West Yorkshire hospital workers win re-banding and thousands of pounds in back pay 

Many of the healthcare assistants working in A&E at Calderdale and Huddersfield NHS Foundation Trust have been on band two of the national Agenda for Change pay scale, but have undertaken clinical duties falling under band three for several years.

Thanks to UNISON, the workers have now been re-banded to band three and are set to receive around £3,000 in back pay.

The victory marks the latest success in UNISON’s Pay Fair for Patient Care campaign, which has seen repeated re-banding wins across the country. 

Pay Fair For Patient Care calls for all band two staff with increased responsibilities to be paid at the correct rate for the job they are doing and for workers to be compensated for the work they’ve already done at band three level. 

The deal reached with the trust means more than 50 A&E staff across Calderdale and Kirklees will be moved to the higher band, as well as receiving back pay.

Kimberley Cundall-Mellor, who is one of the healthcare assistants due to receive this backpay, is thrilled by the union’s success. “We go above and beyond in every shift that we work, and being re-banded means that we’re being recognised and rewarded for the work we undertake for a patient’s care and the patient’s journey,” she said.

UNISON Yorkshire and Humberside regional organiser Gary Cleaver said: “This is fantastic news for workers who go above and beyond to keep the NHS running, but it’s long overdue. Finally, staff will be properly recognised for the work they do, and paid accordingly.

“This is just the first step in Calderdale and Huddersfield. It’s promising the trust has agreed to negotiations for healthcare assistants in other departments.

“UNISON will do everything possible to make sure those workers get the pay and respect they deserve.”

Managers at Calderdale and Huddersfield have agreed to enter negotiations with UNISON aimed at re-banding healthcare assistants in other departments in the new year.

Find out more about Pay Fair for Patient Care

The article West Yorkshire hospital workers win re-banding and thousands of pounds in back pay  first appeared on the UNISON National site.

West Yorkshire hospital workers win re-banding and thousands of pounds in back pay 

Many of the healthcare assistants working in A&E at Calderdale and Huddersfield NHS Foundation Trust have been on band two of the national Agenda for Change pay scale, but have undertaken clinical duties falling under band three for several years.

Thanks to UNISON, the workers have now been re-banded to band three and are set to receive around £3,000 in back pay.

The victory marks the latest success in UNISON’s Pay Fair for Patient Care campaign, which has seen repeated re-banding wins across the country. 

Pay Fair For Patient Care calls for all band two staff with increased responsibilities to be paid at the correct rate for the job they are doing and for workers to be compensated for the work they’ve already done at band three level. 

The deal reached with the trust means more than 50 A&E staff across Calderdale and Kirklees will be moved to the higher band, as well as receiving back pay.

Kimberley Cundall-Mellor, who is one of the healthcare assistants due to receive this backpay, is thrilled by the union’s success. “We go above and beyond in every shift that we work, and being re-banded means that we’re being recognised and rewarded for the work we undertake for a patient’s care and the patient’s journey,” she said.

UNISON Yorkshire and Humberside regional organiser Gary Cleaver said: “This is fantastic news for workers who go above and beyond to keep the NHS running, but it’s long overdue. Finally, staff will be properly recognised for the work they do, and paid accordingly.

“This is just the first step in Calderdale and Huddersfield. It’s promising the trust has agreed to negotiations for healthcare assistants in other departments.

“UNISON will do everything possible to make sure those workers get the pay and respect they deserve.”

Managers at Calderdale and Huddersfield have agreed to enter negotiations with UNISON aimed at re-banding healthcare assistants in other departments in the new year.

Find out more about Pay Fair for Patient Care

The article West Yorkshire hospital workers win re-banding and thousands of pounds in back pay  first appeared on the UNISON National site.

Blog: Let’s stick together to win the proper pay for the job

Across every UNISON region, we’ve got live campaigns to get health workers the fair pay they deserve.

Dedicated staff have been regularly performing important duties above the level of responsibility their employers pay them for.

