Striking ambulance workers in England and Wales manned picket lines on Thursday, escalating a pay dispute between the government and a host of public-sector staff.
A series of stoppages are causing misery across Britain in the run-up to Christmas, with railway workers and passport control officers set to hinder festive holiday getaways as the government resists the growing pay demands.
Employees across the UK economy are demand-ing salary rises to match or beat decades-high infla-tion — currently running at nearly 11 percent — which is spurring the worst cost-of-living crisis in a generation.
“We’re not paid enough for what we deserve,” 24-year-old paramedic Kirsten Reid said in Crawley, southern England. “Secondly, patient safety is a huge thing… our response times are shocking, and they need to be better.” “We do 12-hour shifts with a 30-minute break, but they’re rarely ever 12-hour shifts. We’re usually overrun,” she added.
The government and unions continue to trade blame over the strikes amid fears of possible loss of life, as healthcare leaders warned about straining a system already in crisis.
On Tuesday, thousands of members of the Royal College of Nursing (RCN) in England, Wales and Northern Ireland took to picket lines, five days after their first strike in its 106-year history.
Health Secretary Steve Barclay, writing in the Daily Telegraph newspaper, accused the unions of making a “conscious decision” to “inflict harm” on patients. GMB union national secretary, Rachel Harrison, hit back calling his comments “insulting”.
“Ambulance workers are seething at such a crude, insulting attempt to divert attention from the government’s continued chaos in the NHS,” she said. Around a dozen staff formed the picket line out-side the ambulance base in Crawley.
“My members are striking today for fair pay. At the end of the day, they’ve had a 20 percent pay cut over the last 10 years, and they can no longer afford to keep going with that,” GMB union representative Lib Whitfield said.—AFP