Shropshire Star

Major national announcement to be made in Telford today on teachers' industrial action

All five education unions will be making a major announcement about industrial action at a meeting in Telford today.

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Photo: PA Wire.

The headteachers' union the NAHT’s is holding its Annual Conference at the international centre and a big press conference will be held there this afternoon.

General secretaries of all four education unions – NAHT, NEU, ASCL and NASUWT – are due to speak together at the press conference in what is being flagged up as an unprecedented show of unity, to announce co-ordination of their unions’ industrial action going forward.

The NAHT has today (Friday) announced that it will formally ballot its members on industrial action over pay, funding, workload and wellbeing. The union’s National Executive Committee yesterday, decided to hold a formal postal ballot of all its eligible members in England.

Delegates attending conference will vote to endorse that decision.

The ballot will ask one question: whether school leaders are willing to take strike action.

The move comes after NAHT members rejected the recent pay offer from government, calling it “inadequate and unaffordable.” 90 per cent rejected the offer, with 92 per cent saying they could not afford to pay it. 78 per cent said they would be prepared to vote for industrial action if the offer was rejected.

Paul Whiteman, NAHT general secretary, said: “Our members have been very clear: they are fed up with their continued mistreatment by government, and they want to stand up and be counted.

“I took part in the recent intensive negotiations with the Education Secretary in good faith, and we took the best offer the government could make us to our members. Their response could not be more clear: it is just not good enough.

“School leaders have suffered over a decade of pay erosion and are feeling the pinch of the cost-of-living crisis just like everyone else. But they still voted against a pay rise, knowing the damage it would do to their schools, pupils and staff.

“A pay offer from government without the funding to back it is an utterly empty promise. It simply leads to redundancies and reduced support for children.

“The government knows what it needs to bring to the table to continue negotiations. And our ballot announcement today sends a strong message that we will not go away. This dispute will continue – the government needs to recognise that and engage.”