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Glasgow Live
Glasgow Live
National
Paul Hutcheon

Glasgow council urged to sell Salvador Dalí painting in Kelvingrove to meet equal pay bills

Salvador Dalí's Christ of Saint John of the Cross should be sold to meet Glasgow City Council's equal pay bills, according to a top trade unionist.

The most popular of all Dali's religious works, the painting is considered the jewel in the Kelvingrove Art Gallery & Museum crown and represents a huge draw for the million plus people who visit the museum each year.

Purchased in 1952 for £8,200 (after Dali had initially asked for £12,000), it is said to be worth in the region of £60 million.

Gary Smith of the GMB said council bosses should be prepared to flog the masterpiece and give the cash to women denied a fair wage, the Daily Record reports.

He said: “There is no way this discrimination is going to be paid for off the back of hard-pressed workers in a cost of living crisis.”

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An equal pay deal worth around £500m was agreed by Glasgow City Council back in 2019 for thousands of predominantly female workers. But a new pay grading scheme has still not been introduced, with unions saying that discrimination remains in place.

The GMB believes the outstanding bill will be massive and the union’s members have been balloted for strike action.

Smith, general secretary of the GMB, says lucrative city assets should be on the table when considering how to pay for any future settlement.

He said: “The council’s residual equal pay liability is getting bigger by the day and the final bill will probably run into the hundreds of millions once again.

“That’s why the council’s unelected officials have stalled the settlement process, made no clear offer to the claimant groups, and provided no definitive timescale on the replacement of the discriminatory pay and grading system – yet they wonder why 14,000 workers are balloting for strike action?

“Time and again we’ve urged the council leadership to pick up the phone to government and ask for help to ease the pressure on the city’s finances and to help resolve Glasgow’s equal pay crisis, but it’s fallen on deaf ears.

“If the council really thinks it can fix this alone then it had better start making plans to flog the Dali, because there is no way this discrimination is going to be paid for off the back of hard-pressed workers in a cost-of-living crisis.”

Martha Wardrop, a Scottish Green councillor in Glasgow, said: “The process of settling Labour’s unequal pay legacy must remain a priority whoever forms Glasgow’s administration after May’s elections.

“Green councillors will work for a fast and fair settlement, but we will not resort to flogging off the city’s cultural assets to do that. We’ll keep pressing for the funding and powers councils need to invest in local services and pay workers well.”

A council spokesman said: “We’re negotiating with trade unions and others representing claimants. We will only know the cost of settling claims once we have a deal – and that will determine any financial strategy.”

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