This expectation has been put on them for years, but the salary they should be earning has been held back for years too.

Today in Liverpool, clinical support workers went on strike at Arrowe Park Hospital.

Their lively and packed picket line attracted constant beeps from the public driving by.

And a banner was emblazoned with the simple and clear message that Janelle Holmes, Wirral Hospitals CEO, must respond to “Stop underpaying us”.

I was so pleased to join our striking members this morning, to give them a message of solidarity and hope on behalf of our whole union.

The members I spoke to were frustrated at their employers’ constant refusal to properly value the work that clinical support workers do.

And rightly so. Because when a workforce is undervalued and underpaid, they suffer, their families suffer, and patients suffer too.

So it’s because of their compassion and commitment to patient care that they’re taking this action.

As soon as I arrived at the picket line, I could tell they have the resolve to see this campaign through.

With UNISON’s backing, and the support and solidarity from the public, I know they can win the fair pay they’re owed.

Right now, at Wirral University Teaching Hospital NHS Foundation Trust, it’s up to the employers to end the strikes by delivering a deal that our members can accept.

But it’s also up to all of us, in UNISON, to stick together, to grow our campaigns across the whole of the UK, and to grow our union.

Because each of our wins in our Pay Fair for Patient Care campaign, helps put pressure on bosses in hospitals in every region, to do the right thing by their amazing staff.

The article Blog: Let’s stick together to win the proper pay for the job first appeared on the UNISON National site.

Blog: Let’s stick together to win the proper pay for the job

Across every UNISON region, we’ve got live campaigns to get health workers the fair pay they deserve.

Dedicated staff have been regularly performing important duties above the level of responsibility their employers pay them for.

This expectation has been put on them for years, but the salary they should be earning has been held back for years too.

Today in Liverpool, clinical support workers went on strike at Arrowe Park Hospital.

Their lively and packed picket line attracted constant beeps from the public driving by.

And a banner was emblazoned with the simple and clear message that Janelle Holmes, Wirral Hospitals CEO, must respond to “Stop underpaying us”.

I was so pleased to join our striking members this morning, to give them a message of solidarity and hope on behalf of our whole union.

The members I spoke to were frustrated at their employers’ constant refusal to properly value the work that clinical support workers do.

And rightly so. Because when a workforce is undervalued and underpaid, they suffer, their families suffer, and patients suffer too.

So it’s because of their compassion and commitment to patient care that they’re taking this action.

As soon as I arrived at the picket line, I could tell they have the resolve to see this campaign through.

With UNISON’s backing, and the support and solidarity from the public, I know they can win the fair pay they’re owed.

Right now, at Wirral University Teaching Hospital NHS Foundation Trust, it’s up to the employers to end the strikes by delivering a deal that our members can accept.

But it’s also up to all of us, in UNISON, to stick together, to grow our campaigns across the whole of the UK, and to grow our union.

Because each of our wins in our Pay Fair for Patient Care campaign, helps put pressure on bosses in hospitals in every region, to do the right thing by their amazing staff.

The article Blog: Let’s stick together to win the proper pay for the job first appeared on the UNISON National site.

Clinical support workers set to strike for the first time in NHS history

Over 400 health staff at Wirral University Teaching Hospital NHS Foundation Trust (WUTH) will take strike action tomorrow.

The strike will take place from 7am on Thursday 31 August through to 6:59am on Saturday 2 September after an overwhelming majority (99%) of clinical support workers voted to strike in a recent UNISON ballot.

Clinical support workers (CSW) are some of the lowest paid workers in the NHS. As roles have evolved and hospitals have struggled with staffing, they have taken on more clinical responsibilities without the pay and recognition to match.

The clinical support workers are employed at band two but regularly perform duties at band three level. UNISON says these employees should be paid at least £2,000 more a year in recognition of the tasks they perform.

The strike is the first in UNISON’s Pay Fair for Patient Care campaign, which has seen thousands of workers rebanded to band three.

