinated action unites us,’ McAnea tells TUC congress

“Our purpose binds us – co-ordinated action unites us.” That was the message at the heart of Christina McAnea’s speech to the TUC’s annual congress in Brighton today, as she moved a successful UNISON motion on Higher pay to tackle the cost of living crisis.

The general secretary had opened by telling delegates that she had been on a picket line recently in Blackpool. It was “early one morning, in the wind and the rain …

“I was talking to our UNISON members. Most of them were cleaners, caterers or porters, who work in the hospital but for a private company – OCS.

“They don’t get full NHS pay and conditions, and even during the pandemic – working Christmas day – they only got flat rate pay.

“Their ask was reasonable: pay parity with the directly-employed workers doing the same job.

Ms McAnea said that she had asked one of members how she travelled to the picket line so early.

The member replied that she walked. An hour to work/the picket line and an hour home.

“Because she could no longer afford the bus fare.”

That, said the general secretary, was the reality that was forcing people take strike action even when it meant losing pay.

She continued by telling the hall: “The picture inside our NHS hospitals is not much prettier. Almost 30% of employers have set up foodbanks to help feed their staff and another 20% are planning to bring it in.”

It was, said Ms McAnea, “a shameful period in our history.”

She reported that a care worker, forced to work 60-70 hours a week to pay her debts, had asked: “Is this life, what do you think?”

The general secretary told congress that, while working people have struggled through austerity, a deadly pandemic and are now in a devastating cost of living crisis, they face a repeat of the “penny-pinching austerity” inflicted on the country since 2010.

“Meanwhile, the UK government has been playing roulette, racking up debt on the public tab.

“All their gambling always ending with the same result – working people lose out.”

And she had surprising words of thanks for Conservative MP Sir Crispin Blunt, for his wise words over the weekend, agreeing that, “Yes, ‘the game is up’.”

But Ms McAnea said that “this should never have been a game, because it’s far too serious for that.”

With the government trying desperately to blame someone or something other than itself, it was time for it to take responsibility for a decade of spending cuts, for the political choices that have made the economy weaker and working people poorer.

The latest, desperate chaos at the heart of government she said was not “desperation to save the country, but desperation to save the Tory Party.”

But the party is sinking in the polls as mortgage repayments, energy bills, and food and travel costs are up.

“The country can’t take any more,” said Ms McAnea. “Workers can’t take any more. Only a general election … can get rid of this lot of chancers”.

She then turned her attention to the people who are putting the interests of working people first: trade unionists.

And emphasising that UNISON already works with other unions, she made the message clear: “Our purpose binds us – co-ordinated action unites us”.

The article ‘Co-ordinated action unites us,’ McAnea tells TUC congress first appeared on the UNISON National site.

Unless wages rise in social care, the sector’s problems will never be fixed, says UNISON 

Commenting on reports from Skills for Care and the Health Foundation published today (Tuesday) that low rates of pay are at the heart of problems in the social care sector, UNISON general secretary Christina McAnea said:

“Put simply, wages are much too low. The social care sector won’t get back on its feet and deliver the support needed by millions if it can’t pay the rates needed to attract, keep and promote experienced care workers.

“This is a government which promised to fix social care, but ministers seem to have fallen asleep at the wheel.

“Previously, the government was happy to intervene and force care employers to sack unvaccinated staff. Ministers should get involved again and ensure all staff are paid at least the real living wage immediately.

“But that requires grown-up decisions on funding. Without proper action to arrest the decline in social care provision, the NHS will never clear its backlog.

“The prime minister and the health secretary must make social care the priority they both say they want it to be.”

Notes to editors:
-The Skills for Care latest state of the workforce report says that vacancies in social care are now the highest on record. The Health Foundation’s research says that even before the cost-of-living crisis, one in five residential care workers were living in poverty. Both cite the problem of persistent low pay as key to the chronic staffing problems being experienced in the sector.
– UNISON is the UK’s largest union with more than 1.3 million members providing public services in education, local government, the NHS, police service and energy. They are employed in the public, voluntary and private sectors.

Media contact:
Liz Chinchen M: 07778 158175 E: press@unison.co.uk

 

The article Unless wages rise in social care, the sector’s problems will never be fixed, says UNISON  first appeared on the UNISON National site.

