24/04/2008

School's Out As Teachers Strike

Schools across England and Wales will have their gates shut today as the National Union of Teachers (NUT) calls strike action.

In a move that Prime Minister Gordon Brown has called "regrettable", more than 8,000 schools are closed or will face disruption as teachers walk out for the first time in about 20 years.

Schools in Leeds, Manchester, Cumbria, Nottinghamshire and inner London will all suffer from the action.

Teachers are demanding a 4.1% pay increase rather than the 2.45% currently on the table.

Acting General Secretary of the NUT, Christine Blower commented: "Teachers do not take the decision to strike easily, or lightly, but teachers' patience has been stretched to the limit.

"The Retail Price Index, which features on Government websites as the figure used for pay bargaining, is currently running at a yearly average of 4.1%. The current pay offer of 2,45% is well below that and can be seen in no other way than as a pay cut."

John Ransford from the Local Government Association believes the strike action is unwarranted saying "in the past teachers have not had brilliant pay settlements but in terms of the average they've been above average".

Mr Ransford added that teaching is "a well paid, well resourced profession".

Junior Schools Minister Jim Knight said parents would be "frustrated" by strike. Mr Knight commented: "Their pay has gone up by 19% in real terms since 1997 and that at 2.45% they're getting more than the 2% benchmark for public sector pay last year."

Sally Low, Director of Policy and External Relations at the British Chamber of Commerce said: "The strike is going to cause disruption far beyond the classroom. "The NUT and the authorities must sit down to resolve this before any damage is done to the economy."

The organisation has warned that the teacher's strike could cost businesses up to £68 million in lost working hours.

Standing by the action Ms Blower added: "There has been a significant decline in applications for post graduate teacher training across both secondary and primary education. You cannot run a world-class education system if teaching doesn't attract enough graduates. It is time for the government to listen."

(DS)


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