Threat of industrial action averted as council workers agree to pay deal


Strike action in Scotlandโ€™s local authorities has been averted as two more unions announced members have accepted a two-year pay offer.

Unite the union announced on Thursday that 77% of its members backed the deal offered by local authority body Cosla, while GMB said 66% voted in favour.

The deal will see a 4% increase in pay this year and 3.5% next year, with both unions joining Unison โ€“ which accepted the proposal earlier this week โ€“ in backing it.

With union members backing the proposal, the chance of strike action among non-teaching council staff has been averted this year.

Sharon Graham, the general secretary of Unite, said: โ€œThe deal negotiated by Unite will boost pay packets and provide stability for our members.

โ€œUnite is once again delivering better jobs, pay and conditions for our Scottish council members.โ€

Keir Greenaway, the GMB unionโ€™s senior organiser for public services, said the offer โ€œdoes not do enoughโ€ for the lowest paid staff despite the vote to back it.

โ€œWe argued and will continue to argue for pay offers to be a flat increase to the hourly rate of every council worker,โ€ he said.

โ€œA percentage increase means the highest-paid council staff will receive thousands of pounds more each year while frontline workers get pennies more each hour.

โ€œThis offer does not do enough for them and it does not do enough to reach a minimum wage of ยฃ15 an hour which ministers continue to insist is their ambition.โ€

A spokeswoman for Cosla said: โ€œIโ€™m pleased that GMB and Unite members, alongside Unison, have voted to accept the strong two-year pay offer from Cosla.

โ€œThis means a two-year pay settlement has been agreed โ€“ which will bring a welcome period of stability and certainty about pay for our workforce.

โ€œIn agreeing this pay settlement, which is worth 4% in year one, effective from April 1 2025, and a further 3.5% increase in year two from April 1 2026, council leaders recognise the value our employees in Scotlandโ€™s councils deliver every day.

โ€œCouncils are now able to take forward work to get the pay increase of 7.64% over the two-year period into the pockets of our workforce.

โ€œWhile the agreement will have come too late for most councilsโ€™ July pay runs we know that payroll teams locally will be working hard to implement the uplift and any backpay due in the next months.โ€

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