The government has got to get back to governing, says UNISON

Reacting to the announcement today (Monday) that Liz Truss is to be the new Conservative leader, UNISON general secretary Christina McAnea said:

“Leaving the country rudderless all summer ?at a time of great emergency has been nothing short of a ?national disgrace.

“?The government has got to get back to governing immediately. Liz Truss must do what should’ve happened months ago and deliver help to the millions ?unable to cope with ?their crushing bills.

“Many famil?y finances may never recover ?without an urgent assistance plan. Tackling the cost-of-living? ?crisis must be ?the Prime Minister’s number one priority, not wasting precious time attacking unions for trying to help working people through the pain.

“?Hard on the heels of ?an energy lifeline ?must be an above-inflation wage rise for the public services currently haemorrhaging staff to better-paying parts of the economy. If there’s no-one left to run the hospitals, schools, town halls, police stations and care homes communities rely on, we’ll all be done for.

“Cutting taxes only assists the better-off. It won’t help the hospital porters, teaching assistants, care staff or other low-paid ?workers one bit.

“The new leader also must do what Boris Johnson promised and failed ?to do – fix ?the broken social care ?system once and for all.”

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.

The article The government has got to get back to governing, says UNISON first appeared on the UNISON National site.

Join the UNISON and TUC lobby of Parliament to #DemandBetter

UNISON is urging activists and members to lobby their MPs next month as part of the Together We Rise campaign.

Working with the TUC and other unions, UNISON is organising a lobby of the Westminster parliament on Wednesday 19 October.

This will be an opportunity for members to meet their MPs and tell them about the reality of the cost of living crisis and to demand better. Where relevant, it will also be an important opportunity to speak with MPs about current or pending pay disputes.

The TUC will co-ordinate the lobby and arrange the meetings with MPs. However, once you have signed up, UNISON will be in touch with you again, providing briefing and priority campaign messages.

If your workplace is in a different constituency to where you live and you want to meet the MP for where you work, please enter the postcode for your workplace on the sign-up page.

The day will end with a rally at the Westminster Methodist Central Hall at 6pm.

In addition to the lobby, there is also a local day of action on Friday 14 October.

This offers members the opportunity to raise cost of living issues with their MPs in their constituencies – or raise the profile of UNISON’s Cost of Living Campaign in their workplace and/or community.

The local day of action isn’t being co-ordinated, but UNISON will provide updates where the union knows that the TUC and/or other unions are organising activities across the UK on that day.

Some local trades councils might use the day to leaflet train stations and might well be in touch through the usual channels.

If it’s not possible to meet with you MP in their constituency – some will not meet campaigners on surgery days – here are some other options branches can consider:

  • having a street stall in a shopping area;
  • stalls in workplaces;
  • a leaflet drop outside workplaces at the start and end of day, and lunchtime;
  • organising a public meeting;
  • sending an open letter to local paper.

Please share your branch’s plans with UNISON, by sending an email to policy@unison.co.uk.

Materials – including those for Together We Rise – are available to order from UNISON’s online shop.

The article Join the UNISON and TUC lobby of Parliament to #DemandBetter first appeared on the UNISON National site.

Wealth tax could fund pay rise for staff providing vital services

A pay rise in line with inflation for workers providing essential services could be funded by tax increases for higher earners and the wealthy, says a report published today (Friday) by UNISON.

Independent economic analysis commissioned by the union identifies tax changes that would raise £30.58bn a year to tackle the cost-of-living crisis, including funding for public sector pay increases that keep pace with price rises.

This includes £10.1bn that could be raised from an annual 1% tax on household wealth above £5m, including second homes, buy-to-let properties and pensions, says UNISON.

In addition, the report says a 1p increase in both the higher and additional rates of income tax would yield £1.65bn. Increasing capital gains tax rates to match those for income tax would raise a further £8bn.

The measures are set out in a new report by UNISON, Together we rise, which outlines the disproportionate impact of rising bills on low-paid public service workers. It puts forward a fully costed plan to ease the burden of the crisis for lower and middle-income households.

The report also highlights public backing for a decent pay rise for public sector workers.

Three in five people (60%) agree wages for public sector workers should be increased either in line with (41%) or above (19%) inflation, according to a poll by YouGov for UNISON of more than 3,000 adults in England, Wales and Scotland.

Of these, more than half (54%) thought this should be funded by a new 1% wealth tax proposed by UNISON on incomes exceeding £5 million.

A fair pay rise is central to the union’s national cost-of-living campaign. Also called Together we rise, the campaign calls for urgent action to tackle the economic crisis.

