ABC Home | Radio | Television | News | Your Local ABC | More Subjects… | Shop

Email

Paramedics consider further action as pay talks break down

Posted October 16, 2008 09:04:00

The Ambulance Employees Australia Union says negotiations with the Qