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Education International
Education International

UK: campaign to protect teachers and education

published 22 March 2013 updated 2 April 2013

The National Union of Teachers (NUT) and the National Association of Schoolmasters Union of Women Teachers (NASUWT), EI affiliates, have announced the next phase of their jointly coordinated national campaign to protect teachers and defend education.

Following the refusal of the Secretary of State to genuinely engage with the NASUWT and NUT to seek to resolve the educator unions’ trade disputes with him, plans are in place for the next stage of industrial action which will include:

  • continuation of the current action short of strike action instructions;
  • national rallies across England and Wales in April and May;
  • escalation of the national action short of strike action;
  • a rolling programme of national strikes commencing with local authority areas in the North West of England on 27 June; and
  • unless the Secretary of State responds positively to the unions’ demands, a rolling programme of strike action will continue into the Autumn term and will include a one day all-out national strike before the end of the Autumn term.

“The time has come for the Secretary of State to listen to the concerns of teachers and school leaders,” said NASUWT General Secretary Chris Keates.

He has recklessly pursued a relentless attack on the profession and teachers’ patience has been exhausted, she explained.

Keates added that the Secretary of State still has time to avoid widespread disruption in schools by responding positively and quickly to the reasonable demands trade unions are making.

Christine Blower, NUT General Secretary and President of EI European region, the European Trade Union Committee for Education (ETUCE), stressed that: “We have already rejected the new pension arrangements and the proposed deregulation of teachers’ pay. The attacks on pay and pensions in combination with increasing workload is making teaching an unsustainable option for many.”

She went on to say that the resolution to all the aspects of the trade union dispute with the Secretary of State is in the latter’s hands. “He can respond positively engage with us to seek a way forward. If there is no positive response to our reasonable demands, the joint strike action we are announcing today is inevitable.”

The NUT and NASUWT have put the following list of demands to the Secretary of State for Education:

·         Commit to genuine engagement in a dispute resolution process by establishing a series of meetings in the summer term 2013 with the NASUWT and NUT chaired by himself to address the issues under dispute;

·         Suspend the implementation of the changes proposed to the School Teachers’ Pay and Conditions Document, pending the outcome of these discussions; and

·         Publish the valuation of the Teachers’ Pension Scheme conducted on the basis of the 2010 criteria and factors.

“We fully support our UK affiliates in their struggle to ensure quality education as well as decent living and working conditions for all education staff nationally,” said EI European Director Martin Rømer.

“We urge national authorities to engage in social dialogue with teacher unionists. They must not use the current economic and financial crisis as an excuse to deny educators’ trade union rights.”