The next stage of the campaign will take UNISON’s demands to the incoming Prime Minister, setting out the case for a public sector pay rise for nurses, police community support officers, school cleaners and other public sector staff. The campaign also calls for a £15-an-hour minimum wage, which would take millions out of in-work poverty.

UNISON is urging the next PM to introduce a package of measures to protect low-paid workers against the pending recession and prevent public services losing yet more frontline staff.

In addition to a proper pay rise, solutions outlined in the report include the immediate reintroduction of the £20 a week uplift to universal credit payments which ministers removed last October, better access to affordable childcare and a review of HMRC mileage rates for staff who drive as part of their job.

The report findings also demonstrate that people feel the government is not doing enough to tackle the cost-of-living crisis.

More than a third (38%) of those polled by YouGov believe government measures to address the rising costs of living will not help them at all and the same percentage think they will help only slightly.

The disastrous effect of the cost-of-living crisis on public sector workers is laid bare in the report. More than 5,000 responded to a request from UNISON to share their experiences.

They have told of hardships such as doing without light at home because of rising energy bills, being unable to afford petrol to get to work and having to use buy-now-pay-later schemes to cover living costs.

Commenting on the report, UNISON general secretary Christina McAnea said: “The financial crisis is nothing short of a disaster for public sector workers.

“The real value of their income has plummeted, leaving them struggling to deal with rising prices. It’s clear that without help, many may never recover.

“The incoming Prime Minister must make it a priority to help people such as hospital porters, teaching assistants and other poorly paid public sector employees through the cost-of-living crisis.

“This isn’t the time for pay freezes or tax cuts. The government must put struggling families first and provide a wage rise in line with inflation or above.”

Notes to editors: 
– The online poll was carried out by YouGov who surveyed 3,407 adults in England, Wales and Scotland between 10 and 12 June 2022. Data were weighted to be demographically representative of all GB adults. YouGov is a member of the British Polling Council and abides by its rules. Click here for full tables.
– The independent analysis was commissioned by UNISON from Landman Economics.
– The Together we rise report is part of the union’s national cost-of-living campaign, also called Together we rise. For a summary of the report, click here.
– UNISON is launching a petition for a pay rise above inflation and a £15 minimum wage on 19 September.
– Case studies (all names have been changed):
Farhiya, a special educational needs teaching assistant in Birmingham, said: “I live in total darkness and in constant fear of not being able to afford to pay my bills and of losing my home.”
Michelle, a care worker in Worcestershire, said: “Sadly, I’m currently looking at having to give up my job. This is because I can’t afford the petrol to get to work and pay my bills.”
Jamie, a care and support assistant in a care home in Glasgow, said: “I’ve used the likes of (buy-now-pay-later schemes) Klarna and Clearpay more and more because buying things outright is out of the question.”
– 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 Wealth tax could fund pay rise for staff providing vital services first appeared on the UNISON National site.

Public sector staff forced to skip meals as cost-of-living crisis deepens

Low-paid public sector employees including teaching assistants, hospital porters and care staff are unable to cover basic living costs with the vast majority (95%) finding it increasingly hard to pay their household bills, says a UNISON survey published today (Thursday).

As the UK experiences the highest inflation for decades and with another energy price cap hike imminent, UNISON warns that thousands of workers are forced to cut back on essentials such as food, transport and healthcare.

The union has gathered the experiences of low-paid public service workers ahead of the launch of its major report into the cost of living crisis to be released early next month.

The survey findings – based on responses from more than 3,000 public service workers earning £20,000 or less – show many are skipping meals, not visiting the dentist and taking on second jobs to cope with the cost-of-living crisis,

A total of 84% say rising bills and pressures on their household budgets are taking a toll on their health.

The survey results are contained in UNISON’s Together We Rise report, which calls for fair pay to tackle the economic crisis and suggests taxing high incomes to pay for it. The responses highlight how government support to help with soaring energy bills is failing to tackle the scale of the crisis faced by households.

More than half (53%) say the financial help does not address concerns about rising bills because of other increasing costs such as food and petrol. More than two fifths (42%) say what ministers have offered comes nowhere near addressing their financial worries.

Hit hard by the current crisis, many on low wages are having to take or plan to take drastic measures to get by, says UNISON.

Strategies to make ends meet include switching off heating (80%), limiting car journeys to reduce petrol costs (64%), keeping lights turned off (60%) and avoiding visits to the dentist (30%).

Nearly a third are skipping meals (31%), with some doing this in order to allow their children to eat (11%). A small proportion are avoiding – or planning to avoid – cooking hot food (13%), and some aim to find a smaller or less expensive home (8%).

