Mercury (Hobart)

Threat by teachers

- DAVID KILLICK Political Editor

PUBLIC school teachers are again threatenin­g industrial action after rejecting an increased pay offer from the State Government.

Australian Education Union executive member David Genford said the Government had a week to respond or risk industrial action — which union members had authorised.

A government spokesman said: “The Government has indicated our willingnes­s to revise our wages policy, where we can agree on appropriat­e offsets to pay for increased wage offers.”

PUBLIC school teachers have rejected an increased pay offer from the State Government and countered with a bid for a 3 per cent annual pay rise.

Their union says industrial action is on the cards unless the Government responds favourably within a week.

The Government recently revised its public sector wages policy to offer pay rises of 2 per cent, 2.25 per cent and 2.5 per cent over three years — as long as unions agreed to a host of other efficienci­es.

A meeting of the Australian Education Union’s state executive yesterday issued a counter offer of pay rises equivalent to 3 per cent a year over three years. Teachers are also seeking improvemen­ts to working conditions. AEU executive member David Genford said the Government’s offer wasn’t sufficient. “We are under- whelmed,” he said. “It is not where it needs to be.

“We still think 3 per cent is a fair and reasonable offer. It recognises what teachers are doing, it will help retain the teachers we’ve got and also help recruit teachers.

“We’ve given the minister a week so they can look through the offer, have a week to digest it and get back to us and hopefully we can come to a conclusion soon.”

The union would consider the Government’s response before deciding whether to resume industrial action — which members had authorised, he said.

A government spokesman said the wages offer was being considered. “The Government has indicated our willingnes­s to revise our wages policy, where we can agree on appropriat­e offsets to pay for increased wage offers,” he said.

“We have just received a counter offer and we are cur- rently getting it costed, but we have made clear we will not be going into debt to fund unaffordab­le pay rises.

“We had asked unions to provide appropriat­e offsets to any increase above 2 per cent.”

AEU Tasmania state manager Roz Madsen said a better offer was needed to prevent teachers being the worst-paid in the nation.

“The Government’s revised offer to teachers did not move off 2 per cent in the first year and included a grab-bag of new demands that stripped existing conditions,” she said.

“The Government’s offer was a case of one step forward and two steps back and that was unacceptab­le to the overwhelmi­ng majority of teachers.”

The teachers have made two counter offers — either pay increases of 2 per cent in March and 1 per cent in July each year for the next three years, or 2.5 per cent in March and 0.5 per cent in July.

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