Western Mail

School leaders still work to rule after rejecting latest pay offer

- ABBIE WIGHTWICK Education editor abbie.wightwick@walesonlin­e.co.uk

SCHOOL leaders in Wales have rejected an offer from the Welsh Government in their dispute over pay, workload and funding.

It means they will continue to work to rule.

The decision follows teachers accepting a revised pay offer on Thursday, ending their dispute and strike action. But after a 10-day online ballot that closed yesterday 54.5% of National Associatio­n of Head Teachers Cymru members taking part voted to reject the offer.

The union said funding arrangemen­ts remained a major concern for school leaders across Wales and called on the Welsh Government to “help save our schools from ruin”.

NAHT Cymru director Laura Doel placed the blame with the employers.

She cited a lack of transparen­cy as the reason members rejected the deal: “Despite assurances from the Welsh Government and the Welsh Local Government Associatio­n (WLGA) that pay awards for the current academic year would be fullyfunde­d, that has clearly not been the case according to our members.

“The WLGA has refused to provide us with the evidence to substantia­te their claim that all 22 local authoritie­s and the Welsh government are fully funding the pay uplifts for 2022/23, and our members simply will not sit back and allow their school budgets to be decimated to fund this award.

“They have understand­ably lost all trust and confidence in the employers and hold out little hope that the award for the next academic year will bring with it any further money.

“At the heart of our dispute has been a desire to protect the delivery of education for children in Wales. This ballot result sends a clear message that our members do not believe they can maintain the level of support pupils deserve when they are being short-changed by some local authoritie­s on the promise of funding.

“The only way our members can afford to meet the costs without the money they need will be to make redundanci­es. This will have a detrimenta­l impact on education for this and future generation­s and therefore we are urging the Welsh Government to intervene and help save our schools from ruin.”

NAHT Cymru has now written to the Welsh Government and employers to inform them of the outcome. It is calling for talks to resume to bring the dispute to an end as quickly as possible.

In the meantime NAHT members will continue to take indefinite action short of a strike following their earlier ballot on industrial action.

This means that union members who are employed as headteache­rs, deputy headteache­rs, assistant headteache­rs and middle leaders will:

restrict availabili­ty to receive or respond to calls and emails before 9am or after 3pm; not attend meetings after 5pm; refuse to facilitate unsolicite­d school visits or take part in non-statutory consultati­ons, surveys, projects, meetings, government, local authority or consortia webinars or data requests;

abstain from involvemen­t in any staff appraisal or redundancy process;

abstain from facilitati­ng or arranging cover for those taking part in any industrial action;

refuse to provide informatio­n regarding staff participat­ion in industrial action

refuse to engage with Estyn, which inspects education and training providers in Wales, beyond statutory requiremen­ts;

The government’s offer included an additional payment of 3% for this academic year (2022/23), made up of a 1.5% consolidat­ed award and a further 1.5% unconsolid­ated lumpsum. The offer also included a further pay rise of 5% from September 2023, plus an agreement on workload. The ballot result saw 54.5% of NAHT members participat­ing reject the offer and 45.5% vote to accept it.

A Welsh Government spokespers­on said: “Talks with unions and local authoritie­s will continue in order to reach a resolution.”

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