Wednesday, 31 July 2019

Come rain or shine, UNISON’s on the case

Schools are out and the summer holiday season is in full swing, but your union never rests and July was another busy month.

It opened with a living wage win in Cheshire, after the union successfully negotiated a deal with Edsential for school caters and cleaners to be paid at least £9 an hour from the beginning of July.

Other school support staff will also will also get a pay rise in the deal.

Your new national executive council met at UNISON Centre early in the month to get down to business, with local government funding and Brexit dominating discussions General secretary Dave Prentis noted that the Tory Party leadership contenders had plenty to say about making tax cuts for the rich – but not a word to say about how the government they’d been a part of had slashed council funding in particular.

Of course, by the end of the month, we knew who’d won that little battle, as Boris Johnson – a man never known to let anything stand in the way of his personal ambitions – finally landed himself the job he clearly imagines he was born for.

He had, said Mr Prentis, “spent the past few months talking up a no-deal Brexit that would be catastrophic for public services. But after a decade of austerity, those services can’t afford the shock that crashing out of Europe without a deal would cause.

“Every single one of us must now hold Johnson to his promises – especially the infamous £350 million a week for the NHS. The time for talk is over, our beleaguered public services – particularly social care – demand serious and urgent attention.

“Prime ministers should be elected by the whole country, not an out-of-touch few. If Boris Johnson really believes he’s ready to lead the country, he should call a general election.”

But back to 8 July – and facilities and estates staff across the Bradford Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust took to the picket lines at 6am, as they began a week of action against trust plans to shift their jobs to a wholly-owned subsidiary.

In London, it was time for Pride, with UNISON proudly joining 1.5 million people on the capital’s streets.

But there was a serious message as well as the party atmosphere – it enabled people to show solidarity with those who are persecuted and killed for who they dare to love, and to protest against continuing hate and intolerance.

Meanwhile, a ballot was announced for UNISON members in higher education, after employers made a ‘final offer’ of just 1.8% – well below inflation. That will take place in the autumn, but officers have already started preparing.

At the Durham Miners’ Gala, Mr Prentis told the crowds that “there is an alternative” to the Tories’ austerity, as he called for properly funded public services.

In the middle of the month, members at Birmingham University began a second round of industrial action after rejecting an offer of a non-consolidated one-off payment of 1% of their salary, or £100 if that was more, for the 2018-19 pay round.

The employer improved that slightly before the strike, but it would still mean staff suffering a real-terms pay loss on their already low pay.

July saw us continue to celebrate our Local Service Champions – street cleaner Jozef (above) was just one, while Peterborough youth worker Tahir (below), already honoured for service to his community, was another.

In Scotland, UNISON took a step toward regaining recognition at care charity Cornerstone, with the Central Arbitration Committee agreeing that the union’s bid for statutory recognition can go ahead.

The union has organised and represented staff at the charity for the past 24 years, until November last year, when Cornerstone derecognised it and ripped up its long-standing collective bargaining agreement following a dispute with its workforce on pay and the charity’s strategic plan.

At the beginning of this week, BBC Radio 4 began broadcasting a week-long drama about the problems of 15-minute care visits, based on the experiences of UNISON member Caroline Firmin, whose campaigning saw Southwark Council become one of the first councils in the UK to adopt our Ethical Care Charter.

And the month ended with staff employed by private contractor Compass, who work at Blackpool NHS Teaching Hospitals, St Helens Hospital and Whiston Hospital taking strike action.

Hospital cleaners, caterers, porters, receptionists and security workers are among almost 300 employees affected.

Most of the outsourced staff involved are only paid the minimum wage of £8.21 an hour, yet they work alongside NHS staff in the same role who are paid £9.03 an hour – the NHS’s lowest pay scale. That’s a difference of 82p an hour – £1,600 a year for full-time staff.

It might be summer, but we’re still on the case!

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Outsourced NHS staff in Blackpool and St Helens strike over pay and conditions   

Staff employed by the private contractor Compass who work at Blackpool NHS Teaching Hospitals, St Helens Hospital and Whiston Hospital are striking today (Wednesday). The move is in protest at their employer’s failure to match NHS pay rates and working conditions, says UNISON.

Hospital cleaners, caterers, porters, receptionists and security workers are among almost 300 employees affected. Most of the outsourced Compass staff involved are only paid the minimum wage rate of £8.21 an hour, yet they work alongside NHS staff in the same role who are paid £9.03 an hour – the NHS’s lowest pay scale. This difference of 82p an hour is worth £1,600 a year for full-time staff, UNISON says.

Compass staff working at St Helens and Whiston hospitals are further disadvantaged as they don’t receive any shift bonuses for working weekends or bank holidays. Their NHS colleagues, in the same roles, receive time-and-a-half on Saturdays and double pay on Sundays and bank holidays. Outsourced staff in Blackpool Teaching Hospital receive a paltry 50p an hour extra for weekend or bank holiday shifts.

In addition, Compass employees receive only statutory sick pay, whereas their NHS colleagues are able to access a comprehensive sick pay scheme.

A further planned strike at Liverpool Heart and Chest Hospital NHS Foundation Trust was called off yesterday evening after the trust – rather than the company – agreed to fund the pay parity with NHS colleagues.

UNISON’s general secretary Dave Prentis said: “Compass made £1.7bn in profit last year alone, so we refuse to accept its claim that it can’t afford an 82p pay rise for its lowest paid NHS staff.

“Strike action is always a last resort, but we can’t stand by while outsourced and in-house staff are paid completely different rates for the same role. Cleaners, caterers, porters, receptionists and security staff play a vital role in the NHS, and their contribution must be recognised.”

UNISON North West regional organiser Maria Moss said of the Liverpool deal: “This agreement is excellent news for Compass staff at Liverpool Heart and Chest. They make a huge contribution to the health service and they will now receive the NHS rate for the job.

“Their determination and unity has delivered results. We now hope their colleagues in St Helens and Blackpool are fairly treated by Compass.”

Jean Johnson, a catering assistant employed by Compass at Whiston Hospital, said: “I work with colleagues who do exactly the same job. We all work incredibly hard preparing food for patients and yet some are paid a lot more than me. It’s just not right.

“It’s especially bad at the weekends as some colleagues are getting enhancements for working unsociable hours. I’d happily do more overtime, but it just seems completely unfair to go in and earn so much less than others.

“I don’t go off sick lightly, but I had an operation and couldn’t go into work for three months. I struggled to pay my bills because I wasn’t receiving full sick pay.”

