First Ministers Questions (17/02/16)
I get emails on a daily basis from people asking how they can play their part in the ongoing battle with North Lanarkshire Council over equal pay.
Well publicity is a great weapon, particularly in the run-up to the next Scottish Parliament elections which will be held in May 2016 and this whole business in North Lanarkshire has been dragging on for far too long - 16 years in the case of First Wave NLC claimants whose cases have still to be settled.
So if you ask me for a good way of getting a strong message across to the powers that be, I would go straight to the top and write directly to Scotland's First Minister, Nicola Sturgeon, who had these interesting words to say about 'foot-dragging' councils at FMQs in the Scottish Parliament last year.
First Minister's Questions (FMQs) - Equal Pay
4. Linda Fabiani (East Kilbride) (SNP):
To ask the First Minister what action the Scottish Government considers needs to be taken to fully realise the objectives of the Equal Pay Act 1970. (S4F-03058)
The First Minister (Nicola Sturgeon):
On Monday, we marked equal pay day, which is the point in the year when many women start essentially working for nothing for the rest of the year, because women on average continue to earn less than men. It is a complete and utter disgrace that, despite the Equal Pay Act 1970 having been passed 45 years ago—in the year I was born, in fact—we still do not have equal pay in this country. The Scottish Government is seeking to lead by example. We have made tackling the gender pay gap a priority in our programme for government, we are working with the Equality and Human Rights Commission to tackle pregnancy-related and maternity-related discrimination, and we continue to promote fair work practices and to extend childcare. I take the opportunity to call on all organisations and businesses to take action on the issue so that we end pay inequality in Scotland once and for all.
On Monday, we marked equal pay day, which is the point in the year when many women start essentially working for nothing for the rest of the year, because women on average continue to earn less than men. It is a complete and utter disgrace that, despite the Equal Pay Act 1970 having been passed 45 years ago—in the year I was born, in fact—we still do not have equal pay in this country. The Scottish Government is seeking to lead by example. We have made tackling the gender pay gap a priority in our programme for government, we are working with the Equality and Human Rights Commission to tackle pregnancy-related and maternity-related discrimination, and we continue to promote fair work practices and to extend childcare. I take the opportunity to call on all organisations and businesses to take action on the issue so that we end pay inequality in Scotland once and for all.
Linda Fabiani:
Does the First Minister agree that local authorities in which the same political party has been in office for years, such as South Lanarkshire Council, have no excuse at all not to have settled equal pay claims on a fair and equitable basis? Does she realise that some of the claims date back for many years and continue to cause stress and strife among hard-working constituents in East Kilbride and elsewhere?
Does the First Minister agree that local authorities in which the same political party has been in office for years, such as South Lanarkshire Council, have no excuse at all not to have settled equal pay claims on a fair and equitable basis? Does she realise that some of the claims date back for many years and continue to cause stress and strife among hard-working constituents in East Kilbride and elsewhere?
The First Minister:
Ministers have repeatedly made clear—I do so again unequivocally today—that the delays by councils in settling equal pay claims are completely unacceptable. As Linda Fabiani said, many of the claims go back to 2006—even further, in some cases. There can be absolutely no justification for taking so long to resolve the issue. Some progress has been made recently—for example, the settlement of claims against Fife Council—but much more work needs to be done. Equal pay cases need to be progressed with urgency and commitment so that those who are affected receive their legal entitlements. The Minister for Local Government and Community Empowerment has written to all 32 local authorities to reiterate the Government’s desire for more and faster progress, and to seek information on the number of claims that have been settled and the number that are still outstanding for each council.
In my view, North Lanarkshire Council should be throughly ashamed of its behaviour in relation to equal pay and what's needed now is an independently-led inquiry into how the political leadership of the Council and its senior officials have made such a terrible mess of their pay arrangements for all these years.
Readers can contact the First Minister via the following email address which I would mark for the attention of Nicola Sturgeon: scottish.ministers@scotland.gsi.gov.uk
I would also send a copy of any letter to Nicola Sturgeon to your own local MSP asking for their comments and support.
Ministers have repeatedly made clear—I do so again unequivocally today—that the delays by councils in settling equal pay claims are completely unacceptable. As Linda Fabiani said, many of the claims go back to 2006—even further, in some cases. There can be absolutely no justification for taking so long to resolve the issue. Some progress has been made recently—for example, the settlement of claims against Fife Council—but much more work needs to be done. Equal pay cases need to be progressed with urgency and commitment so that those who are affected receive their legal entitlements. The Minister for Local Government and Community Empowerment has written to all 32 local authorities to reiterate the Government’s desire for more and faster progress, and to seek information on the number of claims that have been settled and the number that are still outstanding for each council.
In my view, North Lanarkshire Council should be throughly ashamed of its behaviour in relation to equal pay and what's needed now is an independently-led inquiry into how the political leadership of the Council and its senior officials have made such a terrible mess of their pay arrangements for all these years.
Readers can contact the First Minister via the following email address which I would mark for the attention of Nicola Sturgeon: scottish.ministers@scotland.gsi.gov.uk
I would also send a copy of any letter to Nicola Sturgeon to your own local MSP asking for their comments and support.