In response to UNISON’s campaigning, seven health trusts across the North West have moved many?low-paid CSW staff onto the higher rate, and paid the affected staff backpay from April 2018.

UNISON member Nikki has been a clinical support worker at WUTH for 19 years. She’s taking part in the strike tomorrow in the hope that it will bring about change: “I’m fed up with doing the work of a band three and only being recognised and appreciated as a band two.

“It’s not just about the pay, it’s about being recognised. We’re not asking to be managers, just to be paid fairly for the work we’re doing.”

“We’ve been doing these roles for many years without question and nobody took any notice of the matter until UNISON supported us to fight our corner.

“I work in theatre, and there are plenty of jobs we’re asking to do, and if we say ‘that’s not my job’, we’re told ‘yes, but you can do that, so go and do that’.

“This is the first time in NHS history that clinical support workers are going on strike. We don’t want to have to strike. We all love our jobs and are dedicated to our patients. But you have to stand up for what you believe in and what is right, and if nobody’s listening to us, we don’t have a choice.”

UNISON North West regional organiser David McKnight said: “Taking strike action is no easy decision. These clinical support workers are dedicated to providing outstanding care to people across the Wirral.

“But the trust is defiantly refusing these workers what they’re owed and insisting that they provide care on the cheap.”

Read more about UNISON’s Pay Fair for Patient Care campaign.

The article Clinical support workers set to strike for the first time in NHS history first appeared on the UNISON National site.

Clinical support workers set to strike for the first time in NHS history

Over 400 health staff at Wirral University Teaching Hospital NHS Foundation Trust (WUTH) will take strike action tomorrow.

The strike will take place from 7am on Thursday 31 August through to 6:59am on Saturday 2 September after an overwhelming majority (99%) of clinical support workers voted to strike in a recent UNISON ballot.

Clinical support workers (CSW) are some of the lowest paid workers in the NHS. As roles have evolved and hospitals have struggled with staffing, they have taken on more clinical responsibilities without the pay and recognition to match.

The clinical support workers are employed at band two but regularly perform duties at band three level. UNISON says these employees should be paid at least £2,000 more a year in recognition of the tasks they perform.

The strike is the first in UNISON’s Pay Fair for Patient Care campaign, which has seen thousands of workers rebanded to band three.

In response to UNISON’s campaigning, seven health trusts across the North West have moved many?low-paid CSW staff onto the higher rate, and paid the affected staff backpay from April 2018.

UNISON member Nikki has been a clinical support worker at WUTH for 19 years. She’s taking part in the strike tomorrow in the hope that it will bring about change: “I’m fed up with doing the work of a band three and only being recognised and appreciated as a band two.

“It’s not just about the pay, it’s about being recognised. We’re not asking to be managers, just to be paid fairly for the work we’re doing.”

“We’ve been doing these roles for many years without question and nobody took any notice of the matter until UNISON supported us to fight our corner.

“I work in theatre, and there are plenty of jobs we’re asking to do, and if we say ‘that’s not my job’, we’re told ‘yes, but you can do that, so go and do that’.

“This is the first time in NHS history that clinical support workers are going on strike. We don’t want to have to strike. We all love our jobs and are dedicated to our patients. But you have to stand up for what you believe in and what is right, and if nobody’s listening to us, we don’t have a choice.”

UNISON North West regional organiser David McKnight said: “Taking strike action is no easy decision. These clinical support workers are dedicated to providing outstanding care to people across the Wirral.

“But the trust is defiantly refusing these workers what they’re owed and insisting that they provide care on the cheap.”

Read more about UNISON’s Pay Fair for Patient Care campaign.

The article Clinical support workers set to strike for the first time in NHS history first appeared on the UNISON National site.

Share your solidarity with Wirral clinical support workers on strike

Healthcare support workers in UNISON are fighting for the respect, recognition and reward they deserve – and they’re prepared to take strike action to get what they’re rightfully owed.

Over 400 clinical support workers at Wirral University Teaching Hospital NHS Foundation Trust (WUTH) will take 48 hours of strike action from 7am on Thursday 31 August.

