
Strike ballot opens today at colleges across England over low pay
14 June 2022
Strikes at 33 colleges in England could be on the cards as industrial ballots opened today in a dispute over low pay, unmanageable workloads and professional respect. The ballot closes on Friday 15 July.
- 33 colleges being balloted over low pay & unmanageable workloads
- Employer body recommended staff receive a paltry 2.25% pay rise
- Since 2009 college staff have seen their pay fall behind inflation by more than 35%
The dispute is between 圖朸厙 members and college employers. Employer representative, the Association of Colleges (AoC), recommended employers raise pay by a paltry 2.25% for 2022/23 and refused to endorse 圖朸厙's call for colleges to become accredited employers. The Retail Price Index puts levels of inflation at 11.1%. Since 2009 college staff have seen their pay fall behind inflation by more than 35% and three in four (76%) college staff say their workload has increased significantly over the past three years.
In March (when RPI was 7.8%), college unions jointly submitted a claim for a pay rise of 10% on all points with a minimum uplift of 瞿2000, for all colleges to become accredited Foundation Living Wage Employers and for significant movement toward agreements on workload in colleges.
After years of joint campaigning by 圖朸厙 and the AoC, in 2021 the Westminster government an 8.4% increase in funding targeted at those in England aged 16-17 years old, the biggest rise in funding for further education in more than decade and coming after 瞿240m in additional funding came into effect in 2020-21. 圖朸厙 members have won pay rises at colleges across England over the previous year's pay offer. These include recent offers worth up to 7.5% at Hopwood Hall College and 6% at Bury College, as well as wins at other colleges across England.
The union estimates that the extra funding means colleges now have an additional 瞿400m that is completely free to spend on staff compared with 2019-20.
The strike ballots are part of the union's Respect FE campaign that aims to improve the pay and conditions of staff in further education. The union has launched a urging the AoC and colleges to sign up to a charter for professional respect in further education.
圖朸厙 general secretary Jo Grady said: 'A pay offer of 2.25% is so far below inflation that it will push many college staff into poverty. That combined with a refusal to recommend colleges become Living Wage employers is a complete betrayal. We campaigned alongside employers for greater government funding on the basis that when that funding arrived it would be used to address the low pay that blights further education. Thanks to our campaigning, the money from Westminster is now here. Colleges need to use the biggest increase in funding they have seen in more than a decade to prioritise staff.'
'Our members must not pay the price of sky high inflation. We will not accept staff having pay held down whilst the cost of putting petrol in the tank, heating the home and feeding loved ones soars. With three in four staff also facing dangerously high workloads we have no choice but to proceed to a ballot for strike action.'
- PrintPrint this page
- Share