Food for Thought (17/02/16)
Here's a letter I wrote to Scotland's First Minister, Nicola Sturgeon, way back in 2014.
Now this was widely publicised at the time and may well have helped knock some sense into Labour-run North Lanarkshire Council given that a partial settlement of the Council's outstanding equal pay claims followed quickly, as the New Year got underway in 2015.
But as we approach the Scottish Parliament elections in May 2016 and with so many equal pay issues still outstanding, maybe the time is ripe to put North Lanarkshire's behaviour back up to the top of the political agenda.
Let's see if we can get Holyrood MSPs (and Westminster MPs for that matter) to put their weight behind a campaign for an independent inquiry into North Lanarkshire's behaviour in relation to equal pay over the past 16 years.
28 November 2014
Dear First Minister
Gender Equality and North Lanarkshire Council
I followed with great interest the events leading up to your election as Scotland's new First Minister, in particular your comments about the importance of gender equality as a way of promoting social justice.
I have a long-standing involvement in equality issues and for the past 10 years I have acted as spokesperson for Action 4 Equality Scotland which has been leading the fight for equal pay in Scottish local government. Before that I acted as Unison's Head of Local Government and chief negotiator in Scotland and one of my responsibilities was to deliver the landmark equalities agreement in the shape of the 1999 Single Status (Equal Pay) Agreement with the purpose of sweeping away many years of historical pay discrimination against tens of thousands of low paid women's jobs.
At the moment I am heavily involved in the campaign for equal pay in North Lanarkshire Council which is proving to be just as stubborn and short-sighted an opponent as South Lanarkshire Council, its close neighbour. South Lanarkshire Council denied the existence of any gender based problems with their local pay arrangements for the best part of 10 years and refused to disclose vital information relating to the pay of traditional male and female jobs. A long and hard FoI battle with South Lanarkshire ended in a hearing before the UK Supreme Court in 2013 (at a cost of £200,000 to the public purse) which the Council lost decisively in a unanimous judgment. This finally forced the release of the pay information I had requested some three years earlier.
So after being in complete denial for years South Lanarkshire Council finally came to its senses and negotiated a settlement of all its outstanding equal pay claims. This was reported in the press at the time as costing the Council over £70 million, ironically after describing my original FoI request as 'vexatious'.
The position of North Lanarkshire Council is very different, but there are striking similarities as well, in particular over how stubbornly and unprofessionally the Council has behaved. In 2007 North Lanarkshire reached an interim settlement of some of its outstanding equal pay claims using the introduction of a new Job Evaluation Scheme (JES) as a cut off date for settlement; the logic being that the new JES allegedly addressed the blatant discrimination and deficiencies inherent in the Council's old pay structures.
Sadly, this proved not to be the case because North Lanarkshire went on to assimilate all the traditional male jobs on to the new pay structures on the basis of their old earnings, entrenching and compounding the historical pay discrimination. In addition, the Council's treatment of various female dominated jobs, for example Home Carers, has been shown to be wrong and discriminatory, yet this belated admission came only in 2014 after a full 7 years of insisting that their grading assessments and the pay of the women's jobs were accurate and fair - and no less favourable than the men.
North Lanarkshire Council is now in a giant hole of its own making and this is the same Council which has been very heavily criticised in the press over the introduction of a performance 'bonus' scheme for the Council's most senior and highly paid officials, while the rest of the workforce has been subject to a policy of public sector pay restraint.
My purpose in raising these matters with you, as First Minister, is to invite the Scottish Government to use its powers under the Equality Act to launch an investigation into North Lanarkshire Council's behaviour. My reading of The Equality Act 2010 (Specific Duties) (Scotland) Regulations 2012 suggests that the Scottish Government can intervene and is able to do so under Clause 11 of the Statutory Instrument which says:
Duty to consider other matters
11. In carrying out its duties under these regulations, a listed authority may be required to consider such matters as may be specified from time to time by the Scottish Ministers.
In my view, Scottish Ministers should intervene and require North Lanarkshire Council to explain why it has not assessed its risks properly or made adequate provision to meet its equal pay liabilities, despite the wealth of information available to the Council from its internal and external auditors. I understand that North Lanarkshire Council is seeking to raise funds from the private sector by selling off public property to meet the costs of equal pay, whereas other councils in Scotland previously approached the Scottish Government for financial assistance by seeking extra borrowing consents.
I think it's fair to say that North Lanarkshire has been behaving very irresponsibly with public money over the past 10 years and now seems out of control, perhaps because the same people who got the Council into this terrible mess are still running the show over equal pay.
In my opinion, what is needed is an injection of independent scrutiny to consider the Council's handling of equal pay from 2006/07 onwards and I hope Scottish Ministers will consider using their powers under the Equality Act to intervene on behalf of thousands of low paid women workers in North Lanarkshire who have been waiting all these years to see justice done over equal pay.
I am in the process of calculating a figure to illustrate the additional cost of this unnecessary delay between 2007 and 2014 and would be happy to share this information with you and/or your officials.
Finally, can I take the opportunity to congratulate you on your appointment as First Minister and for achieving a 50/50 gender balance in the Scottish Government's Cabinet which, in my view, puts the Westminster Government and Westminster Parliament to shame.
Kind regards
Mark Irvine