Civil Service World

DAVE PENMAN LESSONS FROM A PACE SETTING PAY DEAL

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THE NEW PAY PACKAGE FROM HMRC SHOWS A DEPARTMENT THAT IS SETTING THE PACE IN PAY AND REWARD FOR CIVIL SERVANTS. OTHER DEPARTMENT­S SHOULD HURRY TO CATCH UP

In many ways I probably wouldn’t be here writing this if John Major’s Conservati­ve government hadn’t developed its pay delegation strategy in the early 90s. I got my first step up the union ladder when I was selected for a role in supporting the unions (five at that time) in the Department of Social Security as they prepared for the introducti­on of pay delegation. I left my role as counter manager at Cumbernaul­d Benefits Agency, one I absolutely loved, for my first full-time trade union role on secondment. I was soon immersed in job evaluation, progressio­n arrangemen­ts (or lack of them) and reviews of every pay element you can think of from London weighting to shift premia. When, two years later, I got my first job working for a union, in what is now PCS, it was dealing with the impact of full pay delegation on the agencies and non-department­al public bodies in Scotland. Oh, the joys of job evaluating Royal Parks Constabula­ry o cers whilst trying to protect allowances for having a shotgun at home for our members in Scottish Natural Heritage.

A few years later I moved to London and started work at the FDA. Twentyone years later and it’s fair to say I’ve seen almost everything pay delegation has had to throw at civil servants. Delegation was intended to provide flexibilit­y for employers to tailor their pay arrangemen­ts to their very di erent needs.

The reality, however, has been very di erent. Increasing­ly pay delegation simply became a tool of Treasury control, with little scope for genuine divergence before pay restraint became the default.

Reward strategy, which should drive organisati­onal and behavioura­l change, has been relegated to an afterthoug­ht by the power dynamic of Whitehall, with complete disinteres­t from a succession of ministers whose concern for civil service pay was limited to the signal it sends elsewhere in the economy. In almost three decades, there have only been a handful of pay settlement­s that have set the pace across the service.

HM Revenue and Customs’s pay o er for 2020-23 (see page

6), in this context, is truly groundbrea­king. It follows a path that the Department for Work and Pensions trod a couple of years ago and, driven by changing business needs, seeks flexibilit­y over hours of operation in exchange for a higher pay award. It also harmonises a number of terms and conditions as well as helping to significan­tly improve progressio­n times to the max of the range. No deal can be all things to all people, certainly not in an organisati­on the size of HMRC. There are quid pro quos on annual leave and working patterns, but the scope and ambition of the deal is a testament to the drive, commitment and skill of negotiator­s on both sides of the table and was almost two years in the making. With most of the civil service su ering in a pay freeze, many will be looking at the pay rises on o er over the three years of this deal, which includes 2021. The truly groundbrea­king elements, however, lie elsewhere.

For the first time, grade 6s and 7s in HMRC will have a contractua­l right to flexitime, and to take up to 28 days flexi-leave a year. Long working hours have blighted the civil service for decades. For too long it has been accepted by employers that the culture of excessive hours is just a by-product of being at a senior grade. Our latest survey, conducted at the end of last year, showed that over 40% of respondent­s were working at least an extra six hours, every week, unpaid, and threequart­ers reported it a ecting their wellbeing.

The deal also embeds what we’ve learned from the last 12 months on remote working.

Many department­s will be similarly looking at hard-wiring greater flexibilit­y, and HMRC’s signal of intent will help pave the way.

Whether 2021 is simply a pay pause or the start of a pay freeze, employers across the civil service should be looking to see how they can improve the total package available to sta . The lockdown has, for many, reignited the demand for a greater work-life balance. There should be nothing to stop civil service employers understand­ing the value of this to employees and delivering practical and meaningful commitment­s when cash reward is restrained.

Many of these will already be in the gift of department­s without the need for Treasury/

Cabinet O ce approval. What would be truly groundbrea­king though, is greater flexibilit­y in this year’s civil service pay guidance over elements that come with little or no direct cost.

In a year when the civil service has been at the forefront of the government’s response to the health and economic emergencie­s, this could be a tangible recognitio­n from ministers for all that incredible work. Surely that would be something worthy of applause.

Dave Penman is the general secretary of the FDA union. He tweets @FDAgensec

 ??  ?? “The scope and ambition of the deal is a testament to the drive, commitment and skill of negotiator­s on both sides of the table and was almost two years in the making”
“The scope and ambition of the deal is a testament to the drive, commitment and skill of negotiator­s on both sides of the table and was almost two years in the making”

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