Environment Agency staff start to vote on possible strike over pay, says UNISON 

Environment Agency staff are being asked to vote for industrial action in a ballot that could see the first strike over pay in the organisation’s 26-year history, says UNISON today (Monday).

A strike ballot of several thousand Agency employees across England – including river inspectors, flood forecasting officers, coastal risk management officers, sewage plant attendants and staff maintaining the Thames Barrier – opens today. The vote closes in a month’s time.

Earlier in the year, Environment Agency staff voted to reject a pay offer of 2% and an additional £345. This is substantially less than the lowest measure of inflation – currently 9.9% – and simply isn’t enough, says UNISON.

The latest offer follows years of no wage increases, or rises significantly below the cost of living, and has proved the final straw for the Agency’s employees, adds the union.

UNISON says low wages have led to large numbers of staff quitting the UK’s key environmental regulator. The Agency has struggled to fill vacancies, which has put the remaining workforce under intolerable pressure, says UNISON.

UNISON general secretary Christina McAnea said: “Environment Agency employees love their jobs. But harsh government budget cuts means it’s becoming increasingly difficult for them to do their work.

“Staff are no longer prepared to accept such poor treatment at the hands of ministers. It’s high time the government showed it values the important work they do, and increased funding to the Agency so all employees can get a decent wage rise.

“The staff work tirelessly to protect us all. They do crucial jobs protecting the environment, clearing up pollution spills, maintaining coastal defences, managing flooding risks and supporting affected communities. They deserve much better.”

Aside from UNISON, there are three unions – GMB, Prospect and Unite – representing Environment Agency workers. Other unions are expected to commence strike ballots soon.

Notes to editors:
– UNISON is the UK’s largest union with more than 1.3 million members providing public services in education, local government, the NHS, police service and energy. They are employed in the public, voluntary and private sectors.

Media contacts
Liz Chinchen M: 07778 158175 E: press@unison.co.uk

The article Environment Agency staff start to vote on possible strike over pay, says UNISON  first appeared on the UNISON National site.

Improving lives means more than putting money in people’s pockets, says UNISON general secretary

Unleashing the potential in everyone and using the power of the collective to achieve that are the themes running through the annual Jimmy Reid Foundation lecture to be delivered by UNISON general secretary Christina McAnea in Glasgow later today (Thursday).

She will say: “It’s a huge privilege to be honouring one of Glasgow’s finest heroes. I heard Jimmy speak in the early 1970s in the Glasgow City halls. The place was packed to the rafters. I was about 15.

“He spoke for over an hour, but time passed in a flash. He had no notes as he walked up and down the stage, talking eloquently, with great passion. His deep, resonant voice filling the hall.

“I was utterly inspired. Jimmy remains one of the best speakers I’ve ever heard. He spoke passionately about injustice and the inherent goodness of people.

“Despite his awareness of the obstacles to be overcome, Jimmy was optimistic about the future. His was a message of hope he carried throughout his life.

“I didn’t walk out thinking, I want to be leader of a union. I didn’t even walk out thinking I wanted to work for a union. But thanks to Jimmy’s words, I walked out thinking deeply about what matters in life.

“Jimmy’s words – and his message – were so clear. Poverty is a choice made by the powerful. It’s not inevitable. We can do something about it.

“And to achieve that, we need to unleash everyone’s potential – to improve their chances of leading a fulfilling and productive life.

“But even now, opportunities for working class people are still far from what they should be. Life chances are still limited by class, gender, race and disability.

“I see the same thing every day in my job as general secretary of UNISON. Employers and governments constantly underestimating people. Equating low pay or lack of formal qualifications with low intelligence and ambition.

“Jimmy Reid was passionate about fighting inequality and the power of the collective. Every day I marvel at what this can achieve. Like the fantastic equal pay dispute in Glasgow, a campaign devised and led by those on strike, mostly low-paid women.

“Yet, the UK has the toughest industrial action legislation in Europe. And this lot in Westminster are determined to make it even more difficult to campaign for better pay and conditions for workers, with their threats to bring in even more restrictions on the right to strike.

“When we went into lockdown, it was obvious who were the essential workers. The cleaners, catering staff, refuse collectors, transport and food production staff, delivery drivers, health and care workers. Many doing jobs you never think of.

“It’s shocking how quickly they’ve been forgotten – especially by those in power. Now these same people are being told to ‘exercise pay restraint’ because ‘the country can’t afford to give them a pay rise’. But we can’t afford NOT to give them a pay rise.

