UNISON health conference opens in Brighton

UNISON’s annual national health service group conference opened in Brighton this morning, with union president Libby Nolan (pictured above) saying that it had been a “really tough year for us…We say that every year, don’t we?”

Sending “solidarity” to ambulance workers, she noted that, as ambulances queue outside A&E departments, unable to hand over patients to hospitals because of waiting times, they are bearing the brunt of the crisis in the NHS.

Elsewhere, applauding a recent back-pay win, she told delegates that, while people join UNISON for different reasons, she had joined the union to increase her wages.

“We can put so much money in people’s pockets” when members stick together, she said – money that could help members not having to apply to the union’s charity, There for You, for winter fuel grants.

Wilma Brown speaking at UNISON 2024 health service group conference

Wilma Brown, chair of the service group executive (pictured above), also addressed conference, saying “it’s also been a successful year.

“One Team for Patient Care is our slogan for conference – we live and breathe [solidarity] every day.”

“Ours is a union for everyone,” she told delegates.

Citing the recent win by Dudley Mitie health support workers in their struggle to get the private employer pay them the COVID-19 bonus promised by the government at Westminster, she pointed out that the situation illustrates why outsourcing is so bad and that such workers should be brought back in house.

The article UNISON health conference opens in Brighton first appeared on the UNISON National site.

UNISON health conference opens in Brighton

UNISON’s annual national health service group conference opened in Brighton this morning, with union president Libby Nolan (pictured above) saying that it had been a “really tough year for us…We say that every year, don’t we?”

Sending “solidarity” to ambulance workers, she noted that, as ambulances queue outside A&E departments, unable to hand over patients to hospitals because of waiting times, they are bearing the brunt of the crisis in the NHS.

Elsewhere, applauding a recent back-pay win, she told delegates that, while people join UNISON for different reasons, she had joined the union to increase her wages.

“We can put so much money in people’s pockets” when members stick together, she said – money that could help members not having to apply to the union’s charity, There for You, for winter fuel grants.

Wilma Brown speaking at UNISON 2024 health service group conference

Wilma Brown, chair of the service group executive (pictured above), also addressed conference, saying “it’s also been a successful year.

“One Team for Patient Care is our slogan for conference – we live and breathe [solidarity] every day.”

“Ours is a union for everyone,” she told delegates.

Citing the recent win by Dudley Mitie health support workers in their struggle to get the private employer pay them the COVID-19 bonus promised by the government at Westminster, she pointed out that the situation illustrates why outsourcing is so bad and that such workers should be brought back in house.

The article UNISON health conference opens in Brighton first appeared on the UNISON National site.

Dudley NHS staff gain Mitie victory

More than 300 hospital workers in Dudley represented by UNISON are celebrating victory after their employer, Mitie, committed to paying the lump sum COVID bonus due to them at the end of last week.

The one-off payment is worth at least £1,655 for full-time health workers, including porters, domestics, sterile services and catering staff working in the NHS.

Mitie applied for funding for the pay deal from the Department of Health and Social Care and has written to UNISON to say that its application for funding had been successful.

Staff had taken three days of strike action over the company’s previous refusal to honour the payment, already given to health workers employed directly by the NHS in June.

The sum was part of a deal agreed for all staff on NHS contracts and Agenda for Change pay scales, but Mitie said it could not afford to pay up.

UNISON has now called off further strike dates due to take place today and on Wednesday.

UNISON West Midlands regional organiser Ollie Hopkins said: “This is a victory for the hundreds of low-paid health workers employed by Mitie in Dudley.

“They worked through the pandemic in the most challenging conditions imaginable. It is only right they receive the same COVID bonus payment as directly employed NHS staff.

“Workers took the tough decision to make a stand and show their strength of feeling. The high-profile strike action created pressure that focused the minds of Mitie executives and has ended the dispute.

“But Mitie generates huge profits and had the ability to pay its staff all along. It could have easily avoided this strike.

“UNISON and Unite have called off further action. Mitie must now get this money into the pockets of its workers immediately.”

The article Dudley NHS staff gain Mitie victory first appeared on the UNISON National site.

Dudley NHS staff gain Mitie victory

More than 300 hospital workers in Dudley represented by UNISON are celebrating victory after their employer, Mitie, committed to paying the lump sum COVID bonus due to them at the end of last week.

The one-off payment is worth at least £1,655 for full-time health workers, including porters, domestics, sterile services and catering staff working in the NHS.

Mitie applied for funding for the pay deal from the Department of Health and Social Care and has written to UNISON to say that its application for funding had been successful.

Staff had taken three days of strike action over the company’s previous refusal to honour the payment, already given to health workers employed directly by the NHS in June.

The sum was part of a deal agreed for all staff on NHS contracts and Agenda for Change pay scales, but Mitie said it could not afford to pay up.

UNISON has now called off further strike dates due to take place today and on Wednesday.

UNISON West Midlands regional organiser Ollie Hopkins said: “This is a victory for the hundreds of low-paid health workers employed by Mitie in Dudley.

“They worked through the pandemic in the most challenging conditions imaginable. It is only right they receive the same COVID bonus payment as directly employed NHS staff.

“Workers took the tough decision to make a stand and show their strength of feeling. The high-profile strike action created pressure that focused the minds of Mitie executives and has ended the dispute.

“But Mitie generates huge profits and had the ability to pay its staff all along. It could have easily avoided this strike.

“UNISON and Unite have called off further action. Mitie must now get this money into the pockets of its workers immediately.”

The article Dudley NHS staff gain Mitie victory first appeared on the UNISON National site.