They’re joining together to get their employer to pay them appropriately for the Band 3 clinical work they routinely do, and to put right the years they’ve been underpaid by awarding backpay to 1 April 2018 as an absolute minimum. 

This is a key moment in UNISON’s Pay Fair for Patient Care campaign and these members need all of our support and solidarity.

1. Social media

Social media is a great way to publicly put pressure on their NHS Trust to do the right thing. You could use this message, or write your own, and please share on any other social media you use too.

Share your support on Twitter

I stand with Wirral clinical support workers striking for the pay they're owed. UNISON Pay Fair for Patient Care

Download this graphic to share on social media

2. Sign the petition

These hard working UNISON members have seen colleagues in many other NHS trusts in the region getting re-banded and rewarded with backpay, and they’re asking why their work at Arrowe Park and Clatterbridge hospitals should be any different. Add your voice to their petition to the Trust’s chief executive and chairman.

Sign their petition

3. Send a message of solidarity

Deciding to take strike action is always a last resort and these UNISON members need to know that their union and the whole NHS is behind them in their fight. Submit a solidarity message and we’ll make sure the strikers hear your support loud and clear.

Please include your name if you're happy to, and where you're from – this will show UNISON members the breadth of support for them!
How can we use your message?

Are you a healthcare support worker?

We have seen healthcare support workers in every region running local campaigns to get rebanded – and many are securing thousands of pounds in back pay too. It’s not an easy road but the rewards can be huge, and UNISON members have shown that when they organise together, they can win!

Find out more about the campaign:

Pay Fair for Patient Care

The article Share your solidarity with Wirral clinical support workers on strike first appeared on the UNISON National site.

Share your solidarity with Wirral clinical support workers on strike

Healthcare support workers in UNISON are fighting for the respect, recognition and reward they deserve – and they’re prepared to take strike action to get what they’re rightfully owed.

Over 400 clinical support workers at Wirral University Teaching Hospital NHS Foundation Trust (WUTH) will take 48 hours of strike action from 7am on Thursday 31 August.

They’re joining together to get their employer to pay them appropriately for the Band 3 clinical work they routinely do, and to put right the years they’ve been underpaid by awarding backpay to 1 April 2018 as an absolute minimum. 

This is a key moment in UNISON’s Pay Fair for Patient Care campaign and these members need all of our support and solidarity.

1. Social media

Social media is a great way to publicly put pressure on their NHS Trust to do the right thing. You could use this message, or write your own, and please share on any other social media you use too.

Share your support on Twitter

I stand with Wirral clinical support workers striking for the pay they're owed. UNISON Pay Fair for Patient Care

Download this graphic to share on social media

2. Sign the petition

These hard working UNISON members have seen colleagues in many other NHS trusts in the region getting re-banded and rewarded with backpay, and they’re asking why their work at Arrowe Park and Clatterbridge hospitals should be any different. Add your voice to their petition to the Trust’s chief executive and chairman.

Sign their petition

3. Send a message of solidarity

Deciding to take strike action is always a last resort and these UNISON members need to know that their union and the whole NHS is behind them in their fight. Submit a solidarity message and we’ll make sure the strikers hear your support loud and clear.

Please include your name if you're happy to, and where you're from – this will show UNISON members the breadth of support for them!
How can we use your message?

Are you a healthcare support worker?

We have seen healthcare support workers in every region running local campaigns to get rebanded – and many are securing thousands of pounds in back pay too. It’s not an easy road but the rewards can be huge, and UNISON members have shown that when they organise together, they can win!

Find out more about the campaign:

Pay Fair for Patient Care

The article Share your solidarity with Wirral clinical support workers on strike first appeared on the UNISON National site.

NHS staff at Merseyside hospitals announce 48-hour strike after years of being underpaid, says UNISON

Over 400 health staff at Wirral University Teaching Hospital NHS Foundation Trust (WUTH) will take strike action this month in a dispute over pay, says UNISON today (Thursday).

