Portsmouth News

Nurses ponder pay rise offer

- News reporter newsdesk@thenews.co.uk @portsmouth­news

Health secretary Steve Barclay has said he is ‘cautiously optimistic’ that unions will accept the current pay offer for nurses, despite increasing­ly heated rhetoric between negotiator­s.

Unions in the NHS Staff Council will today consider the offer of a 5 per cent pay increase for 2023/24 along with a one-off payment worth between £1,655 and £3,789 for the current financial year for nurses in England.

This comes as the Royal College of Nursing (RCN) launched its ‘biggest strike yet’ at 8pm on Sunday, involving thousands of nurses including intensive care and cancer specialist­s.

Mr Barclay criticised the action as ‘disrespect­ful’ to the unions meeting, while RCN general secretary Pat Cullen urged him ‘not to be disrespect­ful’ to nurses.

The health secretary told journalist­s: ‘I’m cautiously optimistic that the Staff Council will agree to vote in favour of the deal.

‘But I think it’s right to wait until Tuesday for the Staff Council to meet and this strike is premature.

‘I think it’s disrespect­ful to the other trade unions. I think the RCN should have waited. They’re a member of the Staff Council. They were part of the negotiatio­ns.’

Meanwhile, Ms Cullen told the PA news agency more strikescou­ldbeontheh­orizon as RCN members vote on further action later this month.

Speaking at a picket outside University College Hospital in central London, she said Mr Barclay had ‘lost the public and certainly lost any respect that our nursing staff had for him and this government’.

‘What our members are saying to the secretary of state of this government is we are not going to go away,’ she said.

‘We will remain on our picket lines to have a voice heard for our patients.

‘We will continue to lose a day’s pay standing on picket lines for our patients, so that’s how important it is to them and they want to have their voice heard.’

Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer also urged the government to ‘accept responsibi­lity’ for the strikes.

The RCN strike, which ends just before midnight, involves nursing staff from A&E, intensive care and cancer care for the first time.

However, exemptions were granted for nurses in the emergency department­s of some hospitals.

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