Health conference celebrates union’s re-banding wins

The ground-breaking re-banding of health care assistants (HCAs) achieved by UNISON branches in recent months was celebrated by health conference delegates in Bournemouth yesterday, during a busy afternoon of Agenda for Change motions.

Campaigns on overtime, reducing the working week and protecting the NHS pension were among the other key topics discussed by delegates.

Among the re-banding wins, last year thousands of HCAs across Manchester received up to £5,000 in backdated earnings, after a six-year battle to be re-banded, from band 2 to 3, in acknowledgement of the fact they were carrying out clinical duties way beyond their grade and pay.

And this year the South London and Maudsley NHS Foundation Trust agreed to regrade nearly 100 HCAs, with members receiving almost £2,000 a year pay rises.

In proposing the motion ‘winning re-banding campaigns’, Conroy Lawrence of Greater London region (pictured below) told delegates that as a result of the London success, members were now receiving “the right pay for the job they are doing” and had witnessed their union as a force in the workplace, new members were joining, and new activists were stepping forward.

“These battles are winnable and what our union is all about. It’s important and our union is the only union that can win these campaigns in the NHS.”

Another speaker added: “This is putting pounds back in members pockets. It is a massive achievement. And most important, it’s member-led. It’s what we can achieve when our members are with us.”

They shared a story of one health care assistant who told her that she could now afford to take her family on holiday for the first time in 16 years.

But she added: “This is not just about pay, but career progression.”

Delegates agreed that re-banding campaigns could now be utilised to benefit other health workers, enabling them to be paid according to their knowledge, skills and expertise.

In passing the the motion, delegates called on the health service group executive to support regional health committees and branches to take “a more systematic and coordinated approach” to re-banding battles.

Nursing staff

A further motion noted that while the Pay Fair for Patient Care campaign had focussed on HCAs, that focus now needs to “spread upwards through the rest of the nursing family”.

In a recent UNISON survey of nursing and midwifery members, many nursing members reported that their job descriptions were inaccurate, rarely, if ever updated and greatly understate the actual complexity of their role.

The motion called on the HSGE to launch a campaign to encourage nursing and midwifery staff to ensure their job descriptions are updated, and support them to ask for a banding review of their role has changed significantly.

Working week

Conference heard of the “burnout” experienced by so many health members, who have been working “unsustainable hours” under enormous pressure, and with the government constantly refusing to pay them accordingly.

As one delegate said: “We’re exhausted. We are at our limit. The system is broken.”

Against this backdrop, the strategy of reducing the working week, long a key goal of the trade union movement, has re-emerged in recent years, particularly as retention has become a key issue across sectors.

A motion on reducing the working week for NHS/HSC staff noted a global trend towards a four-day week, with no loss of pay, resulting in greater productivity, better work-life balance and a “win-win for workers and employers”.

And delegates approved a motion to pursue this goal for health members, charging their executive to:

  • explore options for practical ways to implement the principle of 100% pay for 80% work with 100% productivity, in the 24/7 environment of the NHS;
  • identify how the 100:80:100 principle could be best described in reference to Agenda for Change terms and conditions;
  • include the 100:80:100 principle as a priority in future pay claims/negotiations.

Pensions

The three NHS pension schemes, in England, Wales and Northern Ireland, are a valued part of the NHS pay and reward structure, and an essential aid to recruitment and retention of NHS staff. Employer pension contributions represent a significant investment available to health workers.

However, conference heard that the cost of living crisis has resulted in many staff experiencing in-work poverty and, as a consequence, a significant increase in health workers opting out of their pension schemes.

One speaker told delegates: “The Tories are trying to destroy NHS pensions by forcing people out of it and making it unsustainable.”

Another added: “The pension is one shining light at the end of a long and sometimes painful tunnel. We need the Tories to keep their grubby hands off it. We need to protect the pension.”

Delegates called on the HSGE to work with other unions to seek improvements in pension scheme administration and accuracy of information given to members, to promote awareness and understanding of scheme benefits, and other measures geared towards promoting, defending and improving the NHS pensions.

Overtime

Conference noted that many NHS employers have been ignoring the NHS pay, terms and conditions handbook on overtime, instead paying staff on bank or sessional rates, which are usually considerably less than overtime rates, with subsequent loss of pension accrual.

A composite motion ‘bring back overtime’ stated that this was being done “solely to circumvent Agenda for Change overtime pay rates and save money at the expense of staff – to make the workforce pay for underfunding of services.”

Delegates called on the HSGE to:

  • lobby nationally for employers to stay within the boundaries set out in the AfC handbook with regards to overtime;
  • raise the issue in the NHS Staff Council and devolved negotiating bodies;
  • encourage and support branches to raise this issue with their NHS employers;
  • design campaigns to organise around the removal of bank as a standard practice.

Images: Jess Hurd

The article Health conference celebrates union’s re-banding wins 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.