Government inaction means NI health strikes continue

Health strikes in Northern Ireland continue today and next week, after a meeting on Monday between trade unions and local health leadership provided no progress in the dispute.

UNISON announced that planned 24-hour strikes in Northern Ireland, involving thousands of health workers, will go ahead today, 31 March, and also on 3 April. This came after unions were informed that local health leadership did not have any money with which to make an increased pay offer.

It comes as a direct result of the Department of Health failing to extend the new NHS pay offer made in England and Wales, earlier in March, to Northern Ireland. That offer included an extra lump sum for 2022/23 and a new offer of a 5% increase for 2023/24.

An increased offer would have allowed unions to suspend the strikes and begin consultation with their members. However, neither the secretary of state nor any officials from the Northern Ireland office attended the meeting with unions.

UNISON Northern Ireland head of bargaining Anne Speed said: “We will not be bounced from pillar to post. Last night we were told we must wait until the outcome of the pay consultation in England before we know whether the health budget in Northern Ireland will be drip fed any money.

“Either that or, alternatively, we must wait until the secretary of state makes up his mind on the delivery date for the Northern Ireland budget.”

UNISON’s regional secretary for Northern Ireland, Patricia McKeown added: “UK ministers should know by now that workers in Northern Ireland will not tolerate being left behind. We proved it in the past and we will prove it again.

“The secretary of state holds the responsibility to sort this problem now, he cannot sit on the fence. He cannot blame anyone else. It is his government that has failed to make money available for health workers in Northern Ireland.”

The article Government inaction means NI health strikes continue first appeared on the UNISON National site.

Bristol healthcare assistants win over £1m in re-banding victory

Over 2,000 healthcare assistants in Bristol hospitals have been re-banded from Band 2 to Band 3 and received up to £4,000 backpay after a UNISON campaign revealed they had been performing clinical duties and patient observations above their grade.

This is the latest victory in UNISON’s ‘pay fair for patient care’ campaign, which saw hospital workers in Manchester win significant back pay last year.

The union has now won significant backpay for members working in the two biggest hospitals in Bristol: North Bristol Trust and University Hospitals Bristol and Weston NHS Foundation Trust.

Workers with over four years’ service received £4,000, those with two to four years’ service received £3,000 and those with less than two years’ service received £2,000.

The money arrived in members’ pay packets in January. For those at the top of Band 2 this will mean a pay rise of £1,859 going forward.

The campaign also included re-banding and a pay increase for apprentices and staff working bank shifts, reflecting UNISON’s ‘put NHS pay right’ campaign.

UNISON officer Louise Chinnery said: “UNISON is successfully winning the argument that healthcare assistants should be at Band 3. There is real momentum behind this campaign.

“For too long healthcare assistants have been working above and beyond to pick up the slack of staff shortages and clinical duties gradually trickling down to HCAs.

“UNISON activists in Bristol have been tenacious and resilient in managing to get big amounts of money directly into workers’ pockets, which is a huge victory.”

Michelle, a healthcare assistant at North Bristol Trust who has been re-banded due to the campaign, said: “I can’t believe how much money I received and the fact I’m now at the top of the band. The money was really needed straight after Christmas and with the price of everything becoming so expensive”

However, the battle for back pay wasn’t straightforward, according to UNISON Concorde Health branch secretary Shawn Fleming: “The staff shortages on wards are horrific, and people are burned out. But UNISON members were unhappy and knew that they were being exploited and had been for a number of years.

“Ultimately, we held management accountable and they had no other option but to settle with us.”

Mr Fleming continued: “Management also came to recognise that this was a viable retention issue for them. It affected a large group of staff hospitals are struggling to recruit because the pay isn’t great. You can’t pay people a pittance if you need them.”

UNISON south west regional organiser Christina Cook said: “Throughout the campaign, we had to keep momentum up. We had the backing of the membership through WhatsApp groups and walking around the hospital. The beauty of North Bristol Trust is that it’s all in one building, so everybody knows everybody.”

Louise Chinnery added: “The pay fair for patient care campaign is about healthcare assistants working together to demand that they are recognised, rewarded and respected for the essential role they play in the NHS.”

If you want to run this campaign in your branch, here are the tools and resources to support you.

The article Bristol healthcare assistants win over £1m in re-banding victory first appeared on the UNISON National site.