“When working people get a pay rise, they don’t invest it in stocks and shares or buy a second home. They’re also extremely unlikely to use it to bet on whether the value of the pound will go up or down.

“They spend it locally, buying shoes for their kids, food in local shops and taking their family to the neighbourhood café or leisure centre.

“Giving a pay rise also helps essential public services at a time when they’re haemorrhaging staff and morale’s at rock bottom.

“Employers don’t hand out pay increases like confetti. Even when many say they’re sympathetic to the plight of workers, unions still have to negotiate wage rises. And sometimes, fight tooth and nail for them.

“Despite the impact of the pandemic, the rich have become even richer. Energy companies are predicted to make £170 billion in excess profits. The ten richest men in the world doubled their income during the two years of the pandemic.

“A pandemic that had a disastrous and disproportionate impact on women, black and disabled people. Where the poorer nations are still struggling to get vaccines and make any kind of economic recovery. This is economic violence on a global scale.

“In the UK, the Westminster government only seems prepared to intervene to help the rich. Its response to the cost of living crisis is to remove the cap on bankers’ bonuses and give tax breaks to the very rich – although as we’ve seen, this was a step too far even for some of their fellow Conservatives.

“But ministers are still ploughing on with cuts to corporation tax and capital gains tax. Apparently, they’ll use it to ‘create wealth’ and, miraculously, after having failed miserably in the past, ‘trickle-down economics’ will work its magic.

“Politicians should go to Drumchapel or Salford, the Welsh valleys, the Falls Road or the Shankill and ask people there how trickle-down economics is working for them.

“The prime minister openly states she doesn’t believe in redistribution. But she does. In her version, it’s about taking money from the poorest to give to the richest.

“An ideological position that flies in the face of long-term evidence from across the world that shows the more unequal a society is, the more everyone loses out. Income inequality hurts everyone in a society, even the wealthy.

“And the more equal a society is, the more likely it is to have good public services, which produce healthier, happier citizens.

“To fund public services and pay workers fairly there must be a fundamental change in how companies and individual wealth are taxed. Ensuring that those large multi-national companies – like Amazon and Google – pay their fair share.

“After all, they depend on staff being able to drive on well-maintained roads, where there’s a transport infrastructure, and have access to health, care and education services.

“If an Amazon warehouse caught on fire, they’d expect the local fire service to put it out. But they’re not paying for that service, we are.

“This is the worst economic crisis in over a generation. A crisis blighting many people’s lives. But people are fighting back.

“UNISON is running ballots in areas we never thought we would – in the Environment Agency and the Food Standards Agency.

“There’s currently a dispute in the university sector, with porters and administrative staff standing up for better pay.

“This week, our industrial action ballot started in the NHS in Scotland, and in a couple of weeks another will in the NHS in England, Wales and Northern Ireland. That means by November, UNISON will be balloting almost 400,000 NHS workers. The sheer logistics are massive.

“Of course, NHS members voting for strike action will be accused of putting lives at risk. But I’ve been speaking to nurses, ambulance workers and hospital cleaners who say the service is already on its knees. Things are so bad that going on strike won’t actually make anything worse, but it will draw attention to the situation.

“We don’t bring people out to bring down governments, we bring them out to get results. To improve their pay and conditions.

“In the public sector, we need to put pressure on employers – but, critically, we also need to put pressure on governments who control the funding.

“The media focused on the rubbish building up on the streets in Edinburgh during the festival. Yet that was a relatively small number of people on strike.

“We were due to bring out school staff the following week, but this action forced employers, and crucially the Scottish government, to come back and negotiate. That new offer has now been accepted.

“Unions have to make a difference to people’s lives and win for them. UNISON will work with any government. Governments in Scotland and Wales (and even Northern Ireland, when they have one) see unions as part of civil society, not the enemy within, unlike the current lot in Downing Street.

“During the recent local government talks in Scotland, the Scottish government was in the room. Nicola Sturgeon got personally involved and I know Mark Drakeford would do the same. I can’t imagine Liz Truss doing that.

“There’s also increasing co-operation between unions. Unions have always worked together, but we’re now seeing more and more of that.

“Unions won’t allow the right to fall back on discredited economic policies or to push the burden and blame for poverty and low pay on to individuals. That’s always their go-to response. If only you worked harder, had two jobs, did longer hours or just got a better job, your life would be fine.