The government’s failure to address low wages is putting public service staff under intolerable work strain and leading to others quitting the sector altogether, says UNISON. Nearly two in five (39%) said they have or plan to increase work hours, 27% to take a second job, and 19% to leave the public sector for a job elsewhere.

Being forced to borrow money is another alarming impact of low wages and is leaving workers in deepening debt.

More than a third (37%) are relying on credit cards to cover everyday spending. A similar proportion are asking friends or family for financial support (33%) while others are using a foodbank (12%), taking out bank or building society loans (13%) or pay day loans (8%).

The mental toll of the cost-of-living crisis on low-paid workers has been significant with four in five (80%) affected by anxiety, three-quarters (75%) feeling down and more than two-thirds (67%) having difficulty sleeping.

Commenting on the findings, UNISON general secretary Christina McAnea said: “The cost-of-living crisis has decimated household incomes.

“Low-paid workers have nothing left to cut from their budgets. They’re now forced to take drastic measures which could damage their health and leave them deeper in debt. Some may never recover from the financial and emotional hit.

“Many can’t afford to work in public services any longer, which will have a devastating effect on our communities. The government must realise that to protect services and the people who rely on them, staff need to be paid fairly with wages increases in line with, or above, inflation.”

Notes to editors: 
– UNISON carried out the survey online during June 2022. The findings are based on responses from 3,688 public service staff earning £20,000 or less who work in England, Wales, Northern Ireland and Scotland. The sectors in which they worked included health; education; social care; local government; police and justice; water, environment and transport; and energy. Survey data is available on request.
Case studies (names have been changed):
-Mark, a library assistant, said: “I’ve only eaten one meal per day for the past week to squeeze my food budget out for the rest of the month. I was just surviving before. Now my energy bills have doubled and I’m scared of what the winter will bring.”
-Beth, a teaching assistant in special needs, said: “I’ve always prided myself on being good with budgeting. But rising living costs mean I can no longer make my wage last the month. The time each month when I’m forced to go into my overdraft is getting earlier, and I never needed one before this year.
“I’m a single mum and really struggling now. I’m in desperate need of dental work as a tooth broke over two years ago. But I can’t get an NHS dentist and there’s no way I can afford to go private.”
-Lucy, a healthcare assistant, said: “I’m on maternity leave and my husband was off sick for three months. It’s been a real struggle and we’ve had to borrow money off family, go to food banks and collect free items from websites. I’m worried that I’ll have to choose between heating and food in the winter.”
– The forthcoming Together We Rise report is part of the union’s national cost-of-living campaign, also called Together We Rise.
– 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 Public sector staff forced to skip meals as cost-of-living crisis deepens 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.

Proper wage boost the answer as inflation reaches new high

Responding to the release of the latest inflation figures showing a new 40-year-high,  UNISON assistant general secretary Jon Richards said today (Wednesday):

“The cost-of-living crisis has become a living nightmare for millions of working people.

“Wages are slumping at a record rate while prices and bills shoot up. But the government and those angling to be the next PM appear indifferent to the plight of those struggling to make ends meet.

“Ministers are deluded if they think workers can put up with yet more misery. Above-inflation pay rises are essential to rescue families on the brink.”

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.

The article Proper wage boost the answer as inflation reaches new high first appeared on the UNISON National site.

TUC and UNISON ramp up cost of living campaign

The TUC and UNISON are stepping up their cost of living campaigning this autumn, with two dates to lobby MPs at Westminster.

Coming after June’s major TUC demonstration in London, which launched the We Demand Better campaign, the fight for a pay rise will target MPs in their local constituencies and at the Houses of Parliament, with public service workers attending to make the politicians listen.

On 14 October, the TUC will be asking workers to visit their local MPs at constituency surgeries to spell out what the cost of living crisis really means.

The following week, on 19 October, there will be a rally and lobby of MPs at Westminster.

This is part of joint union campaign to make the government listen and take urgent action on pay and living standards. UNISON members are asked to reserve the dates in their diaries.

General secretary Christina McAnea said: “We’re using all levers at our disposal to demand better for public service workers. The government refuses to recognise their vital contribution and is failing to address the cost of living crisis.

“UNISON and the TUC are working together to change that. In October, we want all UNISON members to contact their MPs, face to face, either locally or in London, to spell out exactly what they do to keep our public services running, and why they deserve a decent pay rise.”

The rising tide: A UNISON cost of living special report

All at sea: An economy on the brink

The human cost – members explain what the cost of living crisis means for them

The article TUC and UNISON ramp up cost of living campaign first appeared on the UNISON National site.

