School strikes: Deadline extended for councils to improve pay offer

  • Published
  • comments
School canteenImage source, Getty Images
Image caption,

Planned strike action affects school catering, cleaning, janitorial, admin and classroom assistance staff

Unions are giving councils more time to come up with an improved pay offer in an attempt to avoid strikes which could close schools.

Unison had set a deadline of 17:00 on Wednesday, but local authority body Cosla asked for an extension as it sought extra money from the Scottish government to fund a deal.

Unison and Unite now say any new offer will need to be made by Thursday.

Cosla and the deputy first minister are due to meet later on Wednesday.

The Scottish government has previously said that councils would need to use existing budgets to fund a better deal.

The three-day strike by Unison, Unite and the GMB is scheduled to happen on 26, 27 and 28 September across 26 of Scotland's 32 council areas.

Unison wants a new offer by 12:00 on Thursday while Unite said it would give Cosla until 17:00 that day.

The GMB also said a revised offer must arrive on Thursday to avert the strikes.

The dispute is over the pay offer for all council workers other than teachers, who are covered by a different pay agreement.

The proposed strike action would include janitors and school catering staff.

A number of councils - including Glasgow - have already said schools will close if the action goes ahead.

The most recent pay offer, made last week, was quickly rejected by the three unions.

It would give workers at least a £1,929 increase in annual salary by 1 January 2024.

Cosla said the deal would have seen the lowest-paid local government workers receiving a 21% pay increase in two years. It added that it would cost councils just under £500m.

But unions said it was not an improvement on the previous offer which had been rejected and argue more needs to be done to help other staff deal with the cost of living.