“So, we need to keep the focus, as Jimmy Reid would have done, on the power of the collective.

“Unions are the ultimate collective. Making sure people have enough money to live a decent life is the first step. But Jimmy Reid was adamant that improving lives involves more than simply putting money in pockets.

“He said, ‘to measure social progress purely by material advance is not enough. Our aim must be the enrichment of the whole quality of life’.

“That’s our aim too. Unions don’t just focus on improving pay and conditions, but on giving everyone the chance to fulfil their potential, to be whatever they want to be.

“Unions are also a force for change. That’s why fighting for equality is so important, as is ending poverty.

“Unions take governments to court when they introduce blatantly unfair laws – like tribunal fees – a great human rights victory for UNISON.

“That commitment to progress through collective action is why I – and most in this room I suspect – are trade unionists. That passion and anger against injustice is still the driving force in our lives.

“Hearing Jimmy Reid speak all those years ago set me on the path I follow today. It helped me turn my youthful anger into something positive.

“Like him, I also have faith in humanity – and an unshakeable belief in the transformative power of the collective. Jimmy Reid was a realist – but he never let realism dampen his optimism. And neither must we.”

Notes to editors:
– Christina McAnea will deliver the ninth annual Jimmy Reid Memorial Lecture, entitled Tory Turmoil and the Cost of Living Crisis: Challenges and Opportunities for our Trade Unions. It takes place at 7.10pm today (Thursday 6 October) at the Banqueting Hall, City Chambers, Glasgow. Tickets are available here.
– UNISON is the UK’s largest union with more than 1.3 million members providing public services in education, local government, the NHS, police service and energy. They are employed in the public, voluntary and private sectors.

Media contacts:
Anthony Barnes (UNISON) M: 07834 864794 E: a.barnes@unison.co.uk
Gregor Gall (Jimmy Reid Foundation) M: 07724 140211 E: gregorgall@outlook.com

The article Improving lives means more than putting money in people’s pockets, says UNISON general secretary first appeared on the UNISON National site.

Improving lives means more than putting money in people’s pockets

Unleashing the potential in everyone and using the power of the collective to achieve that are the themes running through the annual Jimmy Reid Foundation lecture to be delivered by UNISON general secretary Christina McAnea in Glasgow later today (Thursday).

She will say: “It’s a huge privilege to be honouring one of Glasgow’s finest heroes. I heard Jimmy speak in the early 1970s in the Glasgow City halls. The place was packed to the rafters. I was about 15.

“He spoke for over an hour, but time passed in a flash. He had no notes as he walked up and down the stage, talking eloquently, with great passion. His deep, resonant voice filling the hall.

“I was utterly inspired. Jimmy remains one of the best speakers I’ve ever heard. He spoke passionately about injustice and the inherent goodness of people.

“Despite his awareness of the obstacles to be overcome, Jimmy was optimistic about the future. His was a message of hope he carried throughout his life.

“I didn’t walk out thinking, I want to be leader of a union. I didn’t even walk out thinking I wanted to work for a union. But thanks to Jimmy’s words, I walked out thinking deeply about what matters in life.

“Jimmy’s words – and his message – were so clear. Poverty is a choice made by the powerful. It’s not inevitable. We can do something about it.

“And to achieve that, we need to unleash everyone’s potential – to improve their chances of leading a fulfilling and productive life.

“But even now, opportunities for working class people are still far from what they should be. Life chances are still limited by class, gender, race and disability.

“I see the same thing every day in my job as general secretary of UNISON. Employers and governments constantly underestimating people. Equating low pay or lack of formal qualifications with low intelligence and ambition.

“Jimmy Reid was passionate about fighting inequality and the power of the collective. Every day I marvel at what this can achieve. Like the fantastic equal pay dispute in Glasgow, a campaign devised and led by those on strike, mostly low-paid women.

“Yet, the UK has the toughest industrial action legislation in Europe. And this lot in Westminster are determined to make it even more difficult to campaign for better pay and conditions for workers, with their threats to bring in even more restrictions on the right to strike.

“When we went into lockdown, it was obvious who were the essential workers. The cleaners, catering staff, refuse collectors, transport and food production staff, delivery drivers, health and care workers. Many doing jobs you never think of.

