Skip to content
Union

Union secures record-breaking pay rises and EB outcome for SA police officers

Police Association of South Australia 2 mins read

Union secures record-breaking pay rises and EB outcome for SA police officers

The Police Association has negotiated a historic enterprise bargaining deal for its members, with lead negotiator and president Wade Burns saying it’s a necessary outcome in the quest to avert the retention crisis gripping policing in SA.

Pivotal to the new arrangement are increased wages, starting on the first full pay period on or after 1 January 2025, that represent the highest comparative pay rises for SA police since enterprise bargaining began in 1995.

In addition to wage outcomes, the deal also comes with an extensive suite of improved conditions. And, because the deal is an administrative arrangement rather than a conventional three-year agreement, a broader list of conditions and new initiatives are on the table for ongoing negotiations between the association and the state government — ensuring police retention issues continue to be examined.

The negotiated pay rises include a significant percentage increase, but also a police-specific retention salary increase (added into base salary) and a police-specific retention payment (one-off payment) in January 2025 and January 2026 respectively.

In the period up to January 1, 2026, those pay rises provide for minimum increases ranging from 11.2% to 17.9%, depending on rank and increment.

The association also negotiated to have the junior cadet rate abolished. This outcome, along with the pay increases, delivers new recruits under the age of 21 an astonishing 47.4% immediate pay rise.

“These are historic pay rises but the broader scope of this outcome includes so much more,” President Burns said.

“The government, to its credit, has taken the retention crisis in policing seriously.

“Officials sat down with us for extensive negotiations during which I presented to them a clear path forward.

“I have said all along this would likely be our last chance to prevent a mass exodus from SAPOL.

“The government did listen to those concerns — and it needed to.

“There is an extensive list of improved conditions that will be implemented as part of the arrangement, and many more on the table for future negotiations, with the view of safeguarding policing in SA.”

For some ranks and increments, this arrangement up to January 1, 2026, delivers a better outcome than the total increase provided by the entirety of the 2021 enterprise agreement.

It represents the largest base pay increase, comparatively, since the first SA police enterprise bargaining outcome in 1995.

With the addition of the one-off police-specific retention payment in 2026, the pay rises comparatively represent the highest percentage increase for all members in the history of SA police enterprise bargaining.

“It’s also important to note the base pay rise figures don’t include allowances, shift penalties and other negotiated outcomes,” President Burns said.

“So, calculated on these significantly higher base salaries, allowances and shift penalties will be worth more to members.

“And the extraordinary pay rise to young recruits, as a result of the abolition of the junior cadet rate, is a massive boost for SAPOL’s recruiting team. It will help to restore policing as a job of choice for young people.

“It’s a historic outcome and a significant step forward for the future of policing in this state.”

Attached:

1. Full rank and salary increment increases 

2. Full list of improved conditions to be implemented as part of the Administrative Arrangement. 

For media comment from President Wade Burns, contact the Police Association on: (08) 8212 3055, 0400 377 299 or [email protected] Tuesday 17 December, 2024

Media

More from this category

  • Education Training, Union
  • 15/07/2025
  • 06:23
National Tertiary Education Union

New report reveals university boards’ secretive ‘toxic’ governance issues

A damning new report has exposed dysfunction, secrecy, and intimidation within university governing bodies, adding to growing pressure on the federal government to reform how public universities are run. The National Tertiary Education Union (NTEU) report shows staff on governing bodies experiencing a toxic culture that shuts out dissent, tolerates bullying, and fails even basic standards of transparency. “This report confirms what staff have been saying for years – university governance is completely broken,” said NTEU National President Dr Alison Barnes. “Decisions are being made behind closed doors by people with no connection to the daily realities of staff or…

  • Contains:
  • Education Training, Union
  • 07/07/2025
  • 16:25
National Tertiary Education Union

Union raises concerns over closure of Byron Bay campus

The National Tertiary Education Union (NTEU) is deeply concerned about the planned closure by early 2028 of the SAE and ACAP University College campus in Byron Bay, announced by Navitas this week.The Byron Bay campus was originally established through a global recruitment drive for both staff and students in 2004. It has become a unique regional hub for higher education in the creative arts, media industries and psychology industries – with no comparable institution in the Northern Rivers and potentially across all of northern New South Wales.The closure will impact local access to tertiary education in fields such as film,…

  • Government SA, Union
  • 07/07/2025
  • 13:56
Health Services Union SA/NT

SA allied health workers win historic pay deal

The Health Services Union SA/NT has celebrated a historic new enterprise agreement for public sector allied health workers, following an overwhelming vote in favour of the deal. For the first time, South Australian allied health professionals – including psychologists, physiotherapists, radiographers, pharmacists, occupational therapists, social workers and more – will have their own standalone agreement, bringing the state into line with every other jurisdiction in the country. The new agreement delivers a 13.5% pay rise over four years, as well as a raft of improved conditions including: Better access to professional development allowances A new allowance recognising the qualifications and…

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.