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Daily Record
Daily Record
National
Debbie Hall

West Lothian Council workers could strike over "below the breadline" pay offer

Some West Lothian Council could be set to strike in a row over wages.

The GMB union said a two per cent offer will “turn crisis into catastrophe” for lowest paid workers, which include West Lothian catering staff, bin men and cleaners.

GMB sent statutory notice to COSLA chiefs today that an industrial action ballot of all members in schools and early years and waste and cleansing services across local government will run from Monday 6 June until Tuesday 26 July.

The ballot is in response to COSLA’s two per cent pay offer against all local government pay grades for 2022/23, which would equate to massive real terms pay cuts for frontline workers and disproportionately award the biggest increases to the highest earners in councils.

GMB Scotland Senior Organiser Keir Greenaway warned: “Tens of thousands of the lowest paid staff in local government will go from the frontline of public service delivery to below the breadline unless their pay confronts soaring inflation and eye-watering energy bills.

“But instead of recognising the scale of the challenge and rising to meet it, political leaders are sleeping at the wheel and blaming each other for their inability to address it – it’s a far cry from their doorstep applause every Thursday night only two years ago.

“Let’s be clear. A pay rise of just 2 per cent for the workers earning under £25,000 a year is worth no more than a tenner a week. It will turn a crisis into a catastrophe for many working families and there is no trade union worth its salt that would leave that unchallenged.

“Unless COSLA comes back to the negotiating table with a vastly improved offer that reflects the fact our members are working in the biggest of cost-of-living crisis in forty years then industrial action looks inevitable.”

A WLC spokesperson said the local authority is waiting on the outcome of the ballot before taking any steps.

He continued: “We aware that a ballot of GMB members in local government may impact on council services, particularly in schools, early years, waste and cleansing services.

“We will await the outcome of the ballot.”

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