Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Nurses walk off job in Britain

Ambulance workers join country’s latest strike over wages

- JILL LAWLESS

LONDON — Tens of thousands of British nurses and ambulance staff walked off the job Monday in what unions called the biggest strike in the history of the country’s public health system.

The walkout is the latest in a wave of strikes that has disrupted Britons’ lives for months, as workers — especially in the public sector — demand pay raises to keep pace with double-digit inflation. Teachers, train drivers, airport baggage handlers, border staff, driving instructor­s, bus drivers and postal workers also have walked off their jobs in recent months to demand higher pay.

Teachers, health workers and many others say their wages have fallen in real terms over the past decade, and a cost-ofliving crisis fueled by sharply rising food and energy prices has left many struggling to pay their bills.

Victoria Busk, a trainee nursing associate at a trauma center in Birmingham of central England, said hospitals were understaff­ed and nurses “run off our feet 24/7.”

“We need people to want to come into” the profession, she said. “The only way that we’re going to get that is by raising wages and making sure it is something that people want to do.”

Britain’s annual inflation rate was 10.5% in December, a 41-year high. The Conservati­ve government argues that giving public sector staffers pay increases of 10% or more would drive inflation even higher.

The strike adds more pressure on the state-funded National Health Service, which is already staggering under demand from winter viruses, staff shortages and backlogs built up during the covid-19 pandemic.

Nursing unions say emergency care and cancer treatment will continue during the 48-hour walkout, but thousands of appointmen­ts and procedures will likely be postponed.

The ambulance service says it will respond to the most urgent calls during a daylong strike. But Business Secretary Grant Shapps said the strike could put lives at risk, leaving people with “a postcode lottery when it comes to having a heart attack or a stroke.”

Sharon Graham, general secretary of the Unite union representi­ng some ambulance workers, said Sunday that there were “no talks at any level whatsoever with the government” about pay. She urged Prime Minister Rishi Sunak to “come to the table and negotiate — roll your sleeves up and negotiate on the pay in the NHS — that is what’s required.”

Pat Cullen, head of the Royal College of Nursing union, also said a “meaningful” pay offer from the British government could bring the strike “to a swift close.”

Sunak’s spokesman, Max Blain, said Monday that there was no plan for the prime minister to get directly involved in talks, but “we want to keep discussing how we can find a path forward with the unions.”

Unions are seeking a pay raise for the current year, but the government says it will only talk about the year ahead.

Monday’s nursing strike affects England. In Scotland and Wales — which have semiautono­mous government­s in charge of health policy — unions have suspended walkouts while negotiatio­ns continue.

Sunak’s government also has angered unions by introducin­g a bill that will make it harder for key workers to strike by setting “minimum safety levels” for firefighte­rs, ambulance services and railways that must be maintained during a walkout.

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