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Festival strike threat lifted as equal pay deal talks drag on



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Published Date: 19 July 2008
FEARS of strike action by Edinburgh council staff during this year's Festival have been lifted while negotiations over an equal pay deal continue.
Thousands of workers are set to have their job evaluated by the council, in a move to 'single status' – scrapping the maze of different pay scales and giving staff a fair rate for the jobs they do.

Talks got under way with union leaders in May, a
nd council managers were hoping a ballot of members would be completed within six to eight weeks. This could, however, have led to summer strike action if the deal was rejected, which was a fear privately held by senior politicians.

However, it is now understood that negotiations could actually run into next year, with union leaders warning that the council "underestimated" how long the process would take.

Although the majority of workers should be better off if the deal is accepted, nearly 3000 employees could effectively face a pay cut. Their salaries will be frozen for three years, by which time their new wage bracket should have caught up with the previous level.

This is one of the major sticking points, along with plans to change the hours that qualify for evening rates and make some staff work on public holidays for the first time.

Union negotiators are due to meet with council officials again at the end of July.

John Stevenson, a spokesman for Unison's Edinburgh branch, said: "We are frustrated by the delays. I think the council has underestimated the complexity of this, and we're running behind a lot of (councils] in Scotland.

"It's in both our interests to get this sorted as soon as possible – we have no interest in delaying this, but we've had no real negotiation – so far it's more about receiving information."

Mr Stevenson also reiterated concerns that the local authority has budgeted for only a three per cent rise in its overall wage bill – around £10.5 million – which is thought to be among the lowest in Scotland.

As a single status deal has never been implemented, the council has already faced legal challenges from many low-paid workers. More than £15m has been paid in equal pay claims.

But the last round of settlements expired in March, and the council can now expect more claims to be submitted. These will only stop once the equal pay deal is finalised.

City finance leader Gordon Mackenzie said today: "All of us, including the unions, are agreed that the current situation cannot continue.

"Having a pay system which is open to challenge and is unaffordable is against the interests of Edinburgh taxpayers and the interests of those who provide them with services.

"We are sorting this, not just by meeting legitimate claims from the past, but by transforming the council so that it is protected from these claims in the future.

"We believe we are proposing the most effective and modern package of any Scottish council, and will help Edinburgh to be one of the top-performing local authorities in the country."





The full article contains 517 words and appears in Edinburgh Evening News newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 19 July 2008 10:49 AM
  • Source: Edinburgh Evening News
  • Location: Edinburgh
 
1

alex paterson,

edinburgh 19/07/2008 13:14:31
Council workers should be paid by results.
2

The Hallucinist,

19/07/2008 14:42:59
#1 They wouldn't get paid anything!!
3

Artemis,

19/07/2008 15:47:19
You're right #2. All those workers caring for the elderly and the vulnerable would get nothing. All the people who maintain the parks and green spaces, who collect the council tax and the council housing rent, who maintain trading standards, who carry out pest control, who dig graves and operate the crematoria, who ensure environmental health, who do repairs in council properties, who maintain the roads, inspect buildings - they'd all get nothing. You idiot.
4

Thistledhu,

19/07/2008 16:02:42
Edinburgh council have budgeted for a 3 percent increase in pay costs that dosent count the 5 % unison want payed for a setlemnt this year.

If Unison get there way it will mean cuts cuts and more cuts.
5

tomias,

Edinburgh 19/07/2008 16:09:50
market forces rule?
6

rs,

in ma house 19/07/2008 16:44:04
UNISON signed up to the Single Status Agreement in 1999,
so why are they talking about strike action for something they signed up to.

Strike action only does one thing and SAVES the management Money, funny when theres a strike, you never see a reduction in your council tax !
7

Workshy TradeUnionSupporter,

edinburgh 19/07/2008 18:38:32
#6
the single status agreement was to bring the lowest paid workers up. Not to take money from other workers and put them in the low pay bracket.The 3,000 employees facing a pay cut are all manual workers already low paid,while upper managers are all sitting pretty with their 40,000 + salaries.
8

Listening,

20/07/2008 14:48:03
Equal pay should be linked to equal ability. Too many people want equal pay because of job description when they cannot keep up with others.

Employers should be increasing the number of wage bands to take account of abilities etc, not reducing them.

If equal pay is to be enforced then the individuals who do more than others because they have more ability, fitness, strength etc etc should stop doing extra and reduce what they do to the level of the least productive.

Employers would soon understand that a convoy is only as fast as the slowest ship!!!

Also, single status was forced on employees of East Lothian Council. Anyone who did not sign up to it is deemed to have terminated their employment. Unison are now fighting for the rights of workers who had no choice but to sign up. But Unison are gutless and nothing will come of it. And I bet the EIS will get everything they ask for. Double standards on behalf of the council, they really know how to make their staff feel wanted!!
9

Logie Almond,

20/07/2008 18:30:22
Q. How many people work in Edinburgh City Council?
A. About half of them. The unions demanded equal pay. Now they've got it, they don't like because their featherbedded male employees are having the value of their jobs put under the spotlight.
10

rs,

in ma house 20/07/2008 22:20:45
No7

do you really think that any Council would sign up to an agreement that would Cost them Money.

From what I can see, the single status agreement would "in theory" see a home help get paid the same as a bucket man who sits in his van while three colleagues empty the "rubbish bin" at the side of the road.

You must have seen them in their wee white vans, sitting up side streets, 4 or 5 to van.

Yes the the majority of Council Workers do Work.

But its still true that the Rich GET Richer and the poor get poorer.

How many Council Workers does it take to change a light bulb, 6, Five managers and 1 Worker.

 

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