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Issues facing ancillary workers in healthcare in the United Kingdom . Mike Jackson Senior National Officer (Health), UNISON. Background UNISON. Largest Union in UK – 1.4 million members working in the public sector
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Issues facing ancillary workers in healthcare in the United Kingdom Mike Jackson Senior National Officer (Health), UNISON
Background UNISON • Largest Union in UK – 1.4 million members working in the public sector • 425,000 members in the National Health Service, representing a broad range of professionals and ancillary workers – the NHS is Europe’s biggest employer with over 1.2 million health workers • 40,000 in the private sector – ancillaries • 80% of members women
My background • National Union of Public Employees (NUPE) 1978 – 1993, Area Officer, representing ancillary workers and nursing assistants. • UNISON 1993 – 2004, Regional Officer, representing all healthcare workers • UNISON 2004 to date, Senior National Officer (Health), Lead Negotiator NHS Terms & Conditions, NHS Staff Council
Ancillary Workers in the NHS • Catering – Chefs, Cooks, Kitchen Porters and Assistants, Ward hostesses, Dining Room assistants • Domestic – Cleaners, Housekeeping staff, • Portering – incl transport and security, • Laundry - incl Linen and Sewing room staff, • Other - Switchboard/Call Centre, Sterile Services, • Not classified as ancillary (but similar) – Healthcare assistants (nursing), Healthcare support workers, Administrative and Clerical staff, Maintenance –buildings, car parks and grounds
Battle for Equal Pay • Whitley Councils (9), including Ancillary Staff Council, determined pay since 1948 • Carlisle (North Cumbria) cases 1997 Compared domestics, HCA’s, entry nurses with maintenance workers • ‘Agenda for Change’ Project - Agreement to harmonisation of NHS terms and conditions plus job evaluation • Negotiations 2000 – 2004 • Equal Pay Implementation NHS 2004 – 2006 • Equal Pay Private Sector Ancillaries from 2006
‘Agenda for Change’ (AfC) • Job Evaluated Pay & Grading Scheme • Introduced a Knowledge & Skills Framework • Covered over 1 million NHS Staff (excl Doctors) • Introduced new NHS Minimum Wage = £5.88 per hour, Since ‘Agenda for Change’ Oct 2004 • Average earnings (UK)= Men £11.31 per hour, Women £9.84 per hour (ONS. Nov 2005) UK Minimum Wage = £5.05 per hour
Current AfC Ancillary Pay NHS • Band 1, £11,494 - £12,539 (Domestics, Catering Assistants, Porters, Laundry Assts) Band 2, £12,209 - £14,739 (Higher Level Domestics, Chargehand Porters, Patient TS Drivers, Sterile Service Assts, Security, Cooks – also Health Care Assistants (HCAs), Ward Clerks, Reception, Maintenance Assistants) Band 3 £13,694 - £16,389 (Cook Supervisors, Portering Supervisors, Domestic Supervisors- also Higher Level HCA’s, Maintenance Craft Workers)
Ancillary Staff Pay – Private Sector • October 2005, Agreement between UNISON, Department of Health and CBI for Agenda for Change implementation– covering allancillary staff except maintenance workers • Interim Minimum Pay £5.65 per hour from October 2005 moving to £5.88 per hour in April 2006 • Job Evaluation and KSF from October 2006 • AFC minimum pay rates from October 2006 • Terms & Conditions equivalent value from October 2006 • Resistance by Employers to implement
Privatisation of Ancillary Work • 1983 – Compulsory Competetive Tendering (CCT) –Domestics, Catering, Laundry – others later • Lowest cost basis – fair wages clause abolished • Most NHS Hospitals in England privatised (female dominated) ancillary work • 1991 TUPE regulations • 1998 – Compulsory Competitive Tendering abolished but much ancillary work remains outsourced to the private sector due to PPP/PFI projects – one third of domestic work
Impact on Ancillary Workers • Balance sheet cost savings but….. • high staff turnover • exploitation of women and ethnic minorities • low and unequal pay • loss of pension (if they had) • loss of sick pay/high sickness rates • union de-recognition • little staff development • No longer part of a healthcare team
Impact on Service Delivery • Reduced domestic (cleaning) workforce by 50% over 20 year period 1984 - 2004 • Huge turnover rate (50% in London) • Loss of skills and experience • Rise in cross infection and MRSA • Nurses forced to do cleaning • New hospitals built with no kitchens! • Cook chill units = poor nutrition
Cleaner Hospitals Campaign • UNISON launched campaign in 2004 • Raised profile of importance of cleaners • Focussed responsibility for cleaner hospitals on Senior managers not individual cleaners • Demonstrated that contracting out reduced standards (9 out of 10 dirtiest hospitals had privatised) • Linked poor standards with spread of MRSA • Became 2005 General Election issue • Forced Government action on standards
Issues facing Ancillary Workers • Remain the lowest paid with poor pension provision • Many women part-time – face discrimination • Improved pay but overall unequal pay – compared to male average earnings • Privatisation reducing but job insecurity – always first to face cuts if savings needed • Marginalisation – access to training, careers, team • Exploitation of women and of black & ethnic minority workers - denied rights and access to opportunity www.unison.org.uk www.unison.org.uk/healthcare/cleanerhospitals/