Labour cheats NHS


Stop cuts and closures

Pay health workers a living wage

NHS demonstration March 3rd 2007, photo Paul Mattsson

NHS demonstration March 3rd 2007, photo Paul Mattsson

NHS WORKERS were outraged when they heard that there had been a £500 million under-spend in the NHS in England. All over the country hospital trusts have closed wards, sacked staff and delayed operations under orders from health secretary Patricia Hewitt to get deficits wiped out.

Lois Austin

There have been devastating cuts over the last year. 22,300 jobs were lost and these included 1,446 compulsory redundancies. Gordon Brown told health workers that this year’s measly pay award of 2.5% could not be afforded in full and its implementation has to be staged.

This latest exposure confirms what campaigners and trade unionists knew all along, that the argument from central government was wrong. The government said the money was not there to maintain health services at the current level and that there was massive overspending by ‘irresponsible’ hospital trusts and primary care trusts (PCTs). That is simply not true.

This campaign to reduce NHS deficits has really been about ‘streamlining’ the NHS with cuts and closures, preparing it for further privatisation and ensuring that it meets the requirements of the internal market.

The health trade union rank and file are demanding industrial action over pay. UNISON leaders have so far failed to begin to implement their own health conference policy which was to fight for an above-inflation pay increase.

NHS demonstration March 3rd 2007, photo Paul Mattsson

NHS demonstration March 3rd 2007, photo Paul Mattsson

UNISON general secretary Dave Prentis, like the Royal College of Nursing (RCN) leaders, is demanding that the money left over from the £500 million underspend be used to finance the 2.5% increase in full now. The RCN have begun balloting on industrial action over this issue.

It is quite right to say that the money is there to finance the pay award now in full and that is what should happen, but 2.5% is completely inadequate. In effect it means a wage cut when inflation is running at 4.9%.

The unions should be fighting for the demand put forward by left branches at UNISON health conference which was for 5% or a £1,000 a year increase, whatever is the greater, and prepare for industrial action, including strike action on this issue.

Linked to this, the struggle against the privatisation of the NHS, cuts, closures and redundancies must be stepped up.

There are protests all over the country at blood processing centres on 15 June against privatisation and centralisation of the blood service. Supporters of the NHS and other trade unionists should go to these protests.

Don’t forget to organise a protest or come to the Central London rally on Parliament Green on Thursday 5 July, the 59th anniversary of the NHS’s foundation.

Last but most vital of all, we must build for a massive turnout to the national trade union-led NHS demonstration on 13 October.