Skip to content
Government SA, Human Resources

*** MEDIA ALERT *** Essential workers on ‘poverty wages’ call on Premier to step in

Public Service Association 2 mins read

WHAT: 2000 public servants walk off the job & protest at Parliament House

WHEN: Wednesday 15 October 2025, 12:00 NOON (for 12.30)

WHERE: Parliament House, North Terrace, Adelaide

MORE INFO:

Essential workers on ‘poverty wages’ call on Premier to step in

Desperate child protection caseworkers, State Emergency Service crews and other essential workers are calling on Premier Peter Malinauskas to step in and lift them out of poverty after wage negotiations with the government broke down.

The workers have seen a 21-24% reduction in real wages over the last six years and incredibly many have slipped below the award safety net by almost $4,000.

Over the last six years the workers have received annual pay rises equivalent to 1% a year, while inflation has been running as high as 7.2% in that same period pushing up the price of food, rent and utilities.

Most Australian workers get annual pay increases of 3.5% as a minimum - so after 6 years most workers would see their pay rise by 21%. These workers have only seen 6%.

It is estimated these workers are earning $15,000 a year less than 6 years ago in real terms.

The 40,000 workers are amongst the lowest paid in the state.

Some are on as little as $55,000 a year.

The minimum wage is $49,000.

During negotiations for a three year Enterprise Agreement with the government, which have dragged on since September 2024, the government has offered 3.75% in the first year, 3.5% in the second year and 3.25% for the final year. 

But public sector workers say this just locks in their poverty wages.

By way of comparison to other states a common administration position in SA is paid $58,709, but in WA it's paid $73,954 (26% higher), in the ACT $67,872 (16% higher), and in Tasmania $66,766 (14% higher). 

A recent survey by the union which represents the workers, The Public Service Association (PSA), found many were at breaking point:

“This offer is disgusting and doesn't even begin to cover inflation since our last EB. My rent alone has gone up 65% since then, and groceries are costing an extra $200 a fortnight. This is robbery. I’m ready to pack my family up and move interstate to work,” said one respondent.

“It’s a massive slap in the face. I have two small kids and one on the way, and the government thinks this is sustainable. Absolute joke of an offer,” said another.

“If anyone wonders why people are leaving the SA public service in droves, this is the answer: we are unappreciated, unvalued, and treated like second-class citizens,” said yet another.

Newly elected PSA General Secretary Charlotte Watson says public sector workers across the state are having trouble buying groceries, paying rent and keeping up with bills.

“Despite their vital roles in keeping this state running, many of our members are struggling to survive, forced to choose between paying rent or buying groceries or medication,” she said.

“Our members have seen a 20% reduction in real wages in the last decade, that’s like losing 20 cents on every dollar you were earning in 2015.

“We are calling on Premier Peter Malinauskas to step in and lift our members out of poverty.

“Across the public service we are haemorrhaging staff, we can’t attract people and we can’t retain people, there’s hundreds of jobs unfilled, people have voted with their feet and just left.”

Contact: Tim Brunero 0405 285 547

More from this category

  • Business Company News, Human Resources
  • 23/01/2026
  • 12:35
ReFresh

$1.3M raised to help employers meet Australia’s new nationwide psychosocial safety obligations

$1.3M raised to help employers meet Australia’s new nationwidepsychosocial safety obligations From1 December 2025, psychosocial hazardsare formally regulatednationwide, requiring employers to identify, assess, control, and manage psychosocial risks with the same rigour as physical safety hazards. These changes place new expectations on organisations to demonstrate ongoing oversight, structured risk management, and defensible compliance. ReFresh, a workplace psychosocial compliance and HR risk management platform, has raised a $1.3M pre-seed round to support organisations responding to Australia’s newly mandatory psychosocial safety obligations under workplace health and safety law. ReFresh has been built specifically for this regulatory shift, providing organisations with a single…

  • Environment, Government SA
  • 21/01/2026
  • 14:55
The Nature Conservancy Australia

SA Government and TNC partner to build large-scale shellfish reef as part of algal bloom recovery

The Nature Conservancy Australia is proud to partner with the South Australian Government to deliver a large-scale shellfish reef to support the state’s ocean…

  • Contains:
  • Environment, Government SA
  • 16/01/2026
  • 08:52
Australian Conservation Foundation and Conservation Council SA

Adam Bandt speaking at presser + Dump Santos rally outside Tour Down Under opening ceremony

4pm: Press conference When: Friday 16 January 4pm Where: The northern point of Tartanyangga/Victoria Square, outside the Tour Down Under Opening Ceremony What: Adam Bandt, CEO of the Australian Conservation Foundation, Robert Simms, Greens MLC, and Charlotte Nitschke, Campaigns Coordinator at Conservation Council SA. Press conference calling on the SA Government to end gas company Santos’ sponsorship of the Tour Down Under.5:30pm: Dump Santos Rally at the Tour Down Under opening ceremony When: Friday 16 January 5.30pm Where: The northern point of Tartanyangga/Victoria Square, outside the Tour Down Under Opening Ceremony What: Adam Bandt, CEO of the Australian Conservation Foundation,…

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.