The Herald

More than nine in ten members of council union vote to reject pay offer

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MORE than nine in 10 members of the GMB Scotland union have rejected a “derisory” pay offer for council workers, increasing the prospect of strikes.

An offer on the table from the Scottish Government would see workers earning less than £25,000 get an £800 rise, while those earning £25,000 to £40,000 would get a 2% increase. Those making more than this would be awarded 1%.

But the GMB Scotland union said 93% of its members had rejected the offer, “increasing the prospect of significan­t industrial action across local services this summer”.

GMB, which represents 20,000 local government workers, predominan­tly in services such as home care, refuse, school support, and roads and maintenanc­e, is calling for a “significan­tly improved offer”.

It comes after union bosses called on First Minister Nicola Sturgeon to urgently intervene over the controvers­ial pay proposal.

Pat Rafferty, the Scottish secretary of the Unite trade union, said the offer that has been made so far is “more like a slap in the face rather than a clap for local government workers”.

He contrasted the offer made to council workers with that made to health staff, with the Scottish Government having offered many NHS employees a 4% rise on top of the £500 thank-you payment they received for their efforts during the Covid-19 pandemic.

More than half (55%) of local government workers earn less than £25,000 a year, Unite said, with around three-quarters (75%) on less than the UK national average wage of £32,875.

GMB Scotland’s senior organiser for public services, Drew Duffy, said: “This is a clear demonstrat­ion from key workers across Scottish local government that Kate Forbes’ valuation of their efforts isn’t anywhere near good enough.”

A spokesman for local government body Cosla said on Wednesday: “We have made an offer to our trade union colleagues. This offer remains on the table.”

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