SH3LBONA @ CSBD Posted April 16, 2023 Share Posted April 16, 2023 Nurses could strike until Christmas, said the Royal College of Nursing's leader, as she warned it would not pause a 48-hour strike in England over the first May bank holiday. General secretary Pat Cullen told the BBC the government needed to put more money on the table. But she had "no plans" to co-ordinate strikes with those by junior doctors. Conservative party chairman Greg Hands said the government's pay offer was "fair and reasonable". Asked whether it is was a final offer, he told the BBC's Sunday with Laura Kuenssberg the government needed to wait to see what other heath service unions involved in the pay dispute decided in their ballots and pointed out it had already been accepted by Unison members. The government has offered a 5% pay rise in 2023/24 and one-payment of at least £1,655. The RCN leader had initially called for this deal to be accepted but members voted to reject it by 54% to 46%, while the Unite and the GMB unions will announce the result of their ballots in two weeks' time. Shadow health secretary Wes Streeting told the same programme he was "really worried" about strike action by nurses and not in support of it because of the risks to patients' safety. The RCN strike will involve NHS nurses in emergency departments, intensive care, cancer and other wards, which would be a first as the previous nurses' strike in February included exemptions to maintain staffing in critical areas. Speaking to Laura Kuenssberg, Mr Hands said the offer amounted to an extra £5,100 for a typical band 5 NHS worker. Health Secretary Steve Barclay also said in a letter to the RCN that a nurse at the top of band 5 would get "over £5,000" extra. He added he would welcome a meeting with the RCN and feared no strike exemptions will "put patients at risk". When are nurses and junior doctors striking? Ms Cullen said that after the walkout from 20:00 BST on 30 April to 20:00 on 2 May, the union would "move immediately to ballot our members" on their next move. "If that ballot is successful it will mean further strike action right up until Christmas," she added. She rejected calls from ministers to pause strike action, revealing she had received a letter from Mr Barclay asking for this half-an-hour before she came on air. She said the letter was "disrespectful" to nurses and claimed the health secretary had spent longer writing in the Sun on Sunday newspaper than responding to nurses. In the paper, Mr Barclay warned the strikes would mean more cancelled operations and postponed treatment - and "none of this is good for the NHS or patients". Ms Cullen urged the health secretary and the government to join her union at the negotiating table "very quickly", adding: "And start to put more money on the table, start treat nurses with a bit of decency and a bit of respect." Asked why RCN nurses rejected the government's pay offer despite the union's leadership recommending it, Ms Cullen said the members believed it was "neither fair nor reasonable". Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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