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Birmingham City Council agrees huge equal pay deal with unions

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  • Post last modified:December 10, 2024

Thousands of women are set to have their equal pay claims settled with a council after several years. The agreement between Birmingham City Council, Unison and the GMB union will see 6,000 staff with the authority receive settlement payouts. The equal pay issue was one of the key factors in the authority declaring effective bankruptcy last year when it said it was facing a bill of £760m to settle the claims. The details of the agreement are confidential and the council’s cabinet will be asked to formally approve it on 17 December.

The dispute relates to claims staff in female-dominated roles, such as teaching assistants, have historically been underpaid in relation to those in male-dominated areas of the council, such as waste collection. The campaign for the 6,000 women was launched four years ago, the GMB union said, and talks restarted in November.

“This result would not have happened without their dedicated and tireless leadership of a campaign which was overcome huge odds,” Rhea Wolfson, from the GMB, added. “This will hopefully be the much-needed turning point for staff, services and local communities across the city.”

The council started paying out equal pay claims after a landmark case was brought against the authority in 2012 but said in 2023 the bill had spiralled to £760m. However, earlier this year, Max Caller, the lead commissioner appointed by the government to oversee the financial recovery of the council, said the bill to settle could be below that.

Sally Maybury, a former admin assistant at the council, was one of 174 people who won the ruling at the Supreme Court more than a decade ago. She previously told the BBC: “I felt undervalued and treated as if I was worthless.”

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