Scotland NHS staff accept latest pay offer

1 year ago 101
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A new pay offer was made to staff including ambulance workers

The union representing NHS and ambulance staff in Scotland have accepted the latest pay offer from the Scottish government.

GMB Scotland said 59.7% of balloted members had accepted the new offer.

Health Secretary Humza Yousaf has been locked in negotiations with health unions in recent months amid the threat of industrial action.

Strikes were suspended earlier this year while members of three unions considered the improved deal.

Both the Royal College of Nursing (RCN) and the Royal College of Midwives (RCM) are also balloting their members, with the recommendation to accept the deal.

The result of the RCN vote is expected next week.

The pay offer made to 160,000 NHS staff, including nurses, midwives and paramedics, equates to an average 6.5% increase in 2023/24.

It also includes the commitment to modernising Agenda for Change, which is nearly 20 years old, to support workforce recruitment, sustainability and retention.

The offer is on top of the imposed pay rise already allocated for 2022/23, meaning many staff could receive a consolidated 13 to 14% pay increase over a two-year period.

'Sizable minority voted to reject'

Keir Greenaway, GMB Scotland senior organiser for public services, welcomed the acceptance but warned ministers to heed the warnings of the "sizeable" proportion of the union membership that voted to reject the pay offer.

He said: "Three-fifths of our membership have voted to accept this offer, removing the threat of strike action across NHS Scotland and the Scottish Ambulance Service this year on pay and conditions.

"Make no mistake, the strike mandates secured by our members is what pushed the cabinet secretary to continuously improve his proposals over the last nine months. As a result, frontline staff, and not least the lowest paid, have won significant increases to their consolidated pay and conditions.

"However, we would also warn that no-one in government circles should be naïve enough to think this puts the issue of worker value back in the box. The sizeable minority of members who voted to reject the offer illustrate the point and this sends a loud and clear message on future pay offers.

"If ministers want to seriously tackle the understaffing crisis in our health service and recruit and retain the people needed to build a recovery of our broken NHS, then the bar must continue to rise for the pay and conditions of staff in the years to come."

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