Fresh round of teacher strikes imminent as union warns of disruption until Christmas

Date published: 25 April 2023


Schools and colleges across Oldham will be hit with two more days of disruption beginning this week (Thursday, April 27 and on May 2) as members of the National Education Union (NEU) take strike days five and six in their long-running dispute about pay and school funding.

On earlier strikes dates, 15% of schools have been forced to close completely and up to 70% were only partially open, often just to exam year groups or children from vulnerable families.

The latest strikes come after the union announced at its Easter conference in Harrogate (April 3) that 98% of members, on an impressive turn-out of 66%, had rejected the latest offer made by Gillian Keegan, Secretary of State for Education.

That translates as 191,319 serving teachers in state schools in England who voted online over six days to seek further improvements from the government.

Commenting in advance of the strikes, the NEU’s North West Regional Secretary, Peter Middleman, said: “In rejecting the government's wholly inadequate offer in such overwhelming numbers earlier this month, teachers have sent Gillian Keegan an unmistakeably clear message.

"Her petulant response has been to walk away from any further discussion, which represents a slap-in-the-face to the profession and a gratuitous insult to parents who are still strongly behind the campaign for better school funding and a resolution to the recruitment and retention crisis for the sector.

"This dispute is not going away, and soon after this round of industrial action we’ll be balloting members again – as the law requires – to refresh the mandate for further strikes after the summer break and up until Christmas.

"It may be that Ms Keegan has been unable, rather than unwilling, to persuade the Chancellor of the Exchequer of the seriousness of the financial and staffing crisis facing schools but either way, with all four teaching unions now in dispute on the same terms, time is running out to avoid a serious escalation with all of the additional disruption that would bring to learning and to the wider economy.”

The NEU has asked its local officials to seek voluntary agreements with individual headteachers to ensure that revision and exam practice lessons for students facing GCSE and A-Level examinations this term are not affected by the strikes, and have indicated that dispensation will be provided to members in discreet circumstances on both of the announced strike days.

Across Greater Manchester, 1,200 workplaces will be affected during this latest strike action, with 14,720 NEU members set to walk out.

Parents are advised to visit school websites and social media feeds for the latest information.


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