Ambulance workers to strike on 10 February

  • Published
Ambulances queuing outside an NHS hospitalImage source, EPA

Thousands of ambulance staff across five services in England - London, Yorkshire, the South West, North East and North West - will walk out on Friday 10 February, Unison says.

It means strikes over pay will now be happening across the NHS every day next week, apart from Wednesday.

Life-threatening 999 calls will be attended to but others may not be.

Downing Street says the continuing industrial action will concern the public.

The NHS's biggest day of industrial action is set to happen on 6 February, when many nurses and ambulance crews across England and Wales will be on strike.

Upcoming strike action

University staff

  • University staff who are members of the University and College Union and Unison are on strike
  • Union members at 150 universities have been taking part in industrial action

Read more: Will my lecture be cancelled?

There are currently no national strikes planned for this date

There are currently no national strikes planned for this date

There are currently no national strikes planned for this date

There are currently no national strikes planned for this date

There are currently no national strikes planned for this date

There are currently no national strikes planned for this date

There are currently no national strikes planned for this date

There are currently no national strikes planned for this date

There are currently no national strikes planned for this date

There are currently no national strikes planned for this date

There are currently no national strikes planned for this date

Passport Office

  • More than 1,000 Passport Office workers are on strike in a dispute about jobs, pay and conditions
  • Members of the Public and Commercial Services union have warned of delays to applications and the delivery of passports in the run-up to summer

Read more: Passport delay warning as five-week strike called

Passport Office

  • More than 1,000 Passport Office workers are on strike in a dispute about jobs, pay and conditions
  • Members of the Public and Commercial Services union have warned of delays to applications and the delivery of passports in the run-up to summer

Read more: Passport delay warning as five-week strike called

Passport Office

  • More than 1,000 Passport Office workers are on strike in a dispute about jobs, pay and conditions
  • Members of the Public and Commercial Services union have warned of delays to applications and the delivery of passports in the run-up to summer

Read more: Passport delay warning as five-week strike called

Passport Office

  • More than 1,000 Passport Office workers are on strike in a dispute about jobs, pay and conditions
  • Members of the Public and Commercial Services union have warned of delays to applications and the delivery of passports in the run-up to summer

Read more: Passport delay warning as five-week strike called

Passport Office

  • More than 1,000 Passport Office workers are on strike in a dispute about jobs, pay and conditions
  • Members of the Public and Commercial Services union have warned of delays to applications and the delivery of passports in the run-up to summer

Read more: Passport delay warning as five-week strike called

Passport Office

  • More than 1,000 Passport Office workers are on strike in a dispute about jobs, pay and conditions
  • Members of the Public and Commercial Services union have warned of delays to applications and the delivery of passports in the run-up to summer

Read more: Passport delay warning as five-week strike called

There are currently no national strikes planned for this date

The prime minister's official spokesman said: "We are putting in place significant mitigations that have previously helped reduce some of the impact from these strikes.

"But first and foremost we would ask the unions to reconsider that approach and continue discussions."

Pay rises 'unaffordable'

Unison says the government must stop "pretending the strikes will simply go away" and act decisively to end the dispute by improving pay.

The union warned that unless the government had a "major rethink" over NHS pay, and got involved in "actual talks" with unions, it would announce strike dates running into March.

The government says the above-inflation pay rises requested are unaffordable.

Pay rises are decided by independent pay review bodies.

NHS staff in England and Wales - including nurses - have already received an average increase of 4.75%. The lowest-paid were guaranteed a rise of at least £1,400.

Meanwhile, the Department of Health and Social Care has missed the deadline for submitting evidence on next year's pay award for more than a million NHS staff, MPs have been told.

Former health minister Steve Brine, who now chairs the House of Commons' Health and Social Care Committee, said he was "astonished".

The Treasury has submitted evidence.

A Department of Health and Social Care spokesperson said: "The government is committed to announcing awards for our hard-working public sector workers in a timely manner. We recognise the importance of giving certainty on 2023/24 pay settlements as early as possible, and the government will publish its evidence to the pay review bodies in due course."