New wages policy to support public sector workforce

  • New Wages Policy to attract and retain skilled and valued public sector workers
  • $2.8 billion set aside in upcoming Mid-year Review for future negotiation of new public sector industrial agreements
  • Principles-based policy will deliver fair wage increases and continue WA Labor's sustainable Budget management
  • Public Sector Wages Policy will be flexible and allow for bargained outcomes with public sector unions, and be complemented by investment in public sector capability

The Cook Labor Government has today reaffirmed its commitment to attracting and retaining highly skilled and valued public servants with the release of a new Public Sector Wages Policy.

The new principles-based wages policy is flexible and will allow for bargained outcomes with individual public sector unions.

The policy will prioritise bargaining outcomes that improve public sector operations and performance, deliver fair but financially sustainable wage increases and conditions, and support longer-term attraction and retention of public sector workers.

It will also continue to support initiatives that underpin the Cook Government's preference for direct and permanent employment in the public sector.

While the full financial impacts will be finalised at the end of the bargaining process, $2.8billion has been provisioned in the upcoming Mid-year Review over the forward estimates period to allow for negotiation of wage and nonwage workforce conditions as part of new industrial agreements.

Sustainable and responsible budget management has been a hallmark of the WA Labor Government and that will continue to be a key feature of the new Wages Policy.

Complementary to the new wages policy, the Cook Government will also invest in boosting the capability of the WA public sector by developing a focused training program tailored to the evolving needs of the sector.

To be led by the Public Sector Commission, this work will amount to the biggest capability lift the public sector has ever had and help to ensure an integrated focus on training.

Under the policy, the Government will negotiate Enterprise Agreements of up to three years in length.

The policy will apply to negotiations for all Enterprise Agreements that expired on or after 1 October 2023.

The previous Public Sector Wages Policy will continue to apply to industrial agreements that expired before 1 October 2023.

As stated by Premier Roger Cook:

"My Government is committed to good-faith bargaining with public sector unions, and the approach to future bargaining we are outlining today reflects this.

"The new Wages Policy will provide flexibility in bargaining to address the industrial issues most important to the State's public sector workforce.

"It will deliver fair but financially sustainable wage increases and conditions of employment, that are reasonable in the context of each negotiation.

"We are keen to deliver fair wage outcomes and appropriate conditions to the important workforces in our public sector, and have been able to back this up with significant funding allocated to future negotiations, thanks to my Government's ongoing responsible management of the State's finances."

As stated by Treasurer Rita Saffioti:

"Our Government has valued the public sector and increased the size of the public sector workforcesince 2017, while also bringing privatised services back to government.

"The focus for us is delivering sustainable wage increases for our public sector workforce.

"We're very keen to ensure sustainable wage increases and conditions can be negotiated in good faith through the bargaining process with public sector unions, and this new policy allows for that.

"We're in a position to do this because of our strong financial management, which has long been a priority and hallmark of our Government.

"We want to have the financial capacity to deliver fair wage increases, continue to support the workforce with better conditions, while also ensuring our finances stay strong so we don't put our State in the same position as others who are cutting services and creating redundancies."

As stated by Industrial Relations Minister Simone McGurk:

"It is important that public sector workers feel valued and appreciated in the many roles they do around Western Australia.

"The bargaining flexibility offered under the new Wages Policy will be critical moving forward as we work to address the various issues and needs of individual public sector workforces and their unions.

"We continue to engage positively with all unions and work towards settlements of outstanding negotiations."

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