Sefton UNISON Sefton UNISON
CALL US ON: 0151 928 9911
  • Sefton UNISON
  • Why UNISON
  • Need Help
    • Need Help
    • Redundancy Support Staff
  • Team
  • Our Local News
  • Contact Sefton UNISON
Sefton UNISON Sefton UNISON
  • Sefton UNISON
  • Why UNISON
  • Need Help
    • Need Help
    • Redundancy Support Staff
  • Team
  • Our Local News
  • Contact Sefton UNISON
Mar 07

Care Quality Commission staff vote to strike over pay, says UNISON

  • 7 March 2023

Staff at the Care Quality Commission (CQC) have voted to take strike action over pay, says their union UNISON today (Tuesday).

More than 700 workers were balloted by UNISON, including those in the organisation’s health and social care teams and call centres, along with clerical staff and data analysts.

CQC staff regulate health and social care bodies across England including hospitals, care homes, GP practices and dental surgeries ensuring the safe delivery of services.

Of those who took part in the UNISON vote, 73% opted to strike and 92% for action short of a strike. This means, for example, that staff would only work to their contracts, refusing to do any overtime.

UNISON is one of five unions so unhappy at the pay award imposed this year (2022/23) they decided to ask their members to vote for industrial action.

The five – UNISON, PCS, Prospect, Royal College of Nursing (RCN) and Unite – all have strike votes that have either already closed or are about to.

Last December CQC staff were given a pay increase of between 2.75% and 3.5%. The employees also received a one-off payment of either £100 or £150, depending on their grade.

Low or no wage increases over many years, due to the government’s public sector pay restraint, have forced increasing numbers of staff to quit the health and social care regulator. This has left the CQC struggling to fill vacancies, putting the remaining workforce under mounting pressure, says UNISON.

UNISON national officer Matthew Egan said: “CQC staff have had to put up with their pay rising at a much lower rate than inflation for more than a decade.

“Had wages kept pace with prices, employees at CQC would be earning around a quarter more than they are currently.

“Despite doing incredibly important work, staff have endured mounting financial hardship and watched as colleagues have departed for better paid work elsewhere. It’s not hard to see why so many have voted to strike.

“Ministers must give CQC the freedom to negotiate its own pay settlements with unions and allow managers to come back with a much better offer for staff.

“CQC workers take pride in their jobs but have been taken for granted for too long. They earn significantly less than staff doing comparable jobs at organisations like NHS England, Ofsted and the Nursing & Midwifery Council.

“This is despite CQC not relying on government funding. With health and care systems under increasing pressure, it’s time the government recognised the importance of the CQC and its staff and took steps to make sure they’re paid fairly.”

Notes to editors:
– UNISON is the UK’s largest union with more than 1.3 million members providing public services in education, local government, the NHS, police service and energy. They are employed in the public, voluntary and private sectors.

Media contacts:
Anthony Barnes M: 07834 864794 E: a.barnes@unison.co.uk
Liz Chinchen M: 07778 158175 E: press@unison.co.uk

The article Care Quality Commission staff vote to strike over pay, says UNISON first appeared on the UNISON National site.

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Reddit
  • Pinterest
  • LinkedIn
  • E-Mail

Comments are closed.

Local & National News

  • National News from UNISON (1,186)
  • News (28)
  • Sefton Unison (38)

Archives

Recently…

  • Mandatory jabs were never the right solution to vaccine rollout problems, says UNISON 16 April 2026
  • ‘Racism is beginning to rear its head again’ 16 April 2026
  • Invest in NHS admin staff to keep patients safe, says UNISON 16 April 2026
  • ‘We’re worth a wee bit more than that’ 16 April 2026
  • ‘Migration does not weaken the NHS, migration is the reason it survives’ 15 April 2026
  • Overworked NHS staff report stress, sickness, and a reliance on antidepressants and counselling, says UNISON 15 April 2026
  • The climate emergency is a health emergency 15 April 2026
  • Opinion: The real problems with school food 14 April 2026
  • Health conference debates ‘the scourge of gender-based violence’ 14 April 2026
  • International NHS staff don’t feel safe or welcome and want to quit the UK, says UNISON 14 April 2026

Check out our past posts

March 2023
M T W T F S S
 12345
6789101112
13141516171819
20212223242526
2728293031  
« Feb   Apr »

Get in Touch

Sefton UNISON, 38 Church Road, Waterloo, Liverpool. L22 5QL Phone: 0151 928 9911 E-Mail: info@seftonunison.co.uk
    • Join UNISON today
    • My UNISON
    • Contact UNISON
    • Jobs
    • Media centre
    • Slavery and Human Trafficking Statement 2021

We’re talking about…

  • Mandatory jabs were never the right solution to vaccine rollout problems, says UNISON
  • ‘Racism is beginning to rear its head again’
  • Invest in NHS admin staff to keep patients safe, says UNISON
  • ‘We’re worth a wee bit more than that’

Contact us:

Sefton UNISON, 38 Church Road Waterloo, Liverpool L22 5QL Phone: 0151 928 9911 E-Mail: info@seftonunison.co.uk Web: www.seftonunison.co.uk
Sefton UNISON : Collective Action : Collective Responsibility : Collective Representation - Supporting you throughout your career
Images supplied by Sefton UNISON, Pixabay & Unsplash : Website Maintenance