Skip to content
Childcare, Education Training

Fair Work Commission authorises bargaining for staff in over 100 preschools

Independent Education Union of Australia NSW/ACT Branch 2 mins read

Monday 23 September 2024

In a ground-breaking decision, the Fair Work Commission has today granted the IEU’s application for an authorisation to bargain for pay rises for teachers and educators in more than 100 preschools across NSW.

The IEU represents 32,000 teachers and support staff in NSW and the ACT, including in early childhood education and care centres.

This application is only the third of its kind to be granted under the new ‘supported bargaining’ stream. It is designed to assist employers and employees who haven’t been able to bargain successfully at the individual enterprise level to now bargain together as a group. This process is crucial to sectors with a high proportion of female workers, such as early childhood education and care.

Following today’s decision of the Fair Work Commission, unions will commence bargaining with 103 preschools from across NSW.

“Community preschools are crying out for teachers – their work has been undervalued for far too long and this must be fixed through salaries that are comparable with teachers in schools,” said Independent Education Union of Australia NSW/ACT Branch Secretary Carol Matthews.

Preschools provide high-quality early childhood education to many children throughout NSW, laying the foundations for success at school and lifelong learning.

The bargaining process will enable the union, the NSW government (the primary funding provider for preschools) and preschools to bargain together to lift pay and conditions across the sector. The preschools, which are run by voluntary parent committees of mums and dads, will be represented by Community Early Learning Australia (CELA).

“We look forward to sitting down with the NSW government and CELA at the bargaining table to address the workforce crisis in NSW preschools,” Matthews said.

“We need urgent action to support early childhood teachers and educators who do such critical work every day in educating our youngest children.

“We’re calling for a 25% increase for beginning teachers and more for experienced preschool teachers. In other states and territories, preschool teachers receive pay rates comparable to school teachers.” Currently in NSW:

  • Beginning preschool teachers: earn just $70,045 a year under the applicable modern award, while their colleagues in schools are paid $85,000 a year.
  • Experienced preschool teachers: under the modern award, the top rate for an experienced teacher is $90,134 per year. In comparison, a teacher with the same level of experience working in a NSW government school is paid $122,100 a year. 

A win would help narrow the gender pay gap. “A successful outcome would be a game changer,” Matthews said. “Teachers, children, parents and the wider community will all gain from a stronger preschool sector.”

Contacts

IEUA NSW/ACT Branch Secretary Carol Matthews 0418 272 902

IEU Media Monica Crouch 0486 046 975, monica@ieu.asn.au

The IEUA NSW/ACT Branch represents over 32,000 teachers, principals and support staff in Catholic and independent schools, early childhood centres and post-secondary colleges.

Authorised by Carol Matthews, IEUA NSW/ACT Branch Secretary

Media

More from this category

  • Education Training, Immigration
  • 19/12/2024
  • 16:51
Independent Tertiary Education Council Australia (ITECA)

New Approach To International Education Inconsistent And Lacks Integrity

The Australian Government’s newly announced policy approach for the international education sector is causing significant frustration and uncertainty for members of the Independent Tertiary Education Council Australia (ITECA). ITECA is the peak body representing independent skills training, higher education, and international education providers. The approach, framed as a legal exercise under the Migration Act 1958 (Cth), follows Parliament’s failure to pass amendments to the Education Services for Overseas Students Act 2000 (Cth) after four days of public hearings through a Senate Committee that also included more than 260 submissions where the adverse outcomes of Australian Government policy were laid bare…

  • Contains:
  • Education Training, Industrial Relations
  • 19/12/2024
  • 16:35
Independent Education Union of Australia NSW/ACT Branch

Christmas win: New deal for independent school teachers and staff

Thursday 19 December 2024 In last-minute talks ahead of a hearing at the Fair Work Commission today, the IEU reached a deal with the Association of Independent Schools NSW (AIS) that includes substantial pay rises and improved conditions in new three-year multi-enterprise agreements (MEAs) covering about 30,000 employees in 244 schools across NSW and the ACT. The Independent Education Union of Australia NSW/ACT Branch, which represents teachers and support staff in non-government schools, has been negotiating with the AIS since May to distil 10 separate agreements into just three new MEAs, one for teachers and two for professional and operational…

  • Contains:
  • Education Training
  • 19/12/2024
  • 16:31
NSW Department of Education

Public high schools secure prestigious first in course places

Public high schools secure prestigious first in course places NSW public high schools across the State are celebrating the excellence of their HSC students after securing 51 First in Course awards at a ceremony earlier this week. Twenty-six students from 23 NSW public schools received a First in Course award and 25 First-in Course awards were secured by students at the NSW Education Department’s two specialist language schools – around half the language awards on offer. NSW Department of Education Secretary Murat Dizdar said he was thrilled to meet with public school students from across the State at Tuesday's First…

Media Outreach made fast, easy, simple.

Feature your press release on Medianet's News Hub every time you distribute with Medianet. Pay per release or save with a subscription.