Third day of NHS strikes in Northern Ireland

A third day of NHS strike action in Northern Ireland is taking place today (Tuesday), with thousands of UNISON members in the six arm’s length bodies of the health trust out on pickets, including staff at the Northern Ireland ambulance service.

Speaking of the dispute, Anne Speed, UNISON head of bargaining and representation in Northern Ireland, said: “While the political stalemate continues health staff and patients are paying a price.

“The inertia from the secretary of state speaks volumes. Taking direction from Westminster, who also appear to be doing nothing, is just not good enough.”

At 9:30am UNISON members in Belfast, joined by general secretary Christina McAnea, marched from their picket lines at the Royal Victoria Hospital, the City Hospital, Greenpark, the Mater Hospital and trust community sites across Belfast where they joined teaching unions in a solidarity rally at Belfast City Hall.

Here’s Christina McAnea speaking from a picket line in Belfast:

The article Third day of NHS strikes in Northern Ireland first appeared on the UNISON National site.

Hospital staff in Liverpool are coming home

Around 670 staff at Liverpool University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust will be brought back in-house on 1 April this year.

Staff at two hospital sites, Royal Liverpool and Broadgreen, who work as cleaners, porters, caterers and in other domestic services will be transferred onto NHS terms and conditions once the outsourced contracts come to an end at the end of March.

The move comes after a merger of hospital trusts in Liverpool in 2019, creating Liverpool University Hospitals NHS foundation trust, which left staff in similar jobs on vastly different terms and conditions depending on whether the services at their hospital were provided in-house or outsourced.

The announcement is the latest of number of instances of insourcing at the trust with other services such as security and decontamination already brought back since 2019.

Since the merger, UNISON’s Liverpool hospitals branch have campaigned strongly for the insourcing of the services at the earliest opportunity.

They argued that not only is it beneficial for the community on public health grounds, in that it will allow for improved quality and integration of services, but that, in an area of high deprivation, bringing staff onto better pay and conditions supports the local economy as well as the workers.

In harmonising the terms and conditions of these types of jobs across the trust, the chief executive of the trust echoed these sentiments,  saying the decision “delivers on our vision to support communities to live healthier happier, fairer lives.”

For the staff, a move to Agenda for Change terms and conditions will likely represent a significant pay increase as well as improvements to leave and pension offerings.

Speaking of the decision Joe Baldwin, chair of UNISON Liverpool hospitals health branch, said: “We welcome the decision to bring this service back into the NHS.

“We have been campaigning for a long time for these members to be afforded the same pay and conditions as those of us who work directly for the NHS.

“This is also about pensions and access to wider opportunities and staff benefits. We are ‘One NHS’ and our members in this service are a vital part of our health service.”

 

The article Hospital staff in Liverpool are coming home first appeared on the UNISON National site.

OCS workers secure major victory after 26 days of strike action

UNISON members at Lancashire and South Cumbria Foundation Trust have secured a major victory after taking 26 days of strike action over four months.

In a new deal, announced last week, the workers – who are outsourced to private healthcare facilities firm OCS – have won a pay rise of over 14%, an extra week of annual leave and the same sick pay as their colleagues who work directly for the NHS trust.

The 50 workers include porters, catering staff and cleaners at hospitals, mental health units and clinics in Blackburn, Blackpool, Ormskirk, and Preston.

The deal also included an agreement from the trust that the next outsourced contract will award the workers full pay parity with NHS employees.

UNISON regional organiser Dale Ollier said: “At long last, the trust has given these workers the pay that they deserve and taken a big step to ending the two-tier workforce.

“These employees have stuck together over a very long campaign and this victory is testament to their determination to end the injustice of being treated differently by their employer.

“Outsourcing to private companies shouldn’t be used to undercut workers’ pay and employment conditions.”

The article OCS workers secure major victory after 26 days of strike action first appeared on the UNISON National site.

OCS workers secure major victory after 26 days of strike action

UNISON members at Lancashire and South Cumbria Foundation Trust have secured a major victory after taking 26 days of strike action over four months.

In a new deal, announced last week, the workers – who are outsourced to private healthcare facilities firm OCS – have won a pay rise of over 14%, an extra week of annual leave and the same sick pay as their colleagues who work directly for the NHS trust.