“It’s shocking how quickly they’ve been forgotten – especially by those in power. Now these same people are being told to ‘exercise pay restraint’ because ‘the country can’t afford to give them a pay rise’. But we can’t afford NOT to give them a pay rise.

“When working people get a pay rise, they don’t invest it in stocks and shares or buy a second home. They’re also extremely unlikely to use it to bet on whether the value of the pound will go up or down.

“They spend it locally, buying shoes for their kids, food in local shops and taking their family to the neighbourhood café or leisure centre.

“Giving a pay rise also helps essential public services at a time when they’re haemorrhaging staff and morale’s at rock bottom.

“Employers don’t hand out pay increases like confetti. Even when many say they’re sympathetic to the plight of workers, unions still have to negotiate wage rises. And sometimes, fight tooth and nail for them.

“Despite the impact of the pandemic, the rich have become even richer. Energy companies are predicted to make £170 billion in excess profits. The ten richest men in the world doubled their income during the two years of the pandemic.

“A pandemic that had a disastrous and disproportionate impact on women, black and disabled people. Where the poorer nations are still struggling to get vaccines and make any kind of economic recovery. This is economic violence on a global scale.

“In the UK, the Westminster government only seems prepared to intervene to help the rich. Its response to the cost of living crisis is to remove the cap on bankers’ bonuses and give tax breaks to the very rich – although as we’ve seen, this was a step too far even for some of their fellow Conservatives.

“But ministers are still ploughing on with cuts to corporation tax and capital gains tax. Apparently, they’ll use it to ‘create wealth’ and, miraculously, after having failed miserably in the past, ‘trickle-down economics’ will work its magic.

“Politicians should go to Drumchapel or Salford, the Welsh valleys, the Falls Road or the Shankill and ask people there how trickle-down economics is working for them.

“The prime minister openly states she doesn’t believe in redistribution. But she does. In her version, it’s about taking money from the poorest to give to the richest.

“An ideological position that flies in the face of long-term evidence from across the world that shows the more unequal a society is, the more everyone loses out. Income inequality hurts everyone in a society, even the wealthy.

“And the more equal a society is, the more likely it is to have good public services, which produce healthier, happier citizens.

“To fund public services and pay workers fairly there must be a fundamental change in how companies and individual wealth are taxed. Ensuring that those large multi-national companies – like Amazon and Google – pay their fair share.

“After all, they depend on staff being able to drive on well-maintained roads, where there’s a transport infrastructure, and have access to health, care and education services.

“If an Amazon warehouse caught on fire, they’d expect the local fire service to put it out. But they’re not paying for that service, we are.

“This is the worst economic crisis in over a generation. A crisis blighting many people’s lives. But people are fighting back.

“UNISON is running ballots in areas we never thought we would – in the Environment Agency and the Food Standards Agency.

“There’s currently a dispute in the university sector, with porters and administrative staff standing up for better pay.

“This week, our industrial action ballot started in the NHS in Scotland, and in a couple of weeks another will in the NHS in England, Wales and Northern Ireland. That means by November, UNISON will be balloting almost 400,000 NHS workers. The sheer logistics are massive.

“Of course, NHS members voting for strike action will be accused of putting lives at risk. But I’ve been speaking to nurses, ambulance workers and hospital cleaners who say the service is already on its knees. Things are so bad that going on strike won’t actually make anything worse, but it will draw attention to the situation.

“We don’t bring people out to bring down governments, we bring them out to get results. To improve their pay and conditions.

“In the public sector, we need to put pressure on employers – but, critically, we also need to put pressure on governments who control the funding.

“The media focused on the rubbish building up on the streets in Edinburgh during the festival. Yet that was a relatively small number of people on strike.

“We were due to bring out school staff the following week, but this action forced employers, and crucially the Scottish government, to come back and negotiate. That new offer has now been accepted.

“Unions have to make a difference to people’s lives and win for them. UNISON will work with any government. Governments in Scotland and Wales (and even Northern Ireland, when they have one) see unions as part of civil society, not the enemy within, unlike the current lot in Downing Street.

“During the recent local government talks in Scotland, the Scottish government was in the room. Nicola Sturgeon got personally involved and I know Mark Drakeford would do the same. I can’t imagine Liz Truss doing that.

“There’s also increasing co-operation between unions. Unions have always worked together, but we’re now seeing more and more of that.

