Daily Mail

NHS strikes will go ahead despite bid to back-date pay deal

- By Jason Groves and Shaun Wooller

NURSES and ambulance drivers could have their next pay rise brought forward by three months in a bid to end the wave of strikes hitting the NHS.

Health Secretary Steve Barclay yesterday agreed to examine union proposals that would see the 2023/24 pay settlement due in April back-dated to this month.

If health workers are offered a five per cent rise in April, a nurse on an average £33,338 would get an increase of £1,670. Back- dating this to January would mean an extra £417.

But the move was last night not enough to head off the immediate threat of more strikes, with ambulance drivers saying they would press ahead with a walkout in parts of the country tomorrow. Nurses said walkouts scheduled for January 18 and 19 would go ahead. Another ambulance strike is scheduled for January 23.

Whitehall sources questioned whether the Treasury would agree to sign off the back-dating plan, which would increase the cost of the pay deal by a quarter. Downing Street warned the deal would have to be funded from existing budgets, meaning potential cuts to services if pay awards are significan­tly above the 3.5 per cent pencilled in by the Treasury.

In a sign that the Government fears the disputes could last for months, ministers will today press ahead with the publicatio­n of new strike laws that will require unions in key sectors like emergency cover and the rail industry to provide

minimum service levels during strikes. The TUC will convene a meeting of union leaders today to discuss further coordinati­on of strikes this winter in a bid to force ministers to back down. Senior union representa­tives in the health, education and transport sectors held separate meetings with ministers yesterday after Rishi Sunak offered to have an

‘open’ discussion about pay. Government sources insisted that the meetings had been ‘positive’, but unions left warning that industrial action would go ahead.

Rachel Harrison, of the GMB union, said the talks ‘fell well short’ of what was needed.

She added: ‘There was some engagement on pay but not a concrete offer that could help resolve this dispute.’ Joanne Galbraith- Marten, of the Royal College of Nursing, said there was ‘no resolution to our dispute yet in sight’ and warned that strikes by nurses next week would go ahead.

She added: ‘Today’s meeting was bitterly disappoint­ing. Ministers have a distance to travel to avert next week’s nurse strike.’ Unite union negotiator Onay Kasab said Mr Barclay had warned that extra pay would depend on increased productivi­ty – an idea he branded ‘an insult’.

He said: ‘That is absolutely ludicrous. This isn’t a factory we’re talking about – we’re talking about people who are working well beyond their contracted hours anyway just to get the job done because... they care so much.’

Sara Gorton, head of health at Unison, said the Government’s willingnes­s to discuss

‘Cost would rise by a quarter’

‘Major step forward’

pay was a ‘major step forward’, but warned that ‘cold hard cash’ would be needed.

She added: ‘We did actually manage to talk about pay – we didn’t get the tangible concession­s that we might have hoped for that would enable us to call off the strikes later this week. But it was definitely progress when you’re in a room with the Secretary of State talking about pay,.’

The PM earlier fuelled speculatio­n that the Government might offer striking public sector workers a one-off payment to settle disputes when he refused to rule out the move. Mr Sunak said ministers were ‘ happy to talk about pay demands... anchored in what’s reasonable, what’s responsibl­e, what’s affordable’.

However, a Government source said the PM was prepared to hold out for months if necessary rather than give in to pay demands that risked fuelling inflation.

 ?? ?? Walkouts: Nurses demand more pay at rally in London
Walkouts: Nurses demand more pay at rally in London

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