Skip to content
Industrial Relations

Historic deal to lock in big pay rises for long day care staff set for vote

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

14 November 2024 

The first multi-employer supported bargaining agreement developed under new industrial relations laws, with pay rises of 15% over two years, is ready to be put to a vote by thousands of teachers and educators working for 63 employers in the long day care sector. Unions and the employers have endorsed the deal.

This historic agreement means thousands of teachers and educators in the long day care sector will gain a 10% pay rise in December, with a further 5% increase in December 2025. Improved conditions around professional development and teacher accreditation are also included.

“We’re seeing the groundbreaking outcome of unions, the federal government and a group of 63 employers working together to lift pay and conditions across the long day care sector,” said Independent Education Union of Australia NSW/ACT Branch Secretary Carol Matthews.

Under the Modern Award, an experienced teacher in a long day care centre is currently paid $93,000 a year. The new top rate after the 15% increase will be more than $107,000. It is a vital step towards closing the gender pay gap.

“The education and care of our youngest children is important and indispensable work,” Matthews said. “These long overdue increases better reflect the valuable work of early childhood teachers in laying the vital foundations for our children’s development and lifelong learning.”

The pay rises will help address critical teacher shortages in long day care centres across the country.

In August the federal Labor government announced a $3.6 billion funding injection to provide for the pay rises, and centres are subject to a cap on fee increases of 4.4% to receive the funding.

The IEU, which represents early childhood teachers in NSW and the ACT, joined with the United Workers Union (UWU) and the Australian Education Union (AEU) to access the supported bargaining stream under new industrial relations laws passed as part of the Secure Jobs Better Pay Act 2022.

“This new agreement is a big shift but work still needs to be done,” Matthews said. “The gap in pay and conditions between many teachers in the early childhood sector and those in schools is still too big. Teachers are teachers no matter the age of their students, and we will keep fighting until there is equity between teachers in the early childhood education and care sector and those in schools.”

In another announcement today, teachers and educators at the nation’s largest provider of long day care services, Goodstart Early Learning, have voted on a separate enterprise agreement with the 15% pay rises that will also be funded under the new arrangements.

 

Contacts 

IEUA NSW/ACT Branch Secretary Carol Matthews 0418 272 902

Media: Monica Crouch 0486 046 975 [email protected]

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

  • Industrial Relations, Union
  • 12/12/2025
  • 13:15
Timber, Furnishing and Textiles Union (TFTU)

Qube Forestry Workers Move Toward Possible Industrial Action Across Three Key Tasmanian Export Facilities

MEDIA RELEASE 12 December 2025 Qube Forestry in Tasmania is now facing the prospect of industrial action at three of its major export log facilities — Burnie, Bell Bay and Hobart — as members of the Timber, Furnishing and Textiles Union (TFTU) move to progress a protected action ballot. Tasmanian District Secretary Danny Murphy said the union has been bargaining in good faith for months, but Qube has failed to put forward an acceptable offer for workers. “We have been bargaining in good faith with Qube for months and we are still far from finalising a fair deal for our…

  • Industrial Relations, Manufacturing
  • 11/12/2025
  • 16:59
AWU

AWU members instruct union to explore protected industrial action after Glencore breaks faith after $600m taxpayer bailout

The Australian Workers’ Union (AWU) has condemned Glencore for returning to the bargaining table with an offer described by workers as insulting, unsustainable, and a betrayal of the commitment they showed during months of uncertainty at the North Queensland Copper Refinery. As a consequence members have instructed the AWU to begin the process of taking protected industrial action. The company secured a $600 million taxpayer-funded support package in October to keep operations afloat for the next three years. AWU members stood shoulder to shoulder with Glencore during that campaign, advocating publicly for government intervention to protect jobs and stabilise the…

  • Government SA, Industrial Relations
  • 10/12/2025
  • 08:49
PSA

SA Justice System in crisis as Corrections Officers vote to enter unprecedented 72 hour lockdown

Corrections Officers across seven of South Australia's prisons have voted to continue a 48 hour strike which has plunged the prison system into an unprecedented lockdown. They will be joined by Home Detention Officers who also voted this morning to down tools. They are responsible for the ankle monitoring of 1500 offenders who've been sentenced to home detention by judicial officers. Corrections Officers voted at stop work meetings at Yatala Labour Prison, Port Augusta Prison, Mobilong Prison, Port Lincoln Prison, Cadell Prison, Adelaide Women’s Prison, and the Adelaide Pre-Release Centre. Over 2000 of the state’s prisoners have been confined to…

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.