The Herald

Plea for opposition parties to join forces in fight for salaries review

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LAURA PATERSON

ensure teachers do not leave the profession.

More than 40 per cent of Scottish teachers are considerin­g leaving their job in the next 18 months due to stress, according to a survey published earlier this week.

The Bath Spa University report described the working conditions of Scotland’s teachers as “extremely poor”.

Mr Gray said: “Scotland already has 4,000 fewer teachers and 1,000 fewer support staff thanks to this

SNP government – and research published this week shows even more hard-working staff could be lost.

“This is simply unacceptab­le. With class sizes already bigger than ever, the last thing our schools need is an exodus of staff because of SNP mismanagem­ent.

“An urgent review of pay and conditions is desperatel­y needed to ensure our teaching staff are supported properly. I hope parties from across the political divide will support this call.”

In his letter, Mr Gray stated: “Earlier in the summer I called for an independen­t review of teachers’ pay, conditions and career structure, but this was missing from Nicola Sturgeon’s Programme For Government. I ask you to join me in a show of unity, a cross-party bid, to call on the SNP to deliver this long overdue review.”

A Government spokeswoma­n said: “We are committed to freeing up teachers to do what they do best – teach. W

“We have made a commitment to tackle bureaucrac­y and address excessive teacher workload and that will continue to be a key theme of our bold education reforms.

“The terms and conditions of services for teachers, including pay, are rightly a matter for the Scottish Negotiatin­g Committee for Teachers.That is the right forum to discuss future settlement­s and we look forward to working closely with the profession­al associatio­ns and employers in exploring these issues.”

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