“Unions won’t allow the right to fall back on discredited economic policies or to push the burden and blame for poverty and low pay onto individuals. That’s always their go-to response. If only you worked harder, had two jobs, did longer hours or just got a better job, your life would be fine.

“So, we need to keep the focus, as Jimmy Reid would have done, on the power of the collective.

“Unions are the ultimate collective. Making sure people have enough money to live a decent life is the first step. But Jimmy Reid was adamant that improving lives involves more than simply putting money in pockets.

“He said, ‘to measure social progress purely by material advance is not enough. Our aim must be the enrichment of the whole quality of life’.

“That’s our aim too. Unions don’t just focus on improving pay and conditions, but on giving everyone the chance to fulfil their potential, to be whatever they want to be.

“Unions are also a force for change. That’s why fighting for equality is so important, as is ending poverty.

“Unions take governments to court when they introduce blatantly unfair laws – like tribunal fees – a great human rights victory for UNISON.

“That commitment to progress through collective action is why I – and most in this room I suspect – are trade unionists. That passion and anger against injustice is still the driving force in our lives.

“Hearing Jimmy Reid speak all those years ago set me on the path I follow today. It helped me turn my youthful anger into something positive.

“Like him, I also have faith in humanity – and an unshakeable belief in the transformative power of the collective. Jimmy Reid was a realist – but he never let realism dampen his optimism. And neither must we.”

Notes to editors:
– Christina McAnea will deliver the ninth annual Jimmy Reid Memorial Lecture, entitled Tory Turmoil and the Cost of Living Crisis: Challenges and Opportunities for our Trade Unions. It takes place at 7.10pm today (Thursday 6 October) at the Banqueting Hall, City Chambers, Glasgow. Tickets are available here.
– UNISON is the UK’s largest union with more than 1.3 million members providing public services in education, local government, the NHS, police service and energy. They are employed in the public, voluntary and private sectors.

The article Improving lives means more than putting money in people’s pockets first appeared on the UNISON National site.

Austerity cuts had terrible repercussions and should never be repeated, says UNISON

Commenting on a new study from Glasgow University and the Glasgow Centre for Population Health suggesting UK government austerity policies contributed to a significant rise in excess deaths, UNISON general secretary Christina McAnea said today (Wednesday):

“Harsh spending cuts have cast a long, nasty shadow. Slashing budgets meant key public services were unprepared and understaffed when Covid came calling.

“The same mistakes cannot be made again. Austerity can never be a solution. It was a failed experiment that’s had terrible repercussions for communities across the UK and cost many lives.

“The Prime Minister must take heed, particularly as the pandemic inquiry opens. Cuts to public services cause irreparable damage to the nation’s health.”

Notes to editors:
– UNISON is the UK’s largest union with more than 1.3 million members providing public services in education, local government, the NHS, police service and energy. They are employed in the public, voluntary and private sectors.

Media contacts:
Anthony Barnes M: 07834 864794 E: a.barnes@unison.co.uk
Liz Chinchen M: 07778 158175 E: press@unison.co.uk

The article Austerity cuts had terrible repercussions and should never be repeated, says UNISON first appeared on the UNISON National site.

Royal Northern College of Music and UNISON sign historic agreement as staff prepare to strike 

An agreement has been signed by the Royal Northern College of Music (RNCM) and UNISON that will give employees the right to be represented by unions.

The deal, signed by the union’s general secretary Christina McAnea, allows UNISON and the University and College Union to negotiate with college managers on behalf of staff about pay and their working conditions.

The agreement comes as RNCM staff represented by UNISON prepare to strike over pay on dates due to be announced later this month. ?

Royal Northern College of Music employees were offered a 3% wage rise, which is nowhere near enough to bridge the chasm opening up between pay and the cost of living, says UNISON.

UNISON general secretary Christina McAnea said: “College staff will be relieved to learn that their interests will be championed by UNISON from now on, especially as they face massive cost of living pressures.

“Unions are undoubtedly a force for good, ensuring better working relations, higher pay and improved productivity. The RNCM deserves credit for signing this landmark agreement and investing in its workforce.”

UNISON North West regional organiser Katie Doyle said: “RNCM’s recognition of UNISON is to be welcomed. After a long-running campaign, staff will now have a strong collective voice when negotiating with college managers.

