70% of surveyed providers wonโt opt in to the governmentโs Pay Parity offer after months of waiting, meaning teachers could miss out on the pay increase promised by the Minister of Education.
โProviders were promised Pay Parity progress and got a pile of homework instead. Itโs late and complicated. If teachers miss this funding round, theyโll feel the government has broken its promise to them,โ said Early Childhood Council President Dr Darius Singh.
The government announced $170m funding in Mayโs budget to help close the gap between ECE centre and Kindergarten teacher pay, with a wage scale tied to the Kindergarten Teachers Collective Agreement.
Final teacher pay rates were confirmed only two weeks before the 1 October deadline for opting in, giving providers little time to compile evidence of their teachersโ full work history and qualifications to calculate their wage bill.
โThis decision is too important to rush โ working out if the governmentโs offer is economic is a massive piece of work, all while managing COVID Alert Level changes. Itโs put providers, who want to pay teachers what theyโre worth, under a huge amount of pressure,โ said ECC CEO Sue Kurtovich.
Early indications are the vast majority of centres say the new funding rates wonโt cover their increased wage bill, while Julyโs looming KTCA renegotiations, that centres wonโt be part of, could bring further increases and conditions.
โWith little time to get proper legal and financial advice, some providers might kick this decision for touch until the next funding round, meaning their teachers miss out for another four months. Surely this could have been better managed โ weโre asking the government to be fair and remove some of this red tape, fast, so providers can opt in,โ said Sue Kurtovich.



Here’s a thought – let’s restore the pay parity teachers at the top of the basic scale used to have with back bench MPs.
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