Click here to send a message of support to the strikers

Notes to editors:
– Since the hospital staff announced their plans to strike, Compass met with UNISON to seek to find a resolution to the dispute. Compass bosses did make an offer to their St Helens hospital workers, in order to try to prevent today’s strike but it was unanimously rejected at union meetings which took place over the weekend. The company made no offer to hospital workers at Blackpool Teaching Hospitals.
– Liverpool Heart and Chest Hospital NHS Foundation Trust agreed to the funding to ensure pay parity, including all enhancements. This will be back paid from April 2018.
– Picket lines will be in place outside Blackpool Victoria Hospital today (Wednesday) from 7am until 2pm. There will then be a rally at 12.30pm today at Henley Park, Warrington Road, Whiston, L35 5AL.
– High-resolution photos available upon request to c.mcgurran@unison.co.uk
– Interviews can be arranged upon request.
– UNISON is the UK’s largest union, with more than 1.3 million members providing public services – in education, local government, the NHS, police service and energy. They are employed in both the public and private sectors.

Media Contacts:
Conor McGurran T: 07817 120903 E: c.mcgurran@unison.co.uk
Siobhan Cooley T: 0207 121 5555 E: s.cooley@unison.co.uk

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Tuesday, 30 July 2019

No more job cuts at British Gas as chief exec leaves, says UNISON

Commenting on today’s announcement of a change of strategy at British Gas parent company Centrica and the departure of chief executive Iain Conn, UNISON national officer for energy Matt Lay said:

“Iain Conn cannot solely be blamed for the company’s present challenges, but if the business is to move forward, it is right for him to stand down

“The company can’t continue to axe thousands of front-line staff to make savings, so the cut in dividend is welcome to allow more investment for the future and to strengthen the balance sheet.

“Although the outlook looks better for the second half of the year, UNISON remains concerned for thousands of British Gas employees, many of whom are members.”

Notes to editors:
– UNISON is the UK’s largest union, with more than 1.3 million members providing public services – in education, local government, the NHS, police service and energy. They are employed in both the public and private sectors.

Media contacts:
Anthony Barnes T: 0207 121 5255 M: 07834 864794E: a.barnes@unison.co.uk
Siobhan Cooley T: 0207 121 5555 M: 07816 538199 E: s.cooley@unison.co.uk

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Blog: Fighting for the future of council housing

Council housing means so much to our union and to me personally. Good quality, affordable council housing is the best way to ensure that everyone has a place to call home. At a time when housing has become so expensive that many public service workers can’t afford to live anywhere near where they work, council housing is more important than ever.

More than all that though – council housing means so much to me, because like so many UNISON members, I was brought up in a council house in inner-city Leeds. I know that council housing is vital to our country’s future, because like millions of people it’s part of my own life story and I know what a huge difference it can make to any family.

That’s why I’m delighted that this week we’re celebrating 100 years of council housing.

In 1919, in the aftermath of war, waged by the wealthy but fought by working people, the Housing and Town Planning Act was signed into law. This straightforward sounding piece of legislation – also known as the “Addison Act” made the provision of housing a national responsibility, and saw homes “fit for heroes” built across the country. In the years that followed, millions of people gained the same security that my family benefited from.

Of course in recent decades, council housing has come under sustained attack. Instead of being homes for everyone who needs them, council housing is all too often spoken of as if it were an option of last resort, rather than housing for everyone.

I’m proud that UNISON has always stood up for council housing, against the so-called “right to buy” which decimated it and for the new council houses that our people and our communities need. So as we celebrate one hundred years of council housing, lets commit ourselves to fighting for another hundred years of housing as a national collective responsibility – for the millions of us who know what a difference decent council housing can make.

Read UNISON’s briefing “The housing crisis 100 years on: time to invest in a new generation of quality homes”.

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Monday, 29 July 2019

New radio drama highlights the plight of care workers pushed to their limits

A care worker, whose personal campaign to end the indignity suffered by thousands of elderly people during 15-minute homecare visits, is the inspiration behind a new play to be broadcast every day this week on BBC Radio 4, says her union UNISON.

Flying Visits is loosely based on the experiences of care worker Caroline Firmin who, like many care workers across the UK, was being allocated just quarter of an hour to look after each of the elderly and vulnerable people on her patch.

Frustrated with the difficult and often impossible decisions it was forcing her to make, Caroline gave a heartfelt speech to councillors at Southwark Council, the South London borough responsible for commissioning care services.

Caroline described the impossibility of trying to deliver a basic standard of care in such a short space of time. As a result, Southwark Council abolished 15-minute visits and became one of the first local authorities to adopt UNISON’s ethical care charter*.

Despite the difficulties of caring for people with complex needs in such a short time period, 15-minute visits are still being commissioned by around a fifth of councils in England and Wales, says UNISON.

These fleeting appointments are meant to meet all the elderly or vulnerable person’s needs for the day, but often fall well short of what’s required, says UNISON.

The drama stars BAFTA-winning actress Claire Rushbrook as the lead figure, Hayleigh. Each episode will last 15 minutes, the same length of time many workers are allocated to administer care.

Playwright Charlotte Bogard Macleod said: “I’ve always been obsessed by time and wondered what could be achieved in a quarter of an hour. From Jamie Oliver’s meal plans to Andy Warhol’s fame, 15 minutes is an iconic slot of time.

“Research led me to an article about homecare workers and the flying visits they are forced to make. It seemed extraordinary that as a society we could allow so little time to care for the elderly and most vulnerable.

“For the Flying Visits research I talked to care workers, homecare companies, councillors, MPs, doctors and government ministers.  All were struggling with a system that clearly wasn’t working and all agreed social care was in crisis. But two years on, nothing has changed. It’s time to fix that now.”

Commenting on the drama, UNISON national care officer Matt Egan – who helped Charlotte with her research – said: “This drama shines a light on a national scandal that must end.

“Care workers and the people they look after are being pushed to breaking point as dangerously short care visits have become the new norm.

“The elderly and those dedicated to caring for them are being failed by a government that’s slashed councils’ care budgets, requiring workers to do more and more in less and less time. This not only puts huge stress on employees, it also denies dignity to the vulnerable people they’re trying to help.

“In his first speech on the steps of Downing Street, the new Prime Minister pledged to fix social care. He must act now to save a system that’s creaking at the seams.”

