Written answers

Thursday, 22 October 2015

Department of Education and Skills

Teachers' Remuneration

Photo of Catherine MurphyCatherine Murphy (Kildare North, Social Democrats)
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337. To ask the Minister for Education and Skills her plans to equalise the pay gap for newly qualified teachers to ensure that they are not receiving 34% less than other teachers with equal experience; and if she will make a statement on the matter. [37023/15]

Photo of Jan O'SullivanJan O'Sullivan (Limerick City, Labour)
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Since the beginning of the financial crisis, there has been a need to enact a number of measures to reduce public expenditure. The previous Government reduced the salaries and allowances payable of all new entrants to public service recruitment grades (including teachers) by 10% with effect from 1 January 2011 and required that such new entrants would start on the first point of the applicable salary scale.

Subsequently, following the public service-wide review of allowances and premium payments, the Government decided to withdraw or modify allowances for new beneficiary public servants with effect from 1 February 2012. Under this decision, certain allowances were withdrawn for new beneficiary teachers, including qualification allowances. However, the Government partially compensated for this by deciding that new entrant teachers would henceforth commence on a new salary scale which had a starting point higher than the starting point of the old scale.

These measures were implemented at time of very difficult financial and budgetary circumstances for the State.

Alleviation of the salary imbalance between those who entered the public service since 2011 and those who entered before that date began under the Haddington Road Agreement. Improved pay scales for post-1 January 2011 and post-1 February 2012 entrants to teaching were agreed and implemented under the terms of that Agreement. In addition, allowances payable to post-1 January 2011 entrants and such allowances as remain payable to post-1 February 2012 entrants were restored to pre-2011 levels.

The Lansdowne Road Agreement will, through salary increases and a reduction in the Pension-Related Deduction, begin the process of restoring the reductions to public service pay which were implemented over recent years. The issue of equalised pay scales was not one which could be resolved in the discussions which lead to the Agreement. However, the flat-rate increases contained in the Agreement will be proportionately more favourable to new entrants to teaching (who are lower on the pay scale) than to longer serving teachers.

Comments

R Tracey
Posted on 4 Nov 2015 10:20 pm (Report this comment)

The government never compensated for removing allowances. This is completely incorrect. Teachers had previously started the scale at point three and then were put onto starting at point one. On top of new entrants starting at point one, a ten percent cut was imposed and the removal of allowances. The slight improvement in the salary scale helped alleviate some of the problem of starting at point one and not three. However, it is still approximately ten percent lower and without allowances. So please actually do some maths.

Mr A
Posted on 5 Nov 2015 9:17 pm (Report this comment)

As a "new entrant", in my first three years I've earned €97,820 gross. Every teacher with the exact same qualification as me, who commenced teaching just over a year before me, has earned €120,456.
That's 23% more than me.
And not because they are a better teacher (they may or may not be!), not because they are better qualified, not because they've been able to negotiate a better salary. No. Simply because they commenced teaching a year before me.
In an industry where every employee is on a salary scale, where pay is not performance related, you can't negotiate a better salary for being a good teacher, how can the minister stand over such pay inequality? It is a disgrace. And the unions are a disgrace for allowing this to happen. Feather your own nests, sod the rest.
And here is the minister spouting misinformation and fudging the facts, either because she is trying to deny the truth or because she doesn't have a clue what she is talking about. Infuriating.

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