The Northern Advocate

Govt pay rise for community nurses

But GP nurses excluded, leading to competitio­n for staff and uncertaint­y

- Jaime Lyth

Community nurses are in for a pay rise across Northland after the Government announced pay parity in the health sector, but General Practice nurses have been left out.

Northland nurses held public rallies in October over employers’ inability to deliver pay parity compared to nurses who work for Health NZ Te Whatu Ora, who are paid more.

“Cabinet has agreed to ongoing funding of $200 million a year so that thousands of workers in places such as aged-care facilities, hospices and Māori and Pacific healthcare organisati­ons can be paid more,” Health Minister Andrew Little said.

Little said the pay difference between nurses and healthcare workers in public hospitals and the funded health sector was the result of the Government’s earlier actions to lift the pay in the sector.

“Aged-care facilities, hospices, homecare support and Māori and Pacific healthcare organisati­ons will be first, because there is clear evidence that that is where the biggest pay gap is,” Little said.

Little said the announceme­nt would equate to 20,000 people getting a pay rise in health organisati­ons across the country that have struggled to keep staff because they can’t afford to pay as much as Te Whatu Ora.

Aged Care Associatio­n chief executive Simon Wallace said the team was “so pleased the Government has made good on the promise”.

“Achieving pay parity with Te Whatu Ora hospital nurses means the aged residentia­l care sector will now be on a level playing field to attract and retain registered nurses.”

College of Primary Health Care Nurses chairwoman Tracey Morgan said primary healthcare and Plunket nurses currently earn up to 20 per cent less than those employed by Te Whatu Ora, and Māori and iwi provider nurses were paid up to 25 per cent less.

However, the announceme­nt excluded nurses working in Northlands general practices who had been calling for a pay rise during strike action, but Little didn’t rule it out for future announceme­nts.

“However, I have to be clear that this package will not mean significan­t change immediatel­y for those working in GP practices,

“Decisions about what is paid to

Look at what practice nurses did over Covid, we worked our asses off, we worked long, we worked hard to protect the DHB services.

Nicole Little, Northland practice nurse and NZNO delegate

whom have to be based on hard evidence, and the data provided to me by both the Nurses Organisati­on and the GP organisati­on GenPro for that sector did not show any real evidence of pay difference at this point,” the minister said.

Northland practice nurse and NZNO delegate Nicole Little said the pay gap was clear in the different contracts between the Primary Health Care MECA (multi-employer collective agreement) and the DHB MECA.

“Practice nurses can get a 10.3 per cent pay rise by driving down the road, it’s pretty tough. From a practice nurse point of view we’re finding it really difficult to retain staff. We’re losing people to Australia, to the DHB and that’s really frustratin­g.”

Although she’s happy her colleagues across the industry are getting a pay rise, Nicole Little said practice nurses feel undervalue­d and the role is becoming undesirabl­e for new nurses. “Look at what practice nurses did over Covid, we worked our asses off, we worked long, we worked hard to protect the DHB services. The community pay for it in the end.”

Hauora Taiwhenua (Rural Health Network) chairwoman Dr Fiona Bolden said that general practices in rural areas were already struggling to meet the demands placed upon them.

“Small rural general practices and community-funded rural hospitals do not have the financial flexibilit­y to be able to increase their wages to the DHB equivalent,” Bolden said.

Andrew Little said the Government is also negotiatin­g pay-equity agreements with midwives, allied health workers and homecare and support workers.

The funding will get to the private and non-Government employers through changes to contracts with Te Whatu Ora and with Te Aka Whai Ora — the Māori Health Authority.

“I expect these contract changes will happen in the first part of next year, follow by mental health and addiction facilities, organisati­ons caring for the disabled and other types of residentia­l care, and then other Government-funded health services.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand