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Government could break minimum wage laws unless NHS given £280m, say unions

Government could break minimum wage laws unless NHS given £280m, say unions
30 September 2016



The government will need to inject £280 million into the NHS by 2021 or ministers will be in breach of their own minimum wage laws, warn health service unions.

In their annual submission to the NHS pay review body, the unions said that because the pay of health workers has failed to keep pace with inflation, within five years the lowest paid employees will be earning less than the minimum wage.

The government will need to inject £280 million into the NHS by 2021 or ministers will be in breach of their own minimum wage laws, warn health service unions.

In their annual submission to the NHS pay review body, the unions said that because the pay of health workers has failed to keep pace with inflation, within five years the lowest paid employees will be earning less than the minimum wage.

The 13 NHS unions involved in the submission to the NHS pay review body are British Association of Occupational Therapists, British Dietetic Association, British and Irish Orthoptic Society, Chartered Society of Physiotherapy, Federation of Clinical Scientists, GMB, Royal College of Midwives, Royal College of Nursing, Society of Chiropodists and Podiatrists, Society of Radiographers, UCATT, UNISON and Unite.

The national living wage – the minimum wage for workers over the age of 25 – is currently £7.20 an hour.

But with the government insisting on a 1% pay cap across the NHS, the wages of those on the lowest pay scales, such as hospital porters, cleaners and healthcare assistants, will fall below the legal minimum by 2021.

The health unions have said the Department of Health should comply with the minimum wage by boosting the pay of low-paid staff and not by docking the pay of the rest of the NHS workforce.

As plans stand, everyone earning above around £17,000 would have their 1% rise cut to fund the government’s minimum wage pay promise.

Instead, ministers must focus on injecting the additional money for the lowest earners, and then deliver annual across-the-board pay rises for everyone, the unions’ submission says.

Christina McAnea, chair of the NHS trade unions, said: “Capping NHS pay at such low levels is giving hospital trusts across the country a huge headache as they struggle to hold on to experienced staff, who can earn much more working for agencies. Limits on NHS pay are also deterring many people from taking up careers in the health service.

“The government must come up with the cash to increase the pay bands of the lowest paid or it will be breaking its own wage laws. If the NHS is continue to deliver the best possible care for patients, its workforce must feel valued and motivated – and that has to start with fair pay.”

The unions are also calling for a return to UK-wide pay scales, saying that staff in England, Wales and Northern Ireland deserve to receive the same pay rates as health workers on the equivalent grades in Scotland.

Since 2012 the government has restricted the remit of the NHS pay review body, so they have not been allowed to make recommendations outside the one per cent public sector pay policy.

As NHS pay is now different in the four devolved nations, Northern Ireland’s lowest paid health workers will fall below national living wage rates next year, in England and Wales it will happen the following year, and in Scotland by 2021.

However, both Wales and Scotland are delivering on policy commitments to pay in line with the Living Wage Foundation rate of £8.25 outside of London.

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