Press releases and events

UCU: College lecturers vote to accept 3.2% pay offer

Monday, 13, Oct 2008 12:00

In a ballot that closed today, college lecturers have overwhelmingly voted to accept a 3.2% pay offer for this academic year.

Nearly 89% of University and College Union members, working in further and adult education, who voted in the ballot, agreed to accept the offer from employers, the Association of Colleges.

At a special UCU pay conference held last month, delegates agreed to issue a recommendation with the ballot papers that the membership accepted this year’s 3.2% offer. Delegates acknowledged that the 3.2% offer falls short of their original claim for 6%. However, they accepted it was an improvement on previous offers and was one of the strongest pay offers in the public sector this year. The offer followed two days of strike action by UCU and joint union protest action.

Although this stage is over, UCU’s campaign to achieve pay parity with schoolteachers, and obtain pay awards that meet inflation will continue. The union will be meeting with other FE trade unions shortly to draw up and submit as early as possible, a pay claim for next year.

Meanwhile the union will relaunch its campaign for all colleges to implement pay scales agreed in a pay deal for 2003/4. It will organise targeted industrial action in those institutions yet to implement the new scales.

Barry Lovejoy, UCU Head of Further Education, said:

“Our membership has accepted an offer which although below the current rate of inflation is one of the strongest in the public sector in this pay round.

“We shall be submitting an early claim for next year but will now focus hard on those colleges who have disgracefully failed to pay up on a national deal agreed five years ago. Lecturers at those institutions are really suffering now that the cost of living is soaring.”

ends

notes

  • A well attended delegate UCU pay conference held on 20 September agreed to recommend that members accept the 2008/9 AOC pay offer of 3.2% from 1 October 2008.

  • A ballot of all UCU members in further education opened on 29 September and closed on 13 October: 88.7% of those who voted agreed to accept the offer.

  • A national pay deal agreed in 2003/4 introduced eight-point scales that standardised pay rates between colleges and delivered pay rises for many. To date, 48% of colleges have not yet implemented these new shorter scales.

    contacts:

    UCU press officer Vicky Wilks t: 020 7520 3207; m: 07970-383995; e: vwilks@ucu.org.uk

    Disclaimer:
    Press releases published on this page are from key opinion formers who promote their organisation's activities by subscribing to a campaign site within politics.co.uk. politics.co.uk does not endorse, edit, or attempt to balance the opinions expressed on this page. The content of press releases are wholly the responsibility of the originating company or organisation.
  • Latest press releases

    UCU response to new university plans

    University and College Union (UCU) said it welcomed plans to open up higher education to more of the population but warned that contradictory government funding policy and the high price of studying could severely limit many people’s choice of degree.

    UCU: Strike threat at South Birmingham College over observation row

    The University and College Union (UCU) today (Friday) declared a trade dispute at South Birmingham College (SBC) after college bosses were accused of trying to force through unannounced lesson observations.

    UCU says government’s 'higher education debate' needs proper debate

    The University and College Union (UCU) said today (Wednesday) that the government’s future of higher education debate needed input from people on the front line if it was to have any genuine credibility.

    UCU: Nottingham Trent staff threat of sanctions on day University celebrates first chancellor

    University and College Union (UCU) members at Nottingham Trent University (NTU) will today (Tuesday) be lobbying a ceremony at the city’s Royal Concert Hall to commemorate the installation of Michael Parkinson as the University’s first chancellor.