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Public sector nurses and midwives statewide EBA meeting

Australian Nursing and Midwifery Federation (Victorian Branch)

Thursday 21 March 2024, 2PM – 3.30PM ANMF (VIC BRANCH), 535 Elizabeth Street, Melbourne plus 7 satellite venues in Ballarat, Bendigo, Geelong, Mildura, Shepparton, Traralgon, Warrnambool

MEDIA INVITED TO ATTEND (please note these are approximate times only)

1:30pm Buses bringing nurses and midwives will arrive at ANMF (Vic Branch) 535 Elizabeth Street, Melbourne and seven regional venues (contact Robyn Asbury for details).

2pm Statewide meeting commences. Media is invited to hear formal speakers, but will be asked to leave for the discussion. Media will be invited back in for the nurses’ and midwives’ vote.

3.30pm (approx) ANMF (Vic Branch) Secretary Lisa Fitzpatrick available to answer media questions.

Victorian public sector nurses and midwives will attend a statewide meeting on Thursday 21 March to hear a report from elected union officials about their enterprise bargaining negotiations.

Negotiations are between the Australian Nursing and Midwifery Federation (Victorian Branch), the Department of Health representing the Victorian Government and the employers’ representative the Victorian Hospitals’ Industrial Association.

Negotiations on behalf of ANMF’s approximately 60,000 public sector members began in October 2023. The current 2020-24 enterprise agreement expires on 30 April 2024.

Nursing and Midwifery Board of Australia registration figures show an increase of practicing Victorian nurses and midwives from 107,544 in 2019 to 122,683 in 2023. There are 2544 Victorian nurses and midwives who are registered but not working.

While the workforce has increased, filling rosters remains challenging because nurses and midwives are reducing their hours and moving from permanent to casual employment.

ANMF members are seeking a range of claims designed to retain, recruit and rebuild our early career and experienced nurses and midwives.

Claims include about 15 new or improved financial incentives to reward working additional hours and unpopular shifts. They also include the introduction of financial disincentives for unpopular employer rostering practices such as redeployment, excessive reliance on overtime and missed meal breaks. Many of the claims, endorsed by our delegates, flow to permanent staff.

About 30 per cent of most nurses’ and midwives’ pay comprises allowances and penalty rates which are on top of a base rate.

The ANMF members’ claim does not specify a percentage wage claim, but it does seek that wages and allowances recognise the government’s wages policy, and at the same time address issues such as gender equity, cost of living, retention, increasing permanent employment, interstate/territory competitiveness and other considerations.

Victorian public sector nurses’ and midwives’ 2024 EBA log of claims: https://anmfvic.asn.au/EBA24claim

About us:

The ANMF (Vic Branch) has more than 100,000 members – nurses, midwives and aged care personal care workers – across the Victorian health and aged care sectors.

/Public Release.