Teachers in 23 independent schools run by the Girls’ Day School Trust voted overwhelmingly to strike after their employer said it would withdraw from the Teachers’ Pension Scheme. Some 1,500 teachers were expected to be involved in the action.
The first strike day, on 10 February, saw high levels of involvement, with picket lines outside schools. Five more strike days were due between 23 February and 3 March. More than 70 per cent of the trust’s teaching staff belong to the National Education Union, and on a turnout of 84 per cent, 95 per cent voted to strike – the first in the trust’s 149-year history.
Independent schools have been rushing to opt out of the pension scheme since the government changed the rate used to calculate the liabilities of public sector schemes. As a result, employer contributions rose from 16.48 per cent to 23.6 per cent in 2019.
Independent schools have to meet this increase themselves, unlike state schools where the government is (so far) still funding it. Under the trust’s proposal, teachers would be at least 20 per cent worse off when they receive their pensions. Like all teachers, they have already suffered a decline in real pay over several years, with increases below inflation and a pay freeze throughout the last academic year. Losing the Teachers’ Pension Scheme would be an even bigger financial blow.
The trust’s finances, meanwhile, show a healthy annual surplus. It can afford to pay, but instead has threatened to “fire and rehire” its teachers to force through the change in contracts. This added to the teachers’ anger leading up to the vote.
• A longer version of this article is on the web at Independent school teachers take strike action