The strike will take place at 7am on Thursday 31 August through to 6:59am on Saturday 2 September after an overwhelming majority (99%) of clinical support workers voted to strike in a recent UNISON ballot.

Clinical support workers (CSWs) assist nursing staff in delivering care on the wards. They’re employed across the trust’s sites at Arrowe Park and Clatterbridge hospitals on the Wirral.

UNISON says these employees should be paid at least £2,000 more a year because they are performing duties and tasks well above their pay grade.

The NHS says that CSWs on a low pay band* like those at WUTH should only be undertaking personal care like supporting patients with going to the toilet, bathing and feeding.

But a survey by the union has found that most CSWs at the band 2 pay scale are routinely undertaking clinical tasks like taking and monitoring blood, electrocardiogram (ECG) tests, and inserting cannulas.

UNISON says that according to NHS job role profiles, all these duties should be paid according to at least a band 3 salary, which is nearly £2,000 a year more.

A total of seven health trusts across the North West have moved many?low-paid CSWs staff onto the higher rate, and paid the affected staff backpay to April 2018. This is in response to campaigns by UNISON.

However, WUTH has refused to draw up a similar agreement, despite a months-long campaign, including a collective grievance signed by over 400 staff.

Instead, the trust has offered to backdate pay to their CSWs to December 2022. This would mean these employees would receive thousands of pounds less than those in other North West trusts.

This strike will be the first on this issue in England. All other trusts have settled this issue through negotiation, says UNISON.

UNISON North West regional organiser David McKnight said: “Taking strike action is no easy decision. These clinical support workers are dedicated to providing outstanding care to people across the Wirral. But the trust is defiantly refusing these workers what they’re owed and insisting that they provide care on the cheap.

“The workers have been reasonable throughout, they submitted a collective grievance and met with the trust many times to try to resolve the situation. Our members are open to resolving this dispute via negotiation if the Trust make an offer in line with agreements elsewhere in the North West.

“The majority of CSWs have been working well above their band for many years. It’s time the trust did the right thing and paid up to avoid strike action.”

Jo, a clinical support worker at Arrowe Park Hospital, said: “For many years CSW’s have been doing extra tasks above our pay grade to help and support our nursing staff and doctors.  The past few years our workload has increased, and the majority of our shifts involve doing Band 3 tasks but we have only been paid Band 2 with no talk of this ever changing.

“Nursing staff, clinics, and theatres all rely on us doing these extra jobs so their departments run smoothly.  The trust refuses to acknowledge that we have been working at a Band 3 level, when all they’d need to do is speak to anybody who works in the hospital and they’d be told exactly what duties we all routinely perform.

“Striking is our only option is because we have exhausted every other channel. We just want our employer to ackowledge the truth. We have worked above our pay grade for years and they have saved money by not paying us properly.

“This campaign won’t stop until we’re paid the same as what other trusts have offered. Wirral CSWs are not worth any less than those elsewhere.”

Notes to editors:

–*Band 2 CSWs should only undertake personal care duties according to NHS guidance. They are currently paid £22,383 annually whereas band 3 staff earn between £22,816 and £24,336 after two years in the job.

– Click here for images of the workers campaigning outside the trust’s headquarters.

– The trusts that have resolved the issue over CSW pay are: the Northern Care Alliance NHS Foundation Trust; Manchester University NHS Foundation Trust; Wrightington, Wigan and Leigh NHS Foundation Trust; Stockport NHS Foundation Trust; Tameside and Glossop Integrated Care NHS Foundation Trust; the Christie NHS Foundation Trust; and Pennine Care NHS Foundation Trust.

– 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:

Sam Doherty  E: s.doherty@unison.co.uk  M: 07432 459759

The article NHS staff at Merseyside hospitals announce 48-hour strike after years of being underpaid, says UNISON first appeared on the UNISON National site.

