Daily Mail

Nurses union chief to meet minister amid pay deadlock

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THE head of the Royal College of Nursing will meet the Health Secretary as she pursues a double-digit pay rise for nurses.

Pat Cullen told members at the union’s annual conference yesterday that her meeting with Steve Barclay is ‘not about negotiatio­ns’, however. She will instead explain why nurses have rejected a pay settlement ahead of a new strike ballot, which will open on May 23 and close on June 23.

The RCN has warned that strikes could go on until Christmas, which would force thousands more operations and appointmen­ts to be cancelled.

Ms Cullen told the congress in Brighton: ‘If you give the college another six-month mandate for strike action across the whole of England’s NHS, then Government will be forced to act once more.’

She said the Government may be watching the conference, adding: ‘I’ll tell you why… Who emailed me last night at nine o’clock?’ To cheers from the

‘Negotiatio­ns will not be reopened’

audience, she said: ‘The Health Secretary wants to see me. Colleagues, this is not about negotiatio­ns, but it is important that I go and tell him again why many of you voted to reject the pay offer.’

A Department of Health and Social Care source said Mr Barclay is happy to listen to nurses’ concerns but stressed the current pay deal is ‘final’ and negotiatio­ns ‘will not be reopened’, adding: ‘The Health Secretary wants to work constructi­vely with unions on making the NHS a better place to work.’

Yesterday’s conference also heard claims that NHS trusts are using students as unpaid healthcare assistants and employing cheaper nursing associates – who have less training than registered nurses – to plug gaps in rotas.

With around 0 nurses leaving the profession every week, and 45,000 vacancies in England, the less-qualified workers are said to be picking up the workload but for less pay.

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