Wales ambulance strikes: Four more walkout days by Unite
- Published
Four more days of strikes by ambulance workers in Wales have been announced by the Unite union.
The dates in February and March coincide with walkouts by GMB union ambulance staff in a pay dispute.
On 6 February GMB nurses will join the ambulance strikers in the biggest NHS walkout in this dispute.
A health department spokesman said it is "continuing to have constructive discussions" with unions about pay.
Both Unite and GMB members will be striking on 6 February, 20 February, 6 March and 20 March.
These are in addition to the two Unite strikes taking place in January.
The announcement came as part of 10 fresh strike dates throughout January, February and March across Wales, England and Northern Ireland.
Not all union member ambulance staff - including paramedics, call handlers and support workers - will strike at once. Under trade union law emergency cover will still be provided and staff can leave the picket lines to attend.
Ahead of previous strikes in January and December, patients were told that all Category 1 calls - classed as the most life-threatening situations, such as cardiac arrest - would be responded to by an ambulance.
However, less urgent calls which are not immediately judged to be life-threatening (Category 2), might have to wait longer than usual for an ambulance but they would still respond to strokes and heart attacks.
Urgent problems that fit into Category 3 - such as a woman in late-stage labour - would not be prioritised, the public was told.
Unite is also a smaller union, meaning on some days only a couple of hundred ambulance workers across the country will actually be striking across the 10 ambulance services in England, those in Wales and Northern Ireland.
Speaking to the BBC in the Political Thinking podcast, Unite General Secretary Sharon Graham said staff were "fighting for the NHS".
Ms Graham said: "People are dying as we speak because of waiting times and the clogging up of the NHS.
"In all cases, patients with the most urgent clinical need will be given priority."
The dispute centres on pay, with workers calling for above-inflation (10.5% in the year to December) pay rises.
The government has made it clear it is not willing to move on this year's pay award.
But the governments in England and Wales have given NHS staff an average of 4.75%, with everyone guaranteed at least £1,400 - as recommended by the independent NHS Pay Review Body.
That is less than half the rate of inflation, although latest figures show the rate at which prices are rising has started to slow.
One option being explored by Health Secretary Steve Barclay is backdating the 2023-24 rise to January. It would normally kick in in April.
The Treasury has not agreed to the idea.
This has already been tabled in Scotland, leading to NHS strikes being halted for further negotiations - although staff there received a 7.5% pay rise this year.
A Department of Health and Social Care spokesperson said: "It is disappointing some union members are going ahead with further strikes at a time when the NHS is already under huge pressure from Covid, flu and tackling the backlog.
"The Health and Social Care Secretary is continuing to have constructive discussions with unions about the 2023/24 pay review process and what is affordable and fair."
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