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Daily Record
Daily Record
Politics
Peter Davidson & Paul Hutcheon

Schools in Scotland set to close as teachers vote for strike action over pay dispute

Schools are set to close after teachers voted for strike action following a bitter pay dispute.

Any walkout would be the first national strike since the 1980s. On a turnout of 71 per cent, 96 per cent members of the EIS trade unions supported strike action.

The vote follows a separate consultative ballot, where 94 per cent of EIS members rejected a 5 per cent pay offer and 91 per cent said they would be willing to move to strike action. Scotland faces a crippling winter of discontent, with nurses also voting for a strike.

Commenting following the result, EIS General Secretary Andrea Bradley said: "This ballot result provides the EIS with an extremely strong mandate for strike action over pay. Our members have sent yet another very clear message to their employers in Scottish local authorities and to the Scottish Government that they must do better on teachers’ pay.

"Our members should have received a pay increase in April but, after months of unjustifiable dither and delay from COSLA and the Scottish Government, we are still waiting for an acceptable offer to be made. Quite frankly, our members have had enough of waiting and enough of feeling the financial strain of the cost of living on top of the significant stress of their teaching jobs.

"A move to strike action is always a last resort, but our members have become increasingly angry over their treatment by their employers and by the Scottish Government. The last pay offer, a sub-inflation 5%, was rejected by Scotland’s teachers almost three months ago. Since then, there has been no new offer made, despite a strong desire on the part of teachers for a fair deal to be struck.”

Bradley added: "In the current context – with the cost of living soaring, and prices of food and fuel, housing and heating continuing to climb ever higher – our members are neither willing nor able to accept a deep real-terms cut to their pay.

"COSLA and the Scottish Government really must now pay attention to Scotland’s teachers and they must come back with a greatly improved pay offer if strike action starting this month is to be avoided."

A special meeting of the EIS executive committee will be held on Thursday afternoon to agree the next steps to be taken in the EIS pay campaign, including an initial programme of industrial action in schools.

Labour MSP Michael Marra said: “Years of SNP mismanagement and neglect are at the root of this decisive result.

“Teachers have been going above and beyond to deliver the education recovery children and young people so badly need, and this should be recognised.

“No-one wants strikes in schools, but pupils and teachers alike are being failed by the SNP’s catastrophic lack of leadership.

“The Education Secretary needs to get round the table with a fair deal for teachers and for schools before strike chaos hits.”

Education Secretary Shirley-Anne Somerville said: "The Scottish Government and Scottish local government value the teaching workforce.

"We recognise the vital importance of reaching a fair and affordable resolution on pay, both for the workforce during a cost-of-living crisis, and for the pupils and parents who rely on the vital services our teaching workforce deliver.

"We are absolutely committed to working together to support a fair pay offer for teachers through the Scottish Negotiating Committee for Teachers and to avoiding unnecessary strike action and the disruption that would cause.

"Strikes in our schools are in no-one's interest - least of all for pupils, parents and carers who have already faced significant disruption over the past three years."

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