London Tube workers to get 8.4% pay rise, mayor agrees

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London UndergroundImage source, Getty Images

London's Tube workers are to get an 8.4% pay rise from next month under a deal agreed by the city's mayor Sadiq Khan.

Transport for London (TfL) today confirmed the increase following the publication of February's Retail Price Index (RPI) figure of 8.2%.

TfL is locked into a four-year deal with unions which guarantees workers an annual pay increase of RPI+0.2%.

About 15,000 people will qualify for the rise, which will cost TfL £100m.

The increase is due to a binding agreement made before the pandemic or the current 30-year high inflationary levels the country is now experiencing

A TfL spokesperson said the body is obliged to honour the agreement despite these "unforeseeable" circumstances.

The Covid-19 pandemic caused TfL's income, mainly from fares, to plummet. A series of government bailouts, beginning in May 2020, kept the service running at a cumulative cost of about £5bn.

The current settlement, the fourth so far, will expire on 24 June.

Full-time Tube drivers earn a salary of almost £59,000 a year - meaning a boost of £5,000 per annum. Station staff who qualify for the salary boost earn considerably less.

Mr Khan, who increased Tube and bus fares by 4.8% at the start of March, has previously said it was important to stick with the terms of the deal to ensure future deals could be struck.

Aslef, the train drivers' union, which represents most Tube train drivers in London, said: "We are three years into a four-year deal and the mayor of London is doing the right thing by sticking with a deal, agreed in good faith, by both sides.

"Tube train drivers who worked throughout the pandemic to keep the capital moving will not suffer a real-term cut in wages as the government fails to get a grip with the cost of living crisis in this country."

London regional organiser of transport union RMT, John Leach, said: "Our members have worked tirelessly to keep London Underground running throughout the pandemic and to keep the capital moving as society opens up.

"This 4-year deal agreed before the pandemic involved intense negotiations and RMT is simply doing what all unions do, winning the best possible deal for our members."

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