Notes to editors:
– Flying Visits is to be broadcast every day this week at 10.45am on BBC Radio 4 immediately after Woman’s Hour. Caroline the care worker and Charlotte the playwright are both available for interview on request.Matt Matt
-*UNISON’s ethical care charter aims to help local councils improve homecare for the vulnerable people they’re responsible for. It’s a set of commitments that councils make that fix minimum standards to protect the dignity and quality of life for those people and the workers who care for them. It includes paying homecare staff for their travel time, ending 15-minute visits and ensuring care workers earn at least the real living wage (currently £9 an hour, £10.55 in London).
– Southwark Council was one of the first local authorities to sign UNISON’s charter. Southwark Councillor Jasmine Ali, Cabinet Member for Children, Schools and Adult Care said: “We knew that it was absolutely the right thing to do. Under the ethical care charter there have been many positive changes. The council has been able to better hold on to its care staff and the people they care for are happier with the service provided. Homecare services provide essential support and help people to live safely and independently. The high quality of these services is essential.”
– UNISON is the UK’s largest union, with more than 1.3 million members providing public services – in education, local government, the NHS, police service and energy. They are employed in both the public and private sectors.

Media contacts:
Siobhan Cooley T: 0207 121 5555 M: 07816 538199 E: s.cooley@unison.co.uk
Anthony Barnes T: 0207 121 5255 M: 07834 864794 E: a.barnes@unison.co.uk

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Thursday, 25 July 2019

We need a maximum safe working temperature

UNISON has welcomed Labour’s pledge to legislate for a maximum safe working temperature, with legal safeguards to help workers stay cool.

The party revealed plans today for changes to law recruiting employer to put effective measures in place if the workplace temperature gets above 30˚ Celsius – or 27˚C for those doing strenuous work.

Those measures could include flexible working and travel arrangements, extra breaks, access to water, cooling systems and air conditioning, flexible dress codes or the provision of protective clothing.

Current health and safety legislation specifies minimum working temperatures, but not a maximum. This means most workers have no legal safeguards to protect them from working during uncomfortably high temperatures or dangerous extreme heat.

UNISON head of health and safety Robert Baughan points out that both the union and the TUC “have long called for indoor maximum of 30˚C. We would also call on employers to do more to protect those working outdoors in these temperatures.

“The sort of temperatures we are seeing this week may mean it is just not safe to carry on working as normal. A change of duties may need to be considered or stopping work altogether.

“Other measures would include making sure workers are appropriately clothed to protect them from the sun, and making sure they have enough liquid.

“Employers should also consider relaxing dress codes – whether staff are working indoors or outdoors.”

UNISON health and safety information sheet – temperature at work

Health and Safety Executive: Temperature at work FAQs

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Wednesday, 24 July 2019

Unions call for a 10% pay rise for local government workers

The three largest local government unions, representing 1.4 million employees in schools and councils across England, Wales and Northern Ireland have today (Wednesday) submitted a pay claim that attempts to reverse the real terms pay cuts suffered by local authority staff since 2010.

The claim for the year from next April would see the lowest paid staff earning at least £10 per hour, and all other council employees receiving a ten per cent pay rise.

UNISON, GMB and Unite’s joint claim also includes a one-day increase to employees’ annual leave entitlement and a two-hour reduction in the standard working week. It also calls for a review of the workplace causes of stress and mental health issues.

Commenting on the claim UNISON head of local government Jon Richards said: “Council staff have paid a heavy price during the years of austerity, keeping services going when cash was in short supply and hundreds of thousands of their colleagues lost their jobs.

“The government claims the cuts are behind us, but no new money behind the recent pay announcement for teachers, police officers and the armed forces suggests otherwise. The new PM should make good the damage of the past, and fund local government properly to protect jobs, wages and services.”

GMB national secretary Rehana Azam said: “Our members deserve a real pay rise. Boris Johnson needs to put his money where his mouth is and help reverse the last decade’s brutal cuts to our members’ quality of life.

“Local government workers’ earnings have been devalued by up to 22%. After ten years of real terms pay cuts our demand for a 10% pay rise and a minimum of £10 an hour is more than reasonable.

“Two out of three people now want the government to increase spending on public services – and all political parties agree the public sector needs greater investment.

“GMB is campaigning for pay justice. It’s high time the government started properly investing in our public services and local government workers.”

Unite national officer for local government Jim Kennedy said: “We are strongly supporting a 10 per cent pay increase and a £10 minimum rate claim for local government workers in England, Wales and Northern Ireland for the year starting April 2020.

“There are other highly important elements to our claim that revolve around work life balance and the wellbeing of our members mental health.

“Our claim is based on the fact that local government staff have borne the brunt of the government’s harsh austerity regime since 2010. Our members have seen their pay cut in real terms by 22 per cent since then and they need a substantial pay lift in recognition of the dedicated work that they do to keep council services running smoothly 24/7.”

For eight years from 2010 council workers faced eight years of government-imposed pay restraint, with their wages either frozen or held to a one per cent pay increase.

Local authority employees are now coming to the end of a two-year pay deal, which included a 2% increase each year, with more for the lowest paid. The unions would like to see the 2020/21 pay deal tackle the fall in living standards school and council workers have faced in the last decade.

The unions are presenting the pay claim to the Local Government Association this afternoon and the employers are expected to respond in the autumn.

Media contacts:
Liz Chinchen T: 0207 121 5463 M: 07778 158175 E: l.chinchen@unison.co.uk
GMB press office M: 07958 156846 E: press.office@gmb.org.uk
Shaun Noble, Unite T: 020 3371 2060 M: 07768 693940 E: shaun.noble@unitetheunion.org

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Tuesday, 23 July 2019

UNISON takes a step forward at Cornerstone

UNISON has taken an important step forward in the fight to regain recognition at Scottish care charity Cornerstone, with the Central Arbitration Committee agreeing that the union’s bid for statutory recognition can go ahead.

The charity employs care workers to provide support and care to “adults, children and young people with disabilities and other support needs” across Scotland.

UNISON has organised and represented staff at the charity for the past 24 years, up until November last year, when Cornerstone derecognised the union and ripped up its long-standing collective bargaining agreement following a dispute with its workforce on pay and the charity’s strategic plan.

The charity told UNISON of its decision at the same time as it told the media, and as the union was preparing for a meeting at ACAS to continue discussions on pay.

With more than 800 members employed by Cornerstone, the union vowed to push for statutory recognition if the charity did not change its mind.

