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The voice of Scotland’s vibrant voluntary sector

Published by Scottish Council for Voluntary Organisations

TFN is published by the Scottish Council for Voluntary Organisations, Caledonian Exchange, 19A Canning Street, Edinburgh EH3 8EG. The Scottish Council for Voluntary Organisations (SCVO) is a Scottish Charitable Incorporated Organisation. Registration number SC003558.

Swinney urged to act now and stop strikes in social care sector once and for all

 

Investment is needed urgently to thwart ongoing disputes across social care

First minister John Swinney has been urged to act decisively and end the threat of strikes across the social care sector.

In an unprecedented move Cornerstone, a leading social care charity, has joined with Unison, Scotland’s social care union, to demand that the Scottish Government acts on the immediate threat of industrial action across the sector by pledging significant investment. 

It comes in a joint letter where the organisations call for the government to recognise the social care sector as an essential part of Scotland’s social and economic fabric.

They also question the government’s ability to deliver on its ambitions for dignity, equality, and wellbeing without decisive action on social care.   

The letter asks for commitment a minimum £15 per hour rate of pay for all frontline social care workers; ongoing funding to maintain fair pay differentials for all other staff across the workforce; and the Implementation of sectoral bargaining in Scotland for Social Care in 2026/27.

The organisations say that care work in the voluntary and private sector is undervalued and only pay parity across the sector will bring equality.   

Hazel Brown, chief executive of cornerstone, said: “This is an unprecedented move which sees Cornerstone and Unison join forces in making an approach to the Scottish Government, despite being in dispute and facing the prospect of industrial action. Our unusual joint approach reflects the constructive relationship we have with Unison and our shared conviction that social care workers in the third sector deserve far better. But it also serves to demonstrate the strength of feeling and urgency of the moment.   

“Social care workers are a vital part of Scotland’s communities and economy, and they deserve pay that recognises the challenges, skills and professionalism required of their roles. Recent pay negotiations have become protracted and increasingly difficult, and we now face the real possibility of industrial action along with other providers in the sector.

“We are asking the Scottish Government to commit to sectoral bargaining, allowing for issues around pay differentials to be addressed and ensuring long-term pay parity across the sector that sees staff rewarded on the same basis as colleagues doing the same or similar jobs in local authorities and the NHS.  

“We are of the joint opinion that only immediate, meaningful investment by the Scottish government can deliver a sustainable sector capable of delivering the care, dignity, and fairness that the people of Scotland deserve.

“We will continue to engage in constructive discussions with Unison to do all that we can to avoid industrial action, but without urgent intervention, the sector as a whole is at serious risk of collapse, leaving some of our most vulnerable citizens at risk and causing significant job losses across the country”.

Peter Hunter, Unison regional manager, said: “Unison has good industrial relations with Cornerstone. We understand the financial constraints the charity is coping with.   

“Our joint demands are no more than what social care staff have already been promised by the government.   

“Staff have had four years of broken promises. The Scottish Government pledged to invest into pay and conditions. This has not happened, and this group of workers remain some of the lowest paid workers in the country.   

“Social care staff have no choice but to stand up for themselves.”  

 

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