Energy price freeze is right move for cost of living pressures

Responding to Labour Party proposals to freeze energy bills through an extended windfall levy on oil and gas companies, UNISON general secretary Christina McAnea said today (Monday):

“Millions of people are suffering financially and it’s going to get worse without emergency action.

“Families and households, particularly those on low wages, may never recover from disastrous energy hikes.

“Labour’s plans are a positive start to deal with the cost-of-living crisis, reduce bills and control inflation. They’re in stark contrast to the government’s inertia and failure to grasp the struggles of working people.”

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.

The article Energy price freeze is right move for cost of living pressures first appeared on the UNISON National site.

Ridiculous pay plans would have spelt total disaster for the NHS, says UNISON

Commenting on reports today (Tuesday) that Conservative Party leadership contender Liz Truss has backed down on plans to cut the pay of public servants across the UK, UNISON deputy head of health Helga Pile said:

“The NHS is in the depths of the biggest staffing crisis it’s ever faced. Last month’s below-inflation pay award isn’t enough to stop experienced health workers from leaving a service that’s on the edge. This ridiculous policy would have spelt total disaster.

“Rather than make ill thought-out promises to appeal to Conservative party members, candidates should be thinking about what’s best for the country, the NHS and its patients.

“Cutting the wages of nurses, porters, paramedics and healthcare assistants in parts of the UK would have been the stuff of nightmares. Staff would simply have left for other hospitals paying better wages, or gone to work in other sectors, creating yet more chaos for struggling services.

“This sorry episode only serves to deepen the despair of staff battling to care for patients in horrendous conditions. That those vying to be PM were even thinking about slashing pay will be a huge blow to morale.

“The problems facing the health service need tackling from a national perspective. The starting point must be a reset on wages to an award that cushions staff against rising prices and helps the NHS boost its workforce so it can deliver for the millions awaiting treatment.”

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 Ridiculous pay plans would have spelt total disaster for the NHS, says UNISON first appeared on the UNISON National site.

General secretary reiterates need for branches to be ‘strike ready’

General secretary Christina McAnea reiterated the need for UNISON branches to be “strike ready” when she addressed today’s meeting of the union’s national executive council (NEC).

Rearranged from last week, after being postponed due to the heat emergency, this was the first meeting of the council after June’s national delegate conference (NDC) and was chaired by the new president, Andrea Egan.

Ms McAnea looked back to conference and to the TUC demo in London that came at the end of the union’s week in Brighton (pictured).

It had been a big ask, she said, coming as it did the day after NDC closed. Yet, “as ever, UNISON was the biggest grouping”, she noted.

Since NDC, where she had spoken of “the dying days of an out-of-touch government”, she had been watching the imploding of the Conservative Party, and the race among leadership candidates “to go as far right as possible”.

Of the final two candidates, Rishi Sunak and Liz Truss, they were “both trying to out-tough each other” with “ludicrous” promises. Describing the spectacle as “unedifying”, Ms McAnea said that she had “called for a general election”.

After outlining the situation across service groups in terms of ongoing disputes and pay campaigns, the general secretary offered “huge congratulations to our UNISON communications team who have just won two TUC comms awards.”

In terms of upcoming work, Ms McAnea reported that there would be a national lobby of Parliament, and a rally in Westminster on 19 October as part of campaigning around the cost of living crisis.

That would also involve coordinated local campaign activity in constituencies across the country on the same day, town hall meetings and rallies, media activity and policy interventions ahead of the autumn budget.

The meeting also heard of the successful legal case that UNISON had taken to see long COVID classed as a disability, and it was stressed that the union should promote this more to branches and activists, to help them tackle employers who are refusing to treat it as such.

The meeting also applauded UNISON’s involvement in the recent Supreme Court case on holiday pay for term-time workers, and offered “congratulations to our superb legal department”.

There was a lengthy discussion of balloting and the use of phone banking in building turnout to ensure votes succeed in passing thresholds.

The council heard that UNISON is looking at ways of making phone banking easier and better, as well as exploring peer-to-peer texting.

The meeting also:

  • agreed a message of solidarity to Barnet workers who are in dispute;
  • heard about the work the union is doing around the government’s Rwanda deportation scheme;
  • agreed to hold a seminar on the cost of living crisis;
  • gave thanks to assistant general secretary Stephanie Thomas, who is retiring later this summer;
  • discussed the problems faced by low mileage rates, hearing that the union is doing lots of work in the background, including targeting some Conservative MPs on the subject, and has also issued new guidance on the subject.

The article General secretary reiterates need for branches to be ‘strike ready’ first appeared on the UNISON National site.