Now that that bid has been given the go-ahead by the Central Arbitration Committee, UNISON and Cornerstone have 20 days to agree the bargaining unit that would be covered by a new recognition agreement. Once that is agreed, it is likely that a ballot of all staff will be needed and statutory recognition granted if 40% of the workforce are in favour.

UNISON Scotland’s head of community Deborah Clarke paid tribute to the stewards and staff of Cornerstone for all their commitment and hard work during this time.

“Cornerstone’s attempts to breach our members’ human rights by ripping up our collective bargaining agreement is disgusting and makes a mockery of the chief executive’s claims to be a Fair Work Employer,” she said.

She added that the union will be pressing ahead with the next moves required to win statutory recognition, something that will be “an unprecedented move”, but “one that members across Cornerstone are confident we can achieve.”

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Boris Johnson must now be held to account for his promises

Commenting on the result of the Conservative leadership election today (Tuesday) UNISON general secretary Dave Prentis said:

“Boris Johnson has spent the past few months talking up a no-deal Brexit that would be catastrophic for public services. But after a decade of austerity, those services can’t afford the shock that crashing out of Europe without a deal would cause.

“Every single one of us must now hold Johnson to his promises – especially the infamous £350 million a week for the NHS. The time for talk is over, our beleaguered public services – particularly social care – demand serious and urgent attention.

“Prime ministers should be elected by the whole country, not an out of touch few. If Boris Johnson really believes he’s ready to lead the country, he should call a general election.”

Notes to editors:
– UNISON is the UK’s largest union, with more than 1.3 million members providing public services – in education, local government, the NHS, police service and energy. They are employed in both the public and private sectors.

Media contacts:
Liz Chinchen T: 0207 121 5463 M: 07778 158175 E: l.chinchen@unison.co.uk
Garfield Myrie T: 0207 121 5546 M: 07432 741565 E: g.myrie@unison.co.uk

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Monday, 22 July 2019

No new pay rise for English school support staff

School staff in England won’t be getting an unexpected pay bonus after the school holidays, despite what some media reports suggested over the weekend. These followed an announcement by Chancellor Philip Hammond of pay rises over 2% for “key” public sector workers.

But all is not what it seems.

For a start, the education pay rise of 2.75% only applies to teachers and heads in England – not to other staff. And the government is only funding 0.75% of the pay rise. The other 2% has to be found from within schools’ existing budgets.

Mr Hammond’s announcement came just days after MPs warned that schools and colleges “desperately need” billions of pounds invested in them.

UNISON national secretary Jon Richards warned that, with English schools being told to find the money for a 2% pay rise for teaching staff themselves, this will inevitably hit their budgets further.

“The government needs to fully fund all pay awards,” he said, “otherwise there will be more job cuts and that will hit pupils’ education.”

He added that support staff are in the second part of a two-year deal and unions are just about to begin a new round of bargaining for 2020 onwards.

Mr Hammond’s announced pay rises also cover police officers – but not police staff – in England and Wales, as well as hospital doctors and dentists, though not other health workers, in England.

The chancellor also announced slightly higher than expected pay rises for senior civil servants in England, Scotland and Wales, and for the armed forces across the UK.

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Saturday, 20 July 2019

Labour’s insourcing plans are a welcome first step, says UNISON

Commenting on the Labour Party’s plans to reverse the trend of public services being outsourced to private contractors and bring services back in-house, UNISON general secretary Dave Prentis said:

“This report is a welcome first step on the road to ending the scourge of public service privatisation. For the first time in twenty years we’re seeing positive signs that Labour understands the damage that outsourcing has caused – and is developing a plan to reverse it.

“I’m looking forward to working with the Shadow Chancellor and other members of the shadow cabinet to deliver on Labour’s conference policy – an end to all privatisation in the public sector in the first term of the next Labour government.”

Notes to editors:
– UNISON is the UK’s largest union, with more than 1.3 million members providing public services – in education, local government, the NHS, police service and energy. They are employed in both the public and private sectors.

Media contacts:
Garfield Myrie T: 0207 121 5546 M: 07432 741565 E: g.myrie@unison.co.uk

Liz Chinchen T: 0207 121 5463 M: 07778 158175 E: l.chinchen@unison.co.uk

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Friday, 19 July 2019

MPs call for multi-billion pound education cash boost

UNISON has welcomed MPs’ call for a “multi-billion pound cash injection” into education in England as highlighting “the true scale of the funding cuts to schools and colleges”.

The call for the investment, together with a proper, long-term funding strategy, comes in a House of Commons education select committee report on education funding in England. Education in Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland is a devolved matter.

UNISON and other education unions, as well as headteachers, have been warning about the effect of budget cuts by the Westminster government. The investigation by the Commons committee found that schools and colleges “desperately need” more money.

UNISON national secretary Jon Richards said its report shows “the true scale of the funding cuts” and is “a watershed moment. It backs up what UNISON and others have been saying about the funding crisis caused by this government’s real-term cuts.”

The union points out that support staff in schools and colleges have borne the brunt of these cuts.

Teaching assistants in secondary schools have been cut by 12%, and technicians across schools by 14%. Teaching assistants in primary schools are being made redundant despite higher pupil numbers, including more children with special educational needs.

And a recent survey of staff who provide pastoral support for pupils, carried out by the union, raised significant concerns.

Support staff are often trusted adults and confided in by pupils about a huge range of welfare issues, from parental separation, bereavement and caring responsibilities to bullying, eating problems and suicidal thoughts; regardless of whether this is expected of them in a formal capacity.

But a third of staff in the UNISON survey reported that schools had cut the number of staff providing this support in the past year.

And this is happening as the number of children aged 11 and under being referred to mental health units from primary schools has risen by 50% over three years, according to BBC report.

Mr Richards called on the government to “put an end to this national scandal and commit to a long-term plan to end all funding cuts and to fully fund schools and colleges.”

The article MPs call for multi-billion pound education cash boost first appeared on the UNISON National site.



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Pay rise must be for all and properly funded, says UNISON

Commenting on reports that the Treasury is to announce a public sector pay rise next week, UNISON assistant general secretary Christina McAnea said:

“For almost a decade, the wages of public sector workers have been hit hard by the government’s austerity agenda. The incomes of NHS, council, police and school staff will be a long time in recovery from years of pay caps and wage freezes.

“The Prime Minister appears motivated by concerns for her legacy, not by a genuine desire to repair this damage. Any extra money must be for all public servants, and the government must stump up the extra cash for any pay increase.