“But that hasn’t stopped staff belonging to UNISON from voting in favour of industrial action after receiving a shockingly low pay offer. That’s why the recognition agreement is absolutely critical, so staff and employers can have productive talks despite their differences.

“Higher education employers must make a serious pay offer so staff can concentrate on delivering for students.”

Notes to editors:  
– UNISON is the UK’s largest union with more than 1.3 million members providing public services in education, local government, the NHS, police service and energy. They are employed in the public, voluntary and private sectors.

Media contacts:
Katie Doyle E: k.doyle@unison.co.uk M: 07908 143332
Liz Chinchen E: press@unison.co.uk M: 07778 158175

The article Royal Northern College of Music and UNISON sign historic agreement as staff prepare to strike  first appeared on the UNISON National site.

Government must stop the chaos and abandon its disastrous financial experiment, says UNISON

Commenting on the Prime Minister’s defence of the mini-budget and the news that public services may face ‘efficiency savings’, UNISON general secretary Christina McAnea said:

“The government needs to take its head out of the sand. Ministers must listen to the world’s economic experts urging them to junk this disastrous financial experiment.

“?Borrowing to fund huge tax cuts for the super wealthy has taken the UK economy to the brink and ?is in danger of risking much that we hold dear.

“Suggestions that benefits won’t rise with soaring inflation and beleaguered public services are to be squeezed is a terrifying prospect. The government ?seems to have no idea of the damage its foolhardy approach is wreaking.

“Essential services need support and investment so they can hold onto experienced staff and deliver for the public. Not cuts that will harm communities irreparably.

“Liz Truss must stop the chaos and abandon last week’s mini-budget. There must also be an election soon so people can tell ?the Prime Minister what they really think of her plans to take us all to hell in a handcart.”

Notes to editors:

– UNISON is the UK’s largest union with more than 1.3 million members providing public services in education, local government, the NHS, police service and energy. They are employed in the public, voluntary and private sectors.

Media contacts:
Liz Chinchen M: 07778 158175 E: press@unison.co.uk

The article Government must stop the chaos and abandon its disastrous financial experiment, says UNISON first appeared on the UNISON National site.

A Labour government can’t come soon enough, says UNISON

Commenting on Keir Starmer’s speech to the Labour Party conference in Liverpool today (Tuesday), UNISON general secretary Christina McAnea said:

“This was a speech from the Prime Minister in waiting.

“Keir set out how he will lead a government that protects the economy and living standards, and gives people hope of a better life.

“A government that will work for a fairer, greener future, where people can live in affordable homes, feed their families and pay their energy bills.

“Labour in power would understand that well-funded public services, with properly paid staff, help grow the economy and are the bedrock of a decent society.

“It was an inspiring speech. Keir’s vision is a world away from that of the Tories, who only care about the very rich and are gambling with the country’s future.

“An election cannot come soon enough so working people can elect a government that’s truly on their side.”

Notes to editors:
– UNISON is the UK’s largest union with more than 1.3 million members providing public services in education, local government, the NHS, police service and energy. They are employed in the public, voluntary and private sectors.

Media contacts:
Liz Chinchen M: 07778 158175 E: press@unison.co.uk
Anthony Barnes M: 07834 864794 E: a.barnes@unison.co.uk

The article A Labour government can’t come soon enough, says UNISON first appeared on the UNISON National site.

UNISON comments on NHS Confederation’s call for better funding for social care

Commenting on the NHS Confederation’s call for extra social care funding to help the NHS, UNISON general secretary Christina McAnea said:

“Investing in social care is vital, but it shouldn’t be at the expense of the NHS. Both services must be properly funded.

“Social care has been losing staff at terrifying rates because the government has failed to improve poverty pay rates. The desperate shortage of workers and huge funding shortfall is placing the entire system at risk of collapse. The focus cannot be profit over care.

“For too long, the government has ignored pay and staffing. But ministers must get involved or the consequences for those in need of support are unthinkable.”

Notes to editors
– UNISON is the UK’s largest union with more than 1.3 million members providing public services in education, local government, the NHS, police service and energy. They are employed in the public, voluntary and private sectors.

UNISON media contacts
Fatima Ayad M: 07508 080383 E: f.ayad@unison.co.uk
Liz Chinchen M: 07778 158175 E: press@unison.co.uk

The article UNISON comments on NHS Confederation’s call for better funding for social care first appeared on the UNISON National site.