Following the publication of the STRB recommendations on teacher
pay the Government has offered:
- To fully implement the recommendations of the STRB report,
awarding a 6.5 per cent pay increase from 1 September on all
pay points and allowances.
- To provide extra funding for schools to pay for it, amounting
to £900m per annum.
- Guarantees that this extra money will not come from any
frontline services, including Special Educational Needs (SEND)
funding, schools’ capital, Maintained Nursery or 16-19 funding
provision.
- A set of commitments – agreed with the Prime Minster –
to take urgent measures to reduce teacher workload.
The National Executive of the NEU having considered the offer
have agreed that it should be put to our members and to recommend
acceptance.
Should members vote to accept the offer, strike action involving
teacher members in the autumn term will not go ahead.
The union will set up an electronic ballot of members, which will
run from 18-28 July.
Dr Mary Bousted and Kevin Courtney, Joint General
Secretaries of the National Education Union, said:
“The action taken by NEU members around pay and funding has
compelled the Government to now accept the STRB recommendation on
teacher pay and to accept that it needs to be funded.
‘Throughout this dispute, we promised to take every opportunity
to talk to the Government about the crisis in our schools and
what was needed to resolve it. We also said that, if we thought
any offer was good enough, we would put it to our members to
decide whether it was acceptable or not.
‘No teacher wanted to be strike but equally no teacher could
continue to stand by and see yet again their pay eroded, their
school funding decimated, and their workload left
unaddressed.
‘There is still much more to do to ensure that teachers are
properly rewarded, workload reduced, and schools properly funded.
Should the offer be accepted by members, the NEU will continue
campaigning and negotiating with the DfE to ensure improved
working conditions for teachers and an improved education system
for children and young people.”