“Otherwise services at breaking point will have to be cut further, close altogether or lose yet more staff. Public servants keep this country running and hold communities together. They all deserve a proper wage rise, but not at the expense of the services they deliver with such dedication.”

Notes to editors:
– UNISON is the UK’s largest union, with more than 1.3 million members providing public services – in education, local government, the NHS, police service and energy. They are employed in both the public and private sectors.

Media contacts:
Liz Chinchen T: 0207 121 5463 M: 07778 158175 E: l.chinchen@unison.co.uk

Sophie Goodchild T: 0207 121 5555 M: 07767 325595 E: s.goodchild@unison.co.uk

The article Pay rise must be for all and properly funded, says UNISON first appeared on the UNISON National site.



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Thursday, 18 July 2019

Tahir’s youth mission

Peterborough youth worker Tahir Masood’s journey didn’t start auspiciously. But the only way was up and the UNISON member has been rewarded with a British Empire Medal for services to youth work.

It was 1980. “Fairly new” in the UK from Pakistan, he had left school without any qualifications. “I lacked confidence and my self-esteem was low,” he explains. He was struggling to find work.

But then he came across Louis Nassim, a community education tutor, who suggested that what he needed was to “get some experience”.

Mr Nassim encouraged Tahir to volunteer at a local youth club. For two years, he worked for three evenings a week, walking about a mile each way, to and from his home to the youth club.

With skills and confidence having developed, he was offered a contract for two sessions a week, with a third to be free.

But in 1988, Tahir’s mother fell ill. He left his job and flew back to Pakistan to take care of her, returning five months later after she had recovered.

“Soon after my return, I was offered a new contract. To this day, I am still on that contract,” he explains.

And it was at this point that Tahir also joined Nalgo, becoming involved with Peterborough City branch. Since then he has held many positions and is currently vice chair and equality officer.

He’s also a currently on the Eastern regional council, the Eastern regional disabled members’ committee and the regional Black members’ committee.

During that time, he says that his most memorable experience has been speaking at national conferences.

Of his job, he says: “working with young people gives me a great deal of satisfaction. I have always viewed my work as my contribution back into society, making real differences. I quickly established trust with young people and they feel confidence in sharing a range of issues and concerns with me.”

And Tahir adds that mutual respect can be seen in the young men calling him “Uncle T,” while he knows them as “my lads”.

“I come across men – former youth club members – almost every week and they remind me about their youth club days and talk about all aspects of their time at the club and thank me for leaving a positive impact on their life.”

He says that there have been no lows in his career and many highs, citing four of the latter that particularly stick in his mind.

Taking young people on an annual week-long residential course at the UK sailing academy on the Isle of Wight comes high on the list, along with taking coach loads of young people to London’s West End to see the show Bombay Dreams.

“I wrote a heritage history book for young people and presented a copy to every member,” Tahir explains. And later, of course: “I felt high when I was contacted by the BBC to interview me after the Queen awarded me the British Empire Medal”.

It’s amazing what UNISON members can achieve!

The article Tahir’s youth mission first appeared on the UNISON National site.



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Local Service Champions – making our communities safer

UNISON is campaigning to help raise awareness of the Local Service Champions who are there for all of us, every day, to make our lives better.

Unfortunately, many people don’t realise how important local government and council workers are or what they do – often, we go about our daily lives without evening seeing them.

Here’s Jozef, one of the street cleaning team in Hackney, east London. Early this morning, he found a second smashed bus stop window on his route in just 24 hours.

As a street cleaner, it’s his responsibility to clear anything that’s on the ground. But the glass is heavy – even when it’s been shattered like this.

He reported the situation to his manager, hoping that, as yesterday, the electric road cleaner would come along to help. Otherwise, he’ll have to load all the broken glass into the bins that he pushes around.

That would make the load a lot heavier – no one person would have carried that pane of glass when it was being fitted – with the increased risk of straining his back.

But he didn’t stand around waiting. He got on with making the area safe for bus passengers as quickly as possible and, if he has to load all the glass into his cart, he will – because that’s what he does.

Thank you, Jozef – for being a Local Service Champion.

Find out more about Local Service Champions here

The article Local Service Champions – making our communities safer first appeared on the UNISON National site.



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Wednesday, 17 July 2019

Birmingham university members strike

Noisy, colourful and good-humoured pickets marked the second round of industrial action as UNISON members at Birmingham University continued their pay dispute this week.

The university is one of a handful who are not part of national bargaining for support staff.

The UNISON members are demanding improved pay after management imposed it’s 2018-19 pay offer.

“We already know that members have turned to food banks to feed their families,” says the Birmingham University UNISON branch. “Many low-paid staff only work 15 hours per week and often hold several jobs to make ends meet.”

National pay talks update

In national negotiations, UNISON and other unions have rejected a final pay offer for 2019-20 and will be balloting members at universities involved for industrial action. The ballot will start in September. Meanwhile, talks are taking place.

The article Birmingham university members strike first appeared on the UNISON National site.



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North West hospital staff to strike for pay equality

Outsourced staff at three NHS trusts in north west England will strike for pay equality in two weeks unless their employer Compass agrees to match NHS rates.

UNISON has issued official strike notifications covering workers at St Helens and Knowsley teaching hospitals, Blackpool teaching hospitals and Liverpool heart and chest hospitals. One-day strikes will take place on 31 July if current talks between the union and Compass don’t produce a solution, after workers at all three trusts produced 100% votes for action, on turnouts of between 66.7% and 78.6%.

The members involved are catering, cleaning, security, portering and reception staff. Most of them are on the national minimum wage of just £8.21 an hour. But they work alongside colleagues – either directly employed by the NHS or employed by Compass on TUPE-protected NHS terms – who are paid at least £9.03 an hour.

TUPE: what is it and what does it mean?

That 82p an hour difference amounts to a loss of £1,600 a year for full-time workers, says UNISON.

“It’s disheartening to work alongside colleagues doing the same job who are getting paid more than you,” says St Helens hospital Compass porter Donovan Rowe.

“It’s affecting staff morale and creating a divide between staff on NHS contracts and the rest of us. We do the same jobs and it’s only right that we get the same pay.

“I’m working weekend and night shifts, but unlike my NHS colleagues, don’t earn any extra for doing these.” As well as a higher pay rate, staff employed on NHS Agenda for Change terms receive unsocial hours payments and better sick pay.

But without these, says Donovan: “At times I’ve worked 45 hours overtime a month just to get by. If we got the pay rise, I would be able to work my contracted hours every week and have more time to spend with my family.”

