Trade union members protesting over council workers’ pay are to take their fight to John Swinney’s office in a bid to encourage the First Minister to step in and end the dispute.
Members of the Unison union are to stage a protest outside Mr Swinney’s constituency office in Blairgowrie, Perthshire, on Thursday.
It comes as Unison members in the Perth and Kinross area are taking part in a two-week strike which has closed a number of schools, with others partially open.
The protest comes despite two other unions representing council staff, Unite and GMB Scotland, accepting the pay deal offered by local government leaders at Cosla.
That gives workers either a 3.6% increase or a 67p per hour rise, whichever is higher, with the pay deal now imposed on workers.
Mr Swinney meanwhile has already condemned the “utterly unacceptable” targeting of his constituency.
With non-teaching school staff taking part in the protest, Mr Swinney said education in his constituency “has been disrupted”.
He said: “My constituents have been singled out for treatment just because their MSP is First Minister, and I find that completely unacceptable.”
But Unison Perth and Kinross branch secretary Stuart Hope insisted the First Minister could end the dispute by providing further cash for councils to fund workers’ pay – despite Mr Swinney having already declared there is no more money available.
Mr Hope said: “John Swinney is the one who can end this dispute as most council funding comes from the Scottish Government.
“Education staff do not want to close schools. They all love their jobs and would prefer to be supporting children.
“The way to solve this is for Cosla, the Scottish Government and the union to sit down in the same room and talk.
“Staff need to be valued and treated equally to other public sector workers with the same level of investment.”
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Finance and Local Government Secretary Shona Robison said: “While this Government respects workers’ rights, no one’s interests are served by industrial action which disrupts children and young people attending schools and nurseries in Perth and Kinross.
“I very much appreciate and understand parents’ concerns. I want to assure them that we worked hard over the summer with Cosla and the unions to agree a pay deal. The deal means that the lowest paid council workers, including Unison members, receive a 5.63% pay increase.
“It is a fair pay deal, and I hope that Unison members will now join their GMB and Unite colleagues and accept it and end these unnecessary strikes. Now that local government workers in England have agreed a lower pay deal, it’s difficult to understand why this action is continuing.”
Cosla has been contacted for comment.
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