NHS staff at Merseyside hospitals announce 48-hour strike after years of being underpaid

Over 400 health staff at Wirral University Teaching Hospital NHS Foundation Trust (WUTH) will take strike action this month in a dispute over pay, says UNISON today (Thursday).

The strike will take place at 7am on Thursday 31 August through to 6:59am on Saturday 2 September after an overwhelming majority (99%) of clinical support workers voted to strike in a recent UNISON ballot.

Clinical support workers (CSWs) assist nursing staff in delivering care on the wards. They’re employed across the trust’s sites at Arrowe Park and Clatterbridge hospitals on the Wirral.

UNISON says these employees should be paid at least £2,000 more a year because they are performing duties and tasks well above their pay grade.

The NHS says that CSWs on a low pay band* like those at WUTH should only be undertaking personal care like supporting patients with going to the toilet, bathing and feeding.

But a survey by the union has found that most CSWs at the band 2 pay scale are routinely undertaking clinical tasks like taking and monitoring blood, electrocardiogram (ECG) tests, and inserting cannulas.

UNISON says that according to NHS job role profiles, all these duties should be paid according to at least a band 3 salary, which is nearly £2,000 a year more.

A total of seven health trusts across the North West have moved many?low-paid CSWs staff onto the higher rate, and paid the affected staff backpay to April 2018. This is in response to campaigns by UNISON.

However, WUTH has refused to draw up a similar agreement, despite a months-long campaign, including a collective grievance signed by over 400 staff.

Instead, the trust has offered to backdate pay to their CSWs to December 2022. This would mean these employees would receive thousands of pounds less than those in other North West trusts.

This strike will be the first on this issue in England. All other trusts have settled this issue through negotiation, says UNISON.

UNISON North West regional organiser David McKnight said: “Taking strike action is no easy decision. These clinical support workers are dedicated to providing outstanding care to people across the Wirral. But the trust is defiantly refusing these workers what they’re owed and insisting that they provide care on the cheap.

“The workers have been reasonable throughout, they submitted a collective grievance and met with the trust many times to try to resolve the situation. Our members are open to resolving this dispute via negotiation if the Trust make an offer in line with agreements elsewhere in the North West.

“The majority of CSWs have been working well above their band for many years. It’s time the trust did the right thing and paid up to avoid strike action.”

Jo, a clinical support worker at Arrowe Park Hospital, said: “For many years CSW’s have been doing extra tasks above our pay grade to help and support our nursing staff and doctors.  The past few years our workload has increased, and the majority of our shifts involve doing Band 3 tasks but we have only been paid Band 2 with no talk of this ever changing.

“Nursing staff, clinics, and theatres all rely on us doing these extra jobs so their departments run smoothly.  The trust refuses to acknowledge that we have been working at a Band 3 level, when all they’d need to do is speak to anybody who works in the hospital and they’d be told exactly what duties we all routinely perform.

“Striking is our only option is because we have exhausted every other channel. We just want our employer to ackowledge the truth. We have worked above our pay grade for years and they have saved money by not paying us properly.

“This campaign won’t stop until we’re paid the same as what other trusts have offered. Wirral CSWs are not worth any less than those elsewhere.”

Notes to editors:

–*Band 2 CSWs should only undertake personal care duties according to NHS guidance. They are currently paid £22,383 annually whereas band 3 staff earn between £22,816 and £24,336 after two years in the job.

– Click here for images of the workers campaigning outside the trust’s headquarters.

– The trusts that have resolved the issue over CSW pay are: the Northern Care Alliance NHS Foundation Trust; Manchester University NHS Foundation Trust; Wrightington, Wigan and Leigh NHS Foundation Trust; Stockport NHS Foundation Trust; Tameside and Glossop Integrated Care NHS Foundation Trust; the Christie NHS Foundation Trust; and Pennine Care NHS Foundation Trust.

– 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:

Sam Doherty  E: s.doherty@unison.co.uk  M: 07432 459759

The article NHS staff at Merseyside hospitals announce 48-hour strike after years of being underpaid first appeared on the UNISON National site.