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A landmark agreement that will give Welsh college lecturers pay parity with schoolteachers has just been concluded.
The final phase of the three-stage pay agreement, drawn up between NATFHE - The University & College Lecturers’ Union, and fforwm, the national organisation representing FE colleges in Wales, was completed this week.
Overall, the deal will see an extra £31.5m pumped into Welsh college workers’ pay packets. The first two phases of the deal, implemented in 2003 and 2004, saw an extra £20m allotted to college workers' pay, and the final phase will see another £11.5m put in.
The agreement means that lecturers at the 23 colleges of further education in Wales will now be paid in accordance with a single, national pay spine, which mirrors the pay structures of their schoolteacher colleagues. Previously, Welsh colleges each set their own pay scales which meant that pay rates varied greatly between institutions. All colleges paid lower rates than schools.
The deal also spells very good news for part-time Welsh college lecturers who will be paid at the same rates as their full-time colleagues. And it is a victory for those on insecure, short-term hourly-paid contracts who will be paid on the same pay scales as their full-time colleagues, while some will be transferred on to long-term contracts.
Crucially, Welsh colleges will only get their share of the extra funding if they agree to implement this three-year deal in full.
Margaret Phelan, NATFHE official in Wales, said:
'This is a landmark victory that gives college lecturers much deserved pay parity with schoolteachers, and means part-time staff in further education will no longer get second-class rates of pay.
'One of the reasons that we have been able to secure this pay deal in Wales is because our government recognises the key role colleges will play in shaping the future of the curriculum for 14-19-year-olds and in adult education. I would like to congratulate the Welsh assembly government for allowing us to reach this agreement and for giving us the funding to do so.'
Barry Lovejoy, head of colleges’ department at NATFHE, in congratulating the Wales membership, said:
'This deal should ensure industrial relations peace in Wales for the foreseeable future and employers and government across the border should take heed.
'In England, lecturers are forced to take continued industrial action because of the ongoing failure of colleges to implement a nationally agreed pay settlement.
'The Welsh agreement shows that there is another way. NATFHE calls on the government to face up to its responsibilities and provide ring-fenced money for agreed pay rises.'
See agreement | salary scales | management pay spine | instructor/demonstrator agreement | part-time agreement
NATFHE has welcomed the Welsh Assembly's decision to not charge top-up fees to Welsh domiciled students studying at Welsh HEIs, but the union warned that the funding gap compared to English HEIs must be bridged by additional funds.
NATFHE negotiators have concluded an agreement on behalf of part-time lecturers in Wales. In the agreement is a commitment from colleges to offer fractional contracts to part-time hourly-paid staff from 1st January 2005.
The employers will now access an addition £2.4m from the Welsh Assembly Government to convert the contracts of hourly-paid lecturing staff to fractional appointments.
Your branch officers will be contacting the principal to establish how your college intends to implement that part of the agreement that deals with fractionalising part-time hourly-paid lecturing staff.
The agreement will see part-time hourly-paid lecturers placed on the same scales as full time staff from 1 August 2005, providing the Assembly deliver on their promise to fund equality in the FE sector.
Part-time lecturers will receive an hourly rate of pay that reflects, pro rata, that of a full-time lecturer. Part-time lecturers will also be eligible for incremental progression.