Primary school teachers reject second pay offer

The New Zealand Educational Institute says members felt the current offers did not address the concerns they had raised. supplied file photo.

About 30,000 primary school teachers will be going on strike around the country next Thursday.

The New Zealand Educational Institute says primary school and kindergarten teachers and principals rejected a second offer from the Ministry of Education to settle their collective agreements.

NZEI president Mark Potter says union members want the government to increase staffing and funding to schools and kindergartens and improve current pay offers to attract and retain people.

The current offers from the government did little to address serious issues around funding and understaffing, ratios and sick leave, he says.

"Strike action is the last thing we want to do, but members want to send a message to the government about how serious we are about needing change."

Cost of living rises were a factor, but "the bigger picture is that if we are to retain and attract quality educators we must improve work conditions in the sector", he says.

"We all want the best for our students but without changes to the system we can't give it to them. This affects tamariki, because teacher's working conditions are children's learning conditions."

In a statement put out by the NZEI, one Canterbury primary school teacher said they voted to strike because the offer did not address class sizes and learning support, a Tāneatua primary school principal sys currently primary school children were resourced at 30 per cent less than their secondary counterparts, while a Nelson kindergarten teacher said they were striking because there was not enough sick leave.

Secondary school teachers are also striking next week, which will mean up to 50,000 teachers will be taking industrial action.

The Ministry of Education says it has sought to resume bargaining urgently "to avoid disruption to our learners, their families, employers and communities".

"We have been working through PPTA's priorities with them, however, there are still some outstanding issues and we have now approached the Employment Relations Authority to instigate facilitated bargaining urgently. We hope the PPTA has the same urgency."

It says the offer rejected by NZEI members provided a "significant increase".

-RNZ.

4 comments

Amazing how endless

Posted on 10-03-2023 08:44 | By an_alias

Whenever the govt is involved we seem just to have endless strikes and issues. Just amazes me. Well I guess all I can say is good one them as the present agenda ridden teaching curriculum simply dumbs down the kids. Goal achieved, don't use your own brain just rely on govt and look to the constant dribble from MPs and working groups.


Sick To Death Of It

Posted on 10-03-2023 21:42 | By Yadick

Whenever Labor is in power there's so many strikes. I'm over Teachers and Nurses striking. We would never have heard of these supposed professionals (including Fire Fighters) striking in the past. If you don't like your career choice and the money you chose then get out. Teachers . . . What exactly are you teaching the kids of today, what example are some of you setting?


Who'd Be A Teacher?

Posted on 11-03-2023 07:19 | By Thats Nice

Teachers these days are also required to be counsellors and parents. Kids now, simply have no respect for anything or anyone as consequences for bad behavior have been taken away some time ago. I'm not even going to start on the content of what they "have" to now teach. Wish we could go back to teaching the basics as children would be much better off than the dribble being taught now.


@ Thats Nice

Posted on 11-03-2023 08:35 | By Yadick

Well said.


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