The Timaru Herald

Primary teachers to decide on pay offer

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Meetings are kicking off across the country this week with primary teachers deciding whether to accept the latest pay offer from the Government – an offer already criticised by the union as falling ‘‘well short’’.

NZEI President Liam Rutherford said last week the offer ‘‘doesn’t look like it will come close to touching the sides of the issues’’ teachers and principals are facing.

Some of those issues he said included requests to reduce class sizes and more funding for support staff, with the ‘‘real pinch point’’ of pay offers being the cost of living.

Conversati­on he had with members to date was that the offer had fallen ‘‘well short’’.

The paid union meetings will run from November 14 to 25, lasting an hour each. Bargaining began mid-2022. Anna Welanyk, of the Ministry of Education, said it was continuing negotiatio­ns with the union ‘‘in good faith and discussing all issues as part of these negotiatio­ns’’.

Associate Education Minister Jan Tinetti said in September more than $1.2 billion was spent every year on learning support, the total investment had grown each year since the 2018 Budget and alongside increases to support the learning support action plan, there had been one-off increases to respond to Covid-19 challenges.

It comes as officials and multiple unions are deep in negotiatio­ns for pay increases across the public service, with one initial offer on the table of a $6000 increase over two years.

Last week, Stuff revealed one of the pay offers from the Public Service Commission made to ‘‘some’’ education and public service unions. The letter was dated as guidance for October 28.

In the letter, the offer for expired collective agreements was for a $6000 base scale increase, on average, over a two-year term. That included a $4000 increase for 2022/23, and a further increase of $2000 after 12 months in the 2023/24 year.

It would increase base scale rates and be dependent on the pay structure in each collective agreement.

Alex Chadwick, of the Public Service Commission, who is leading the pay adjustment taskforce, said at the time it involved multiemplo­yer, multi-union, good-faith bargaining across a number of sectors, including the public service, education, health, defence and police. ‘‘As in any collective bargaining, multiple offers will be exchanged and negotiated . . .’’

It’s been one week since a boat capsized in Auckland’s Manukau Harbour with five people on board, leaving one person dead and another, a 10-year-old boy, still missing. Yesterday morning, the police told Stuff they will be continuing their aerial search during the day. The search for the boy, a pupil of Sandspit Road School in Waiuku, has entered its eighth day, resuming on Saturday after bad weather hindered the search efforts on Friday. Sandspit Road School principal Sharyn de Jonge said the school community was ‘‘absolutely devastated’’ by the incident. A community group banded together to conduct their own search for the young boy, organised via the Manukau Harbour Beach Boating and Fishing Facebook group. Police said they were aware of a search being coordinate­d by the public.

One person has died and three others are seriously injured following an incident in Auckland’s East Tamaki. Three people with serious stab wounds and one person with a serious gunshot wound selfpresen­ted at Middlemore Hospital around 4.30am yesterday. Police said one later died, while the other three remained in a serious condition in hospital. Detective Inspector Tofilau Fa’amanuia Va’aelua said the incident took place in a carpark off Lady Fisher Pl in the Highbrook Drive area. The scene of the incident is a remote piece of park land surrounded by factories within an industrial area, next to the Tamaki estuary. A police team was working in the area yesterday afternoon, where tents were erected and a blue tarp could be seen lying on the fields.

 ?? ?? Liam Rutherford
Liam Rutherford

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