Local government representatives of Unite, the UK's leading
union, are recommending that members reject this year's local
government pay offer.
Council workers in England, Wales and Northern Ireland have been
offered a pay increase of 3.2 per cent from 1 April 2025.
Unite will now hold consultative ballots for its thousands of
local authority members, with the recommendation that they reject
this offer, which was tabled by national employers without any
negotiation with unions. Industrial action could then follow this
summer.
Unite general secretary Sharon Graham said: “Yet
again, this year's pay offer fails to tackle low pay for local
government workers, who have endured years of below-inflation
rises on top of the cost-of-living crisis.
“We will back members in local authorities all the
way in their fight for the fair pay rise they
deserve.”
The pay offer has been made against a backdrop of swingeing cuts
to local council services and budgets, which has led to local
government workers seeing their pay decrease by around 30 per
cent in real terms since 2010.
Unite national officer for local authorities said: “This
is a very disappointing pay offer for our members, which is why
our local government representatives have rightfully and
unanimously recommended rejection.”
“For the fourth year in a row, the national employers
have also disgracefully failed to negotiate with Unite,
attempting to force through these pitiful pay rises. Any
industrial action will be of their own making. We are calling on
council leaders to come to the negotiating table and offer fair
pay.”