The 50 workers include porters, catering staff and cleaners at hospitals, mental health units and clinics in Blackburn, Blackpool, Ormskirk, and Preston.

The deal also included an agreement from the trust that the next outsourced contract will award the workers full pay parity with NHS employees.

UNISON regional organiser Dale Ollier said: “At long last, the trust has given these workers the pay that they deserve and taken a big step to ending the two-tier workforce.

“These employees have stuck together over a very long campaign and this victory is testament to their determination to end the injustice of being treated differently by their employer.

“Outsourcing to private companies shouldn’t be used to undercut workers’ pay and employment conditions.”

The article OCS workers secure major victory after 26 days of strike action first appeared on the UNISON National site.

Blog: Vote ‘yes’ for your futures and the future of our NHS

What would you do with an extra 72p an hour in your pay packet? Those extra pennies amount to the pay award that was imposed on NHS staff in England and Wales this year.

A flat rate of £1,400 extra per year, for the essential workers who save lives and worked all through the pandemic, is simply not enough. For many NHS workers it’s just about a 4% increase, which lags way behind inflation.

And it gets worse. NHS workers in Northern Ireland have received no increase at all. Disagreements in Stormont over Brexit trading arrangements have caused a political paralysis preventing the executive from agreeing a budget that would allow public sector pay awards to be given.

Once again, working people are being forced to pay for the crises caused by the people in power. Remember the ‘thank yous’, the claps and the praise politicians showered on the NHS through the pandemic? It seems long forgotten now.

The current health secretary, Thérèse Coffey, thinks volunteers can fix the NHS, and has encouraged nurses to leave the NHS if they don’t like the pay.

And while the musical chairs continue in Downing Street and the Conservatives refuse to give the country the chance to vote on our futures, NHS waiting lists grow, staffing shortages increase and a winter crisis looms.

UNISON is focused on the millions of workers who are suffering from the cost of living crisis, and will give hundreds of thousands of NHS workers across England, Wales and Northern Ireland the chance to vote.

Our strike ballot opens this week, on Thursday 27 October, and we’re asking everyone to vote ‘yes’ for their futures and for the future of the NHS.

So, if you’re a UNISON member working in the NHS, please make sure you vote. Encourage your colleagues to vote too. We need a big turnout – and we need to take action.

On the eve of the ballot opening, I’ll be hosting an online rally for health members. You can watch it live on youtube or facebook from 6pm on Wednesday 26 October.

While you keep an eye out for your ballot paper arriving at your front door, I’ll be keeping a close eye on the new prime minister’s plans. He could do the right thing by the NHS and its dedicated workforce. He could take his lead from businesses, like the high street supermarkets that are giving their staff a second – or even third – pay rise in a year.

But given that he is already setting the scene for public spending cuts, we will have to keep on campaigning to defend public services.

The article Blog: Vote ‘yes’ for your futures and the future of our NHS first appeared on the UNISON National site.

Pledge Yes for the NHS

UNISON has launched the next stage of its NHS pay campaign, which is urging members to Pledge Yes for the NHS.

The campaign follows the government’s imposition of a £1,400 pay increase on NHS workers in England.

UNISON says the award is nowhere near enough to keep pace with rising prices, is nowhere near what’s needed to improve staffing and protect patient care, and will only worsen the current NHS staffing crisis.

Since the pay announcement on 19 July, the government has refused to negotiate with unions. As a result, UNISON’s health service group executive agreed that the only effective way to challenge the pay award is through a formal industrial action ballot which will open in late October.

In the meantime, the union is encouraging its NHS members to get active, visit the website and ‘pledge yes’ to voting for industrial action in October.

Pledge Yes here

Speaking of the campaign, UNISON’s head of health Sara Gorton said: “It is a challenge, but now is the time to take this on. We’re in the biggest cost of living and NHS staffing crisis in history.

“We’ve seen other parts of UNISON, and other unions across our movement, beat anti-trade union laws and deliver effective action. We can too – with hard work and the backing of our members, this is a fight we can win.”

Share the campaign video

The article Pledge Yes for the NHS first appeared on the UNISON National site.

Manchester NHS workers get back pay thanks to UNISON campaign

In a landmark victory, thousands of workers across Manchester have received up to £5,000 in backdated earnings thanks to UNISON’s hard-won, six-year battle to have their roles re-banded.