UNISON rep Michelle Tymon also works for Compass, but because she was transferred from the NHS she gets the Agenda for Change rate for the job.

“We all do exactly the same work and yet those of us lucky to be on NHS contracts earn thousands of pounds more per year,” she says.

“We all play our part in keeping the health service going and it’s only right we all receive proper NHS pay and conditions.”

And she adds: “I am fully supportive of my striking colleagues.”

UNISON regional organiser Lisa Walsh points out that Compass made £1.7bn profit last year. She says the company should “put their hands into their deep pockets and find the 82p per hour that would make little difference to their profits but would be a huge help to NHS workers in St Helens, Blackpool and Liverpool.”

The article North West hospital staff to strike for pay equality first appeared on the UNISON National site.



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Communicating our cause

UNISON is the UK’s largest union serving more than 1.3 million members. We represent full-time and part-time staff who provide public services, although they may be employed in both the public and private sectors.

We are a campaigning and an organising union, promoting the cause of social justice and a better and fairer workplace both at home and abroad. We also have a responsibility to defend human and trade union rights wherever they are under attack.

Our key objectives for 2019 are recruitment and organising; bargaining and equalities; campaigning and influencing and building an efficient and effective union.

We cannot achieve any of our aims and objectives without our members’ support and with them in turn taking action.

Campaigning is a vital part of our work. It is one method we use to raise awareness of issues, fight for employment rights and gather support for local, national and international issues.

Campaigning can help persuade people to take a particular course of action or change their attitudes or opinions.

We regularly promote the union’s overall cause, our aims and objectives and encourage members to take part in campaigns both online – with a monthly e-newsletter, U digital, and also in print, with a quarterly magazine, U. Both of these channels also promote our UNISON Living commercial partners.

Whilst U magazine promotes the cause of the union, it is not an integral part of UNISON membership and there is no obligation on the union to send the magazine.

The article Communicating our cause first appeared on the UNISON National site.



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Tuesday, 16 July 2019

Blog: Durham shows that our movement remains vital

The Durham Miners’ Gala is one of the great annual events in our movement. It’s an opportunity for a whole region to meet in solidarity and celebrate working class cultural and regional pride. Hundreds of thousands of people from the North East and across the country come together, banners and flags waving high, serenaded by dozens of brass bands whose music bounces off the buildings of Durham’s narrow, winding streets.

It’s an incredible spectacle, the only event of its kind in the world, and I’m so proud that UNISON has been a proud supporter and a major contributor to the “Big Meeting” as it continues to go from strength to strength.

Like Tolpuddle, Burston and other fantastic labour movement events, Durham is about both our movement’s past and our future. As the Durham Miners’ motto says “the past we inherit, the future we build”. In our union, we know exactly what that means – no-one owns our union, we nurture and defend it, we hold it in trust and pass it on to the next generation. Our values, our victories – but also, as in Durham, our proud traditions too.

As I told the crowd on Saturday, there are those who say that trade unionism is on the wane, but let our growing union and the incredible Durham Miners’ Gala be an antidote to such talk. Our movement remains as vital today as it ever was – and it’s all of our responsibility to come together, at a time of such great challenges, to fight, not just for the present of our movement, but for its future too.

The article Blog: Durham shows that our movement remains vital first appeared on the UNISON National site.



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Monday, 15 July 2019

Social Worker of the Year Awards

Dow you know a social workers whose contribution deserves national recognition? Entries for the 2019 Social Worker of the Year Awards are currently open – but close at midnight on Friday 19 July.

Now in their thirteenth year, the Social Worker of the Year Awards aim to give recognition to the challenging work of social workers, celebrate the outstanding contributions and achievements of those working in the profession, and improve understanding of the range of challenging work that social workers undertake.

The shortlist will be announced in October and the winners revealed at a ceremony and dinner in London in November.

Previous hosts have included celebrity chef and government fostering ambassador Lorraine Pascale and BBC News reporter and former care leaver Ashley John-Baptiste.

The article Social Worker of the Year Awards first appeared on the UNISON National site.



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‘Your days are numbered,’ Dave Prentis tells Tories in Durham speech

“It was a wonderful day as always at the Big Meeting – and an honour to address the Miners’ Gala again, standing against austerity and for properly funded public services,” UNISON general secretary Dave Prentis said of his trip to Durham at the weekend.

The union has been a long-time supporter and backer of the gala – “the beating heart of our trade union movement: a celebration of our trade union history, a celebration of our people, our class.”

Mr Prentis told the crowd – who braved rain to hear the speeches that are a key part of the Big Meeting – that a million jobs delivering key services have been taken from local communities across Britain.

“And while Boris Johnson bribes the rich with the promises of more tax cuts, our elderly, our frail, our vulnerable, are suffering like never before,” he added.

And for those who asked where the money would come from to pay for the essential services they need, and UNISON members want to provide, he had an answer.

“I’ll tell you where the money can be found to end austerity,” he declared: “We, here at our Big Meeting, have a message for Boris and his like.

“Tax the rich! No more handouts to the wealthy! Stop their tax abuse; close their tax havens; make every company and bank pay their fair share.”

And he reminded the assembly: “Austerity was a political choice by the rich and powerful; a Tory elite that says ‘there is no alternative’.

“We say to the Tories today: there is an alternative. Your days are numbered. It’s time for a general election.”

The article ‘Your days are numbered,’ Dave Prentis tells Tories in Durham speech first appeared on the UNISON National site.



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Thursday, 11 July 2019

Here comes summer!

June got under way as the end to our Go for Growth month confirmed that UNISON has grown again … we’re positively bustin’ out all over! It’s a good thing we don’t have to buy a new wardrobe, what with all these growth spurts!

The union was among those taking to the streets of London to protest against the state visit of US president, Donald Trump, and it made it clear that the NHS cannot be used “as a bargaining chip” in any post-Brexit trade deal, after Trump told an interviewer that ‘yes’, our health service could be part of a deal.

After Mr Trump executed a (supposed) u-turn, we’re happy that our head of health, Sara Gorton, made a difference.

Cleaners at the Princess Alexandra Hospital in Harlow (above) celebrated a cracking victory, when their employer dropped plans to outsource their jobs, after a unified stance by members had brought them to the brink of six days of planned industrial action.

The beginning of June was also important for UNISON’s internal democracy, as the election results for the new national executive council were announced.

This NEC – elected by the members – will hold office and lead the union from now until the end of the 2021 conference.

