The Peterborough Evening Telegraph

Teachers march to council offices

- By Darren Calpin darren.calpin@nationalwo­rld.com Twitter:@peterborou­ghtel

Peterborou­gh teachers striking over pay and working conditions marched on the city’s council offices at Fletton Quays.

More than 40 educators from across the city marched on Thursday from St John’s Church in the city centre to thenewcoun­ciloffices­atSand Martin House to hand deliver letters pleading for support from all 58 city councillor­s.

The march followed a morning of picket-line strikes which saw a good number of thecity’sschoolscl­osedorrunn­ing limited classes.

Charlotte Davis, the Peterborou­gh Branch and District Secretary of the National Education Union (NEU), said “We have a bag of letters, 58 in fact, for all local councillor­s in Peterborou­gh.”

She said the aim of delivering the same letter to all 58 councillor­s was to get them to see that, as well as demoralisi­ng teachers and reducing students’ life opportunit­ies, poor and limited resources is putting people off joining the teaching profession.

“Our schools in Peterborou­gh are struggling,” Ms Davis said.

“The letter explains what’s happening nationally, as well as locally and has quotes from localteach­ersandsupp­ortstaff aboutthepa­y,recruitmen­tand retentioni­ssuesthata­reaffectin­g our pupils in our schools.”

Ms Davis said some of the quotes in the letters show the situation is “at the point that it’s an emergency now” with clear health and safety issues to consider. “We’re talking about classes thatdon’thavequali­fiedteache­rs and haven’t got support staff for our most vulnerable children with special needs.”

“It’s a scary and worrying picture,” she said, and they [councillor­s] need to hear about it.”

John Cooper, who is the NEU Union Representa­tive at Jack Hunt school was one of many teachers who echoed Charlotte’s concerns.

“Teachers are being underpaid and we are struggling to teachallof­thesubject­sthatwe needtoteac­htothestud­entsin our classes,” he said.

Physics teacher Mr Cooper said he’d seen recruitmen­t nose-dive over recent years. “Nobody is joining,” he noted,

talking specifical­ly about science teaching, “we can only recruit about 20 per cent of the teachers we need each and every year.”

The government had offered teachers in England a one-off payment of £1,000 and a 4.3% pay rise.

In addition, the starting salary for teachers in England is due to rise to £30,000 a year by September.

Ms Davis explained why all four teaching unions, includingt­heNEU,rejectedth­isoffer.

“The offer that was made to us by Gillian Keegan was not fully-funded by government.

“So the biggest issue we’ve got here is - it may or may not have been a good offer - but because it wasn’t fully-funded, 98% of our members said ‘no - it’s not acceptable’.

“We cannot have anything coming out of school budgets which are already stretched: absolutely stretched beyond what is comprehens­ible at the moment.”

Ms Davis urged both national government and local councillor­s to listen to teachers’ pleas.

“Please listen to us,” she said, “we’re not trying to be difficult. We’re trying to tell you what’s really going on.”

 ?? ?? More than 30 teachers took to the streets in Peterborou­gh to walk from St Johns Church in the city centre to Sand Martin House.
More than 30 teachers took to the streets in Peterborou­gh to walk from St Johns Church in the city centre to Sand Martin House.
 ?? ?? Charlotte Davis handed over the 58 letters.
Charlotte Davis handed over the 58 letters.

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