INDEPENDENT NEWS

Plunket Moves Towards Pay Parity

Published: Tue 7 Feb 2006 02:11 PM
7 February 2006
Plunket Moves Towards Pay Parity
Plunket staff throughout the country are voting on a pay offer bringing Plunket pay rates for nurses and community health workers in line with the district health board (DHB) multi-employer collective agreement (MECA) July 2005 rates.
The New Zealand Nurses Organisation is recommending that it's around 600 Plunket members vote for the settlement in ratification meetings which finish on March 9.
NZNO negotiator Chris Wilson said the negotiations had been very positive, with Plunket management strongly supporting the principle of pay parity.
"We are very pleased with the settlement as it achieves what we set out to do," she said.
"It is very positive that a large employer in the primary healthcare sector has accepted pay parity is needed for recruitment and retention - a growing issue for Plunket."
Chris Wilson said the settlement sent a strong signal that the primary health sector must achieve pay parity with public hospitals or face a recruitment and retention crisis.
Negotiations between NZNO and over 600 primary health employers continue this month.
Chris Wilson said the Plunket offer includes a 13 percent pay increase, in three installments, for registered and Plunket nurses, Community Karitane, and Kaiawhina and also includes the DHB allowances for professional development. Administrative staff will receive a five percent pay rise, backdated to August.
"This is the first stage of achieving parity. The 05/06 agreement meets the 2005 DHB rates and further pay increases will be negotiated in the 06/07 bargaining round," she said.
The settlement also includes the same bargaining fee clause as the DHB MECA, under which non-NZNO members must pay a bargaining fee to NZNO in order to gain the rewards of the NZNO-negotiated deal.
"We are very happy to have that provision in the agreement and believe it reflects the fact that Plunket values its bargaining relationship with NZNO," Chris Wilson said.
ENDS

Next in Lifestyle

New Project Aims To Transform Health Care Response To Family Violence
By: Auckland University of Technology
Protecting NZ’s Children From The Impacts Of Some Of World’s Highest Screen Time
By: Auckland University of Technology
Youth Week: A Time To Celebrate Rangatahi In Aotearoa
By: Ara Taiohi
TDDA Offers New Advanced Drug Awareness Training
By: The Drug Detection Agency
750 Deaths A Year: Why New Zealand Needs Prostate Screening Programme
By: Prostate Cancer Foundation
Anno 2020's Aussie Producer Celebrates Sold-out Screenings Of This Kiwi-helmed Movie
By: Lance Morcan
View as: DESKTOP | MOBILE © Scoop Media