The union representing nurses and midwives has rejected the New South Wales government鈥檚 effort to freeze their pay, saying it was abhorrent to ask frontline workers to do more for less.
New South Wales Nurses and Midwives Association general secretary Brett Holmes said on May 12 that it was no surprise that nurses and midwives are angry: the union had negotiated a modest 2.5% pay increase from July 1 but the government says it is considering freezing wages before the pay rise.
鈥淥ver 93% of our public sector members indicated their opposition to a wage freeze in a snap poll, while more than 4000 have emailed their local State MPs, urging them to reject it鈥, Holmes said.
鈥淲hile risking their lives to protect our community during the coronavirus pandemic, it鈥檚 abhorrent to be asking frontline nurses to do more for less.鈥
NSW Treasurer Dominic Perrottet said on May 12 that no decision had been made on public servants wages, but made it clear this聽is an option it is actively considering.
But not all NSW public servants are being subjected to a pay freeze.聽In May, it was revealed that seven senior public servants had their base salary lifted to more than half a million dollars.聽NSW police commissioner Mick Fuller was given an $87,000 a year pay rise in March, a sum that most workers do not earn over a whole year.
NSW midwife Trish Corcoran described the government鈥檚 proposal for a pay freeze as "outrageous". She told聽91自拍论坛聽that COVID-19 frontline workers had 鈥渟acrificed their own health and wellbeing and that of their families to care for vulnerable and unwell people鈥澛燼nd they 鈥渘eed to be supported not attacked鈥.
鈥淔or the past nine years, the NSW government has limited pay rises for nurses and midwives to 2.5% per annum. Prior to the COVID-19 crisis, the cap on wage rises affected all public sector workers and suppressed wage growth.
鈥淩ight now, any freeze on wage rises already negotiated not only shows lack of appreciation to nurses and midwives, it won鈥檛 help the economic recovery,鈥 Corcoran said.
聽Holmes said: 鈥淲e are all preparing for a second wave of COVID-19, yet the government is asking nurses and midwives to do more for less, putting the budget bottom line before people in need鈥.聽
The NSW Teachers Federation has also called on the government not to freeze pay for public school teachers and principals who it said 鈥渉ave been turning themselves inside out throughout this crisis.
鈥淭he Premier is reminded that we have a legally binding agreement which we expect to be honoured鈥, the union said on May 12. 鈥淪hould the government proceed with such a proposition, the NSWTF Executive will convene as a matter of urgency to determine a course of action in defence of our members鈥 rights.鈥
The NSW government is crying poor, having allocated $11 billion on stimulus spending. Premier Gladys聽Berejiklian said that the wage freeze would save $3 billion over four years.聽
This is despite the NSW聽聽last June that the state鈥檚 net debt was 鈥渢he lowest of any state鈥 and that the state鈥檚 financial position 鈥渞emains strong鈥.