The New Zealand Herald

Teacher pay rise offer falls well short of expectatio­ns

- Ryan Dunlop

Industrial action may be on the cards for primary school teachers after union negotiatio­ns with the Ministry of Education fell short of expectatio­ns for higher pay and addressing the current teacher shortage.

It comes as full-day strikes for nurses seemed likely and Auckland retail workers indicated they would picket Queen St today.

After six days of negotiatio­ns the New Zealand Educationa­l Institute (NZEI) and Ministry for Education (MoE) tabled an offer of a pay rise ranging from about 2.2 to 2.6 per cent a year for three years for most primary school teachers.

NZEI Te Riu Roa lead negotiator Liam Rutherford said the offer was far from the 16 per cent over two years that members thought necessary to address the “crisis” that was the current teacher shortage and the ability to keep staff on.

“There isn’t anything we can point to that can help attract new teachers or encourage current teachers to stay.

“It is now up to members to decide whether to accept the offer or reject it and determine the next steps,” Rutherford said.

If members did reject the offer then possible industrial action would be discussed, he said.

“Us standing still is us standing backwards. We are very disappoint­ed at the offer and it won’t make a difference for us to move forward,” Rutherford said.

Workload issues had also been largely ignored, as had the request to fund a Special Education Needs Coordinato­r (SENCO) in every school, to assist children with additional learning needs.

“The underfundi­ng has hit us because it has not kept up. There wasn’t anything in the offer that supported the need for a specialise­d role.”

It was “genuinely up to the members” to reject or accept the offer, he said.

Union meetings to discuss the pay offer would begin soon, the first at the Vodafone Events Centre in Manukau on June 18. MoE deputy secretary early learning and student achievemen­t Ellen MacGregor-Reid said the ministry had put a fair offer on the table and would continue to negotiate in good faith.

“To attract new teachers the offer will see a cumulative increase of 14.7 per cent to base salaries for graduates with a teaching degree ($47,980 to $55,030) over three years, and a 14.2 per cent cumulative increase for graduates with a subject degree and graduate teaching diploma ($49,588 to $56,638) over three years.

“Teachers on the next steps (6-11) will see a cumulative increase of between 6.5 to 13.7 per cent to base salaries over three years. Teachers on the maximum step (12) will receive a cumulative increase of 6.1 per cent over three years ($75,949 to $80,599.)”

Meanwhile for nursing union members a two-day 24 hour strike looked likely after the New Zealand Nurses Organisati­on said they were “distressed” and “disappoint­ed” with the DHBs’ revised pay offer.

Retail workers in Auckland planned to picket on busy Queen St today over pay and performanc­e conditions.

Auckland Farmers workers wanted the company to phase out its performanc­e pay system which held down wages and asked for workers to be paid a living wage, First Union’s Tali Williams said.

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