For years, healthcare assistants (HCAs) in hospitals across the city have been performing clinical duties that are above their pay grade. After joining forces within the union’s North West region, they’ve forced Manchester University NHS Foundation Trust to reward and recognise this.

The campaign began in 2016, when Manchester University Health Branch provided diaries to HCAs to document what duties they were doing every day. As branch secretary Wendy Guest explains: “An overwhelming number were doing clinical duties that were above their band and pay”.

Recognising that there was an uphill battle ahead, with the need for a clear strategy and proper resources, in 2019 the region put together a successful UNISON fighting fund bid to employ 10 organisers to be deployed in branches where HCAs were going above and beyond, without being properly paid for doing so.

The result was only possible through what UNISON regional organiser Dan Smith describes as “deep organising”.

“We started off by doing walk rounds in hospitals, face-to-face surveys and meetings to find out what duties healthcare assistants were doing, and how their daily duties matched up to what they were actually paid to do,” he says.

When the results came in, the problem was clear. The majority of healthcare assistants were directly employed on band 2 contracts, which involved the provision of personal care such as bathing, feeding and toileting patients.

However, UNISON found they were also often performing band 3 clinical duties, such as taking and monitoring bloods, carrying out electrocardiogram (ECG) tests, escorting patients unaccompanied, dealing with complex dressings, cannulating veins and recording patient observations.

“We had member meetings where we went through the findings together”, says Mr Smith. When they discovered that people on band 2 contracts were regularly and routinely doing higher band tasks, they asked members what they were willing to do to tackle that.

The answer came in the form of a collective grievance that 350 members put their names to. In the first instance, the trust was slow to respond. So to bring management to the negotiating table, UNISON went to the press and politicians. 

The union organised meetings between frontline healthcare assistants and their local MPs, which eventually led to a Greater Manchester HCA summit, bringing together more than 20 workers with MPs and councillors from across the city. After that event, the group published an open letter signed by seven Greater Manchester MPs and over 40 councillors, urging three key NHS trusts to resolve the long-running dispute.

As a result, three of the biggest trusts in Manchester agreed to collective negotiations with UNISON and then to a Greater Manchester ‘framework agreement’, which ensured the re-banding of healthcare assistants and the potential for back pay up to 1 April 2018.

Members were balloted on the agreement and overwhelmingly accepted.

All HCAs at the trust are now having their jobs reviewed and officially re-banded, and as of last month, back pay began to appear in people’s bank accounts.

The trust has estimated that resolving the issue will cost £16m to resolve this, to which Mr Smith responds: “That’s money that should have been in our members’ pockets anyway. And it’s also about reward, respect and recognition. By making this a band 3 role, it creates upward pressure on wages”.

The impact of the campaign is now being felt in real terms by hospital workers.

UNISON rep Jenna Rooney said she was recently stopped in the corridor by a member who had received £8,000 in their previous pay packet given the back pay.

“It’s amazing to see members receive this – especially at this time when the cost of living is through the roof and people are really struggling. It’s nice for people to have that extra bit of money, to have a bit of breathing space for a month or two.”

Ms Rooney, who has worked as a clinical support worker for Manchester Royal Infirmary for seven years, was heavily involved in the campaign.

“I was going around wards, getting people to sign petitions and being as visible and loud as I could. We had to send a clear message that it wasn’t acceptable for management to treat us like that any more.

“I don’t think the trust expected it to be as big as it is, and it’s been great for union recruitment because it demonstrates the power of collective action. The possibilities feel endless now.”

For Ms Guest, the success of the campaign is all due to the members.

“People come up to me and say ‘thank you’ for what’s been achieved, but I tell them: ‘you don’t need to thank me, it’s you’. Campaigns only work if the members are involved – that’s the only way you don’t lose momentum.

“I’m so proud of all the HCAs that were scared and concerned about putting themselves out there to challenge management. This is what they’ve achieved.”

Ms Guest is hopeful that the success in Manchester will inspire other health workers across the country to do the same. “The groundwork has been done, we’ve won. If we’re one of the largest trusts in the country and we’ve achieved it, it’s possible anywhere”.

The article Manchester NHS workers get back pay thanks to UNISON campaign first appeared on the UNISON National site.