Government Offers Rejected Resoundingly By Secondary Teachers And Principals
PPTA Te Wehengarua members have rejected all recent offers by the government for settlement of the secondary principals’ and secondary teachers’ collective agreements and the area school teachers’ and area school principals’ collective agreements.
The
government’s offer across all four collective agreements
includes a pay offer over two years well below the projected
cost of living. Schools would seriously struggle to recruit
and retain specialist subject teachers at the pay rates
proposed.
The offers fail to address key conditions
and staffing claims made by principals and teachers
including claims for more guidance counsellors and other
specialist staff to provide the school-based assistance that
best meets students’ needs.
“We really hope the government improves the offers sufficiently to head off the likelihood of a summer of discontent in our schools next year. Teachers have voted decisively against the Government’s offer and decisively for industrial action,” says Melanie Webber, President of PPTA Te Wehengarua.
Teachers voted at paid union meetings
around the country last week to take a one-day strike in
Term 1 2023 and impose a ban on all internal relief cover
from the start of Term 1 2023.
The ban on internal
relief cover means teachers would not give up their
entitlement to planning and marking time within the school
day to relieve for absent colleagues.
“Relievers are
in short supply due to an overall teacher shortage, and the
insecurity they faced during the pandemic. If a school
can’t get a reliever they must fall back on the good-will
of the teachers,
to cover classes voluntarily
during the time they are supposed to have for the myriad of
preparation, marking and administrative tasks that are part
of the job.”
“Throughout the pandemic of the last
three years teachers have exercised a huge amount of
goodwill, delivering hybrid lessons, and being available for
students at all hours of the day to enable them to continue
learning through COVID disruptions.
We also
continue to manage all the emotional, mental health and
societal challenges that our students face, and which have
been exacerbated by the pandemic.
“Investing in
teachers is investing in our ability to meet the demands of
an education system that has been through a pandemic.
Salaries and conditions must be sufficient to keep teachers
in the profession and attract graduates into
teaching.
There must be significantly more pastoral
care staffing to work with students who are at risk of
dis-engaging with schooling. The offer it has made is
extremely disappointing and does nothing to address our
valid concerns.”
Kate Gainsford, Chair of the
Secondary Principals’ Council, says “Principals believe
that the offers leave too many items open to lengthy,
time-consuming explorations of ideas in working groups and
the like without any firm resolution addressing core issues
at the heart of our claim.
Principals’ wellbeing
needs to be supported and our workloads need to be
manageable as we lead schools during a time of significant
educational reform, ongoing teacher shortages and increasing
numbers of students experiencing mental health and social
challenges.”
“There is no ignoring the widely held
and deeply felt sense that the sector is undervalued by the
government despite the 'thanks and appreciation' mentioned
in dispatches. After three years of COVID disruption, there
is nothing schools would like more than a settled
2023.
Sensible improvements on these offers could
make that
happen.”