In 2024, the IEU recouped T SCHOOLS N E D N E P E D $2.3 million in A BETTER DEAL IN IN The newspaper of the R O F D E IT N YOU U Independent Education Union underpayments of Australia NSW/ACT Branch for members (vol 44 #1) February 2025 PP 100000871 ISSN No: 0728-4845
LS DENT SCHOO LnSWIN N E P E D IN IN Unio erOO TER DEAL NerDENAITS finSaltC20offH 19 Dec 2024 24 ED FOR A BET INDEPAIES off
YOU UNIT
FOR A BET YOU UNITED
TER DEAL IN
27 Aug 2024
14 Oc
teachers wly employed no less than ne rn ea e nc rie pe hers with ex ) Proficient teac slocation to 2.5 experience (tran e m sa e with th parency Workload trans
lowance shed Teacher Al ceive Accompli re rs he ac te 3 All Band rship positions lease for leade Transparent re ckpay Guaranteed ba
ion Allowance Special Educat d indexation of Maintenance an ary carer) non-initial prim both initial and r (fo ve lea al parent L leadership Improved paid lowance for AL d Leadership Al an r he ac Te ed th Accomplish Eligibility for bo g teachers) nch tin xis (e A NSW/ACT Bra positions s, Secretary, IEU tthew
Carol Ma Authorised by
Join the IEU
“The AIS only offered these improvements because of strong support for the union campaign from members and their colleagues. The union did not make any trade-offs to gain these outcomes.”
INDEPENDENT SCHOOLS New agreements ready at last Carol Matthews Secretary In late December 2024, the union reached agreement with the Association of Independent Schools (AIS) on the terms of the new multi-enterprise agreements (MEAs) that will apply to teachers and professional and operational staff in NSW and the ACT. Single interest bargaining: Why did we settle? Our campaign for single interest bargaining was the reason we gained significant concessions from the employers in late December. A majority of teachers in a majority of schools voted for our petition for single interest bargaining for the Teachers MEA. This enabled us to lodge an application for single interest bargaining on behalf of teachers in those schools with the Fair Work Commission in early December, although the bargaining could not commence until February 2025 when the current MEAs expire. This placed enormous pressure on employers who faced the real risk that more than 100 schools would be forced to commence bargaining in a new stream. The union refused to agree to the Co-operative Teachers MEA proposed by the AIS in late November because we considered the proposed pay rates for existing experienced teachers were too low (and below the rates for new teachers who would be employed from 2025 with the same experience). The AIS had also failed to meet other elements of the union’s claim. We were concerned because there were many substantial technical errors in the drafting. And in the Professional and Operational Staff MEAs (PAOS MEAs), we considered the pay rates were just too low.
Campaign leads to win Under the Fair Work Act, if the union refuses to agree to an MEA going to the vote, the employer has to seek an order from the Fair Work Commission to proceed. This matter was set down for hearing on 19 December. Our application for single interest bargaining for the Teachers MEA was listed on the same day. Negotiations resumed in earnest in the week prior to the hearing, with the AIS seeking the union’s key claims in relation to all the MEAs. In response to our claims, the AIS agreed to: • raise the pay rates for experienced Proficient teachers • substantially support our workload transparency claim • maintain the special education allowance for all teachers in those schools where it is currently paid rather than freeze it just for existing teachers • improvements in the PAOS rates • backdating of all payments to the first pay period after 1 February 2025. The AIS only offered these improvements because of strong support for the union campaign from members and their colleagues. This support was essential to achieving a range of improvements in the MEAS in the last months of the campaign. The union did not make any trade-offs to gain these outcomes. Salary wins for teachers Salary wins for existing teachers included: • Teachers with four or more years’ experience at Proficient (five years in the ACT) will now go straight to Level 2.5 (Level 8 in the ACT). This rate is $127,281 in NSW and $130,643 in the ACT. This is a pay rise in 2025 of between $12,000 and over $20,000 (depending on the current MEA) and about $6000 above the previous AIS offer.
• All existing teachers who were classified as Band 3 – Experienced Teacher or Senior Teacher 1 will receive the Accomplished Teacher allowance of $4979 in addition to their salary at Level 2.5 (Level 8 in the ACT). This gives a total salary of $132,260 in NSW and $135,622 in the ACT. This also applies if the teacher moves to another school covered by this MEA in the future. Teachers employed after January 2025 will receive the Accomplished Teacher allowance if they have been through the ISTAA process. • Existing Band 3 teachers and Senior Teacher 1 teachers will be entitled to receive both the Accomplished Teacher allowance and a leadership position allowance if they are in a leadership position when the new MEA commences. They will retain this right if they move to another school under the MEA in the future. Teachers employed after 1 January will receive both the Accomplished Teacher allowance and a leadership allowance only if they have been through the ISTAA process and hold a Leadership position Level 1 or 2. These improvements will be particularly beneficial for teachers with four or more years’ experience at Proficient, teachers who have been deemed Band 3 under the previous MEAs, and Band 3 teachers in leadership positions. The union has also ensured that teachers at registered special schools who are teaching classes of students with a disability will still receive the special education allowance. The MEA will include a list of schools to which this applies. Newly employed teachers will also receive the allowance, and it will be increased throughout the life of the MEA. continued on page 3
www.ieu.asn.au - newsmonth 1