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McConnell gives nurses full rise | |
(about 12 hours later) | |
First Minister Jack McConnell has pledged that Scottish nurses will receive their full 2.5% increase from April this year. | |
That means they will be paid more than nurses elsewhere in the UK. | |
The move was announced on Tuesday and is at odds with Chancellor Gordon Brown's plans for a phased pay rise for nurses south of the border. | |
Health care union Unison said that it was delighted with the decision by the executive. | |
Glyn Hawker, Unison's Scottish organiser for health, said: "We are delighted that the strong lobbying by Unison has borne fruit. | |
"The minister has listened to health workers' concerns. This reflects the more effective and co-operative nature of the NHS in Scotland." | |
Conference call | |
About 300 nurses had been due to leave a conference at Dynamic Earth and stage a rally at Holyrood protesting over what they claimed was a pay cut in real terms. | |
The Royal College of Nursing in Scotland said nurses had felt angry, frustrated and let down by last week's UK Government announcement on pay. | |
It recommended a pay award of 1.5% from 1 April and a further 1% from November. | It recommended a pay award of 1.5% from 1 April and a further 1% from November. |
The conference is in effect summing up a three-year-long campaign launched in 2004 aimed at increasing staffing levels in order to ensure the quality of care that patients receive. | |
Although the union's campaigning has been successful in some areas, it has failed to convince ministers in the key area of pay. | Although the union's campaigning has been successful in some areas, it has failed to convince ministers in the key area of pay. |
In a survey last month of more than 1,000 RCN members, almost two-thirds said they would be prepared to take some form of industrial action if they received an unsatisfactory pay deal. | In a survey last month of more than 1,000 RCN members, almost two-thirds said they would be prepared to take some form of industrial action if they received an unsatisfactory pay deal. |