The New Zealand Herald

Teachers want rent allowance

- Simon Collins

High-school teachers want a rental housing allowance of up to $100 a week in Auckland, Tauranga and Queenstown. The Post Primary Teachers Associatio­n (PPTA) claim raises the stakes in the pay dispute now affecting all teachers, claiming an immediate 15 per cent pay rise worth $242 million for the country’s 25,765 secondary teachers, as well as the housing allowance.

Most of the country’s 30,000 primary and intermedia­te teachers are expected to strike next Wednesday over a claim for a $373m 16 per cent pay hike over two years.

The Ministry of Education has offered the primary teachers only 4 per cent over two years, plus a further 2 per cent in 2020, for teachers with at least seven years’ service who do not have extra responsibi­lities.

However nurses, who went on strike last month, have won pay rises worth $500m for nurses with at least seven years’ experience of 12.5 per cent over two years, plus a further 3 per cent in 2020.

Until now, all unions have opposed pay bonuses for Auckland and other high-cost areas because they are unpopular in the rest of the country.

But PPTA president Jack Boyle said high school teachers agreed at recent stopwork meetings that the housing allowance was necessary to counter a teacher shortage which secondary school principals say is the worst on record.

“It’s not seen as the job of education collective agreements to address the housing shortages we have got across the motu [islands],” he said.

“But we certainly had to respond to that challenge which is directly affecting the ability of schools to recruit.” The union originally discussed an allowance for all teachers in areas where the median house price exceeds seven times the top step of the trained teacher base salary scale.

Based on the top basic rate of $75,949 at the time, teachers would have got the allowance when median house prices exceeded $531,643 — in Auckland, Tauranga, Western Bay of Plenty, Thames-Coromandel, Wellington, Selwyn and Queenstown­Lakes.

That has been cut back in claims lodged with the Ministry of Education yesterday to a rental subsidy in all areas where median rents are at least 10 per cent above the national median rent.

All Auckland areas would qualify with June median rents of $568 in North Shore, $520 in Rodney, $510 in the old Auckland City, $498 in Manukau, $496 in Waitakere, $494 in Papakura and $465 in Franklin.

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