The summer Silly Season opened early with the Conservative Party leadership election under way, with UNISON general secretary Dave Prentis describing leading contender Boris Johnson’s pledge to cut tax for high earners as “absurd”.

Mr Prentis (above) commented: “Boris Johnson has confirmed he cares about the wealthy few, rather than everyone who relies on public services. A cash giveaway for the richest earners is absurd after 10 years of brutal austerity that has pushed public services to breaking point.

“That money is needed by the nurse who sees our NHS creaking under pressure, the teaching assistant who relies on food banks to feed her family or the care worker who can spend only a few minutes with the vulnerable people she supports.”

Meanwhile, UNISON won another massive legal case in the Court of Appeal which means that NHS workers who do regular overtime will now have these hours taken into account when their holiday pay is calculated.

Making a big difference to the lives of dedicated public service workers – it’s our raison d’être, one might say.

And public service workers need us, because they face no shortage of problems in the workplace. A survey we published in June revealed the dangers faced from weapons by college staff.

Yet at the same time, the government is attacking such dedicated workers: plans could see new higher and further education staff locked out of the local government pension scheme in an “unwarranted and grievous” attack.

As delegates to UNISON’s local government conference in Liverpool heard, library staff are facing the same sort of threats and violence too.

Ah yes – if it’s June, it must mean it’s conference season. This year, the union headed to the home of the Beatles and those Liver birds to set our priorities for the coming year.

First up was local government conference – along with the water, environment and transport conference and the energy conference (you can find reports for all via www.unison.org.uk/news)

Then there was national delegate conference itself – there are full reports online. Tuck in: go on, you know you want to.

And as conference closed, the NEC elected our new presidential team.

Josie Bird (above) is the new UNISON president and she’s joined by Sian Stockholm as senior vice president and James Anthony as junior vice president. They’re going to be a great team.

And June ended with a bang as the University of South Wales became an accredited living wage employer – yet another win for dedicated public service workers.

As was quite clear throughout the month – and as those four lads from Liverpool might have it – all together now, we really can work it out!

The article Here comes summer! first appeared on the UNISON National site.



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Wednesday, 10 July 2019

Proper planning needed for transition to low-carbon economy

Commenting on the TUC’s Just Transition document setting out the route to a greener economy published today (Monday), UNISON general secretary Dave Prentis said:

“The TUC’s commitment is to be welcomed. Energy workers affected by the move to a low-carbon economy need a specific plan for their jobs, particularly in the gas industry.

“Greater public ownership and a commitment to hydrogen technology must be part of this plan. UNISON‘s recent Power To The People report outlined the benefits of nationalising the retail arms of the UK’s biggest energy companies.

“A massive energy efficiency programme is desperately needed to create homes that are cheaper to run, with councils, housing associations and energy companies working together.

“Public services are ready and willing but need the resources to be climate-change ready, reduce emissions and air pollution. We must also do what we can to expand public transport.”

Notes to editors:
– UNISON is the UK’s largest union, with more than 1.3 million members providing public services – in education, local government, the NHS, police service and energy. They are employed in both the public and private sectors.
– The TUC’s A Just Transition To A Greener, Fairer Economy sets out proposalsto meet the needs of working people in the transition to a low-carbon economy and is published on Monday 8 July.

Media contacts:
Anthony Barnes T: 0207 121 5255 M: 07834 864794E: a.barnes@unison.co.uk
Garfield Myrie T: 0207 121 5546 M: 07432 741565 E: g.myrie@unison.co.uk

The article Proper planning needed for transition to low-carbon economy first appeared on the UNISON National site.



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Tuesday, 9 July 2019

Help to get comfortable with numbers

Think you’re not a numbers person?

Many of us say we’re not – but numbers play a big part in all our lives. Understanding how they work can have a hugely positive impact.

Whether  finding a new job or getting a promotion, managing debt or getting a better handle on family finances, everyone can benefit by finding a way to make numbers work for them.

This summer, UNISON is working with National Numeracy, an independent charity, to give all our members working in schools and education the chance to brush up their number skills.

By using the charity’s National Numeracy Challenge – a free online learning tool — you’ll be able to work towards the essentials of numeracy: the maths skills you actually need in work and everyday life.

It allows you to find out your level and points you towards resources personalised to you to help you improve.

You can get started on the challenge using this link or the button below to find out your current numeracy level and how to improve it, based on your strengths and weaknesses.

Being better with numbers isn’t a special talent, it’s something we can all learn.

Get started

National Numeracy is an independent charity established in 2012 to help raise low levels of numeracy among both adults and children and to promote the importance of everyday maths skills.

It aims to enable everyone across the UK to be confident and competent in using numbers and data, to be able to make good decisions in their daily life and at work.

Find out more about National Numeracy

The article Help to get comfortable with numbers first appeared on the UNISON National site.



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Monday, 8 July 2019

HE members to vote on industrial action over pay

UNISON members working in higher education are to be asked to vote for strike action over pay in a national ballot starting in September.

The move comes after they rejected the employers’ final pay offer in a consultative ballot. For most staff, this would see a pay increase of just 1.8%, well below inflation. Two thirds of members who voted on the offer rejected it.

Meeting to look at UNISON’s next steps last week, the union’s higher education service group executive agreed to:

  • enter into a formal dispute with University and Colleges Employers Association (UCEA);
  • start a formal industrial action ballot, opening in September;
  • “campaign in solidarity with the other higher education trade unions to seek an improvement on the pay offer for 2019-20”.

The executive noted that the offer from the UCEA failed to meet any of the aspects of the joint unions’ pay claim, and said it was particularly disappointed with the pay element. On top of that, it pointed out that the employers’ decision to impose last year’s final  pay offer in August had “had caused serious concern and breached the good faith in which the unions enter negotiations.”

Download the UCEA final offer

Download the join union pay claim

The article HE members to vote on industrial action over pay first appeared on the UNISON National site.



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Pride and protest

In a world where nationalism and intolerance are rising and governments pander to reactionary views, a million and a half people hit the streets of London on Saturday to celebrate tolerance and diversity and thumb their noses at bigotry.

A UNISON delegation took part in the parade as London Pride cast a rainbow over the capital – marching (dancing) behind a samba band and welcomed by the enormous crowds at every stage along the route.

Getting the banner ready on Portland Place

Members were present from the West Midlands and there was another group in the parade from Homerton Hospital UNISON branch, carrying a message that migrants make our NHS.

Entirely unforecast rain made an effort to put in an appearance, but it wasn’t going to rain on our parade.

Ready to samba all the way to Westminster

Bathing in the extraordinary warmth of good feeling, it’s easy to forget that Pride is not just a party, but a thumbed nose at bigotry and a protest too.

This year is the 50thanniversary of the Stonewall riots. Police raids on gay bars were routine, but when the New York police raided the Stonewall Inn in Greenwich Village on 28 June 1969, they got more than they bargained for. Details remain fuzzy, what is known is that playing a leading role in the charge against police brutality that night were Black and transgender people.

Wow – look at the crowds on Regent Street!

Stonewall provided the kick start for the modern struggle for equal rights for LGBT+ people: on 28 June a year later, the first Pride marches were held in New York, Los Angeles and San Francisco.

Homophobic and transphobic crime have not gone away, despite all the progress that has been made.

Placard on the sultan of Brunei’s threat to stone LGBT+ people

Beyond UK shores, LGBT+ people continue to face state persecution. Earlier this year, Sultan Hassanal Bolkiah of Brunei announced he was introducing stoning to death for gay sex. Thanks to international outcry, he backed down and later pledged not to actually carry out any stonings.

Seventy two jurisdictions criminalise private, consensual same-sex sexual activity – mostly for men. Half of these are in the Commonwealth. Forty four jurisdictions do the same for women.

Twelve jurisdictions impose (or have the legal capacity to enact) the death penalty for private, consensual same-sex sexual activity. At least six are as good as their word – Iran, Northern Nigeria, Saudi Arabia, Somalia, Sudan and Yemen.

Fifteen jurisdictions criminalise the gender identity and/or expression of transgender people, using a variety of laws to punish those in drag or viewed as cross-dressing, from vagrancy to hooliganism and public order offences.

At the weekend, four LGBT+ Syrian refugees who had arrived in the UK just a couple of days earlier, were able to join Saturday’s Pride celebrations – finally able to express themselves openly.

Waiting to begin the parade

And on Sunday, continuing the union’s equalities work, UNISON took part in Black Pride UK, in East London, where the union held an event exploring the importance of trade unions, not least in the ongoing struggle for equality.

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Bradford hospital staff strike to stay in the NHS

Facilities and estates staff across the Bradford teaching hospitals NHS trust were out on the picket lines from 6am this morning, demanding to stay in the NHS at the start of a week-long strike.

The Yorkshire trust is the latest to try and transfer key support work – and the staff who carry it out – to a wholly owned private company it has set up.

Some 300 UNISON members, including porters, cleaners and security staff are taking action over this ‘back-door privatisation’.

Although the trust says that staff who are transferred will keep their current pay andc onditions for 25 years,  UNISON regional organiser Natalie Ratcliffe says “Our members see this as a promise that can be easily broken and 97% of them made the very difficult decision vote to take strike action.

“We have urged the trust to scrap the plans, or at least shelve them, as there is likely to be a general election this year or next and the policy of establishing wholly-owned subsidiaries is likely to be dropped.”

She added that “other trusts in the UK have dropped or shelved their plans, but the Bradford Trust seems hell-bent on imposing this company on our members.”

Picket lines were mounted at the trust’s two main hospitals – Bradford Royal Infirmary and St Luke’s – this morning, the first of seven days of planned action, which will also affect Shipley Hospitals and three community hospitals.

Earlier: Bradford hospital worker balloted over strike action to fight ‘backdoor privatisation’ (20 May 2019)

Wholly owned subsidiaries in the NHS

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Government should plough money into social care, not tax cuts

Tax cuts for the rich have deprived the UK public of almost £14 billion – an amount that would fund plans to address the social care crisis for two full years, according to new analysis published by UNISON today (Sunday).

While millions of people have struggled financially in recent years, the highest earners have enjoyed hundreds of thousands of pounds in savings as a result of a reduced top rate of income tax, says UNISON.

The government’s decision to cut the top rate from 50p to 45p introduced in April 2013 has benefited the rich, while local authorities have been starved of funds and services cut, contributing to social care problems faced across the UK.

UNISON has calculated that the savings for super-earners with incomes of more than £1 million a year have reduced payments to the Treasury by £13.98 billion, between 2013 and the current financial year 2019/2020. As a result the UK’s millionaires have paid £782,000 less tax on average over seven years.

A new report by the House of Lords Economic Affairs Committee on the adult social care sector published on Thursday estimated that a new NHS-style social care system would cost £7 billion annually and could be funded from taxes.

Both Conservative party leadership candidates have outlined their own plans to cut taxes, despite the ongoing crisis in social care – money which should be used to tackle the growing social care problems, says UNISON.

Boris Johnson has pledged to raise the threshold for the 40p tax rate, which the Institute for Fiscal Studies (IFS) estimates will cost £9 billion in lost revenue every year. Jeremy Hunt has proposed cutting corporation tax, which would cost the Exchequer £13 billion per year in the short term, according to the IFS.

A UNISON analysis of HM Revenue & Customs (HMRC) statistics published last week shows the number of taxpayers earning more than £1m each year has risen from 15,000 to 21,000 since the then Chancellor George Osborne introduced the tax cut in 2013.

Commenting on the analysis, UNISON general secretary Dave Prentis said: “The Conservative leadership candidates have got their priorities all wrong. The whole country knows social care is in urgent need of major reform, but sees politicians continually kicking the can down the street while offering tax sweeteners to people who are already more than well off.

“The elderly and other vulnerable people need the care sector to be funded properly. It also needs an injection of cash to better value the work of those in the care sector. They are the lifeline that helps people with complex needs stay in their own homes yet are being paid less than workers stacking supermarket shelves.

“Instead of helping the rich line their pockets, the government should be ploughing money into services which make a real difference to society and our ageing population across the whole of the UK. This lost £14 billion would not have been a permanent fix but could have been a step in the right direction.”

Notes to editors:
– The top rate of income tax refers to the additional rate (currently 45p in the pound) that applies to earnings over £150,000 per year.
– UNISON is the UK’s largest union, with more than 1.3 million members providing public services – in education, local government, the NHS, police service and energy. They are employed in both the public and private sectors.

Media contacts:
Anthony Barnes T: 0207 121 5255 M: 07834 864794E: a.barnes@unison.co.uk
Garfield Myrie T: 0207 121 5546 M: 07432 741565 E: g.myrie@unison.co.uk

The article Government should plough money into social care, not tax cuts first appeared on the UNISON National site.



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