PCS: Union warns of Government minimum wage shame
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Wednesday, 01, Oct 2008 12:00
Shamefully low pay levels in the civil service were highlighted today, as the Public and Commercial Services Union (PCS) claimed that at least six government departments and agencies may have to give low paid staff an emergency pay rise to lift their earnings above the new national minimum wage rate, which came into force today.
The new adult rate of £5.73 for the national minimum wage has led to some government departments and agencies, such as the Office for National Statistics, writing to staff to inform them of the special pay rise. The areas potentially affected by the minimum wage rise are:
* The Home Office
* National Offender Management Service (Part of the Prison Service)
* The Office for National Statistics (ONS)
* The Maritime and Coastguard Agency (MCA)
* National Galleries of Scotland
* National Museums of Scotland
The news comes as the union ballots 270,000 members across the UK, working for government departments, agencies and related bodies, over the government’s policy to cap public sector pay to below inflation.
The government’s public sector pay policy is disproportionately hitting some of the lowest paid in the public sector and leading to pay freezes and pay cuts. This year has already seen pay strikes hit jobcentres, passports, immigration and coastguards across the UK and follows last week’s strike in the Scottish courts service, museums and sportscotland.
Pay in the civil service is worse than other parts of the public sector because ‘progression’ (moving from the minimum to the maximum of the pay range) is included in the government’s pay cap. Hence there is less money available to fund basic pay awards.
Commenting, Mark Serwotka, PCS general secretary, said: “It is shameful that government departments and agencies may have to give low paid staff an emergency pay rise to lift their earnings above the new national minimum wage. This sorry state of affairs underlines the endemic problem of low pay across civil and public services, which is being made worse by the government’s public sector pay cap.
“The government profess to be on the side of hardworking families yet penalise its own workforce with pay cuts and pay freezes, some of whom have to rely on an increase in the minimum wage before they get a pay rise. The government have got to address the problem of low pay and review its public sector pay cap to stem the growing anger amongst its own workforce.”
ENDS
Notes to editors:
* For further information, interviews and comment please contact Alex Flynn PCS national press officer on 020 7801 2747 or 07833 978216.
* PCS, the Public and Commercial Services Union is the union representing civil and public servants in central government. It has more than 300,000 members in over 200 departments and agencies. It also represents workers in parts of government transferred to the private sector. PCS is the UK’s sixth largest union and is affiliated to the TUC. The general secretary is Mark Serwotka and the president is Janice Godrich.
Alex Flynn
National Press Officer
Public and Commercial Services Union
160 Falcon Rd
London SW11 2LN
Direct line: 020 7801 2747
Mobile: 07833 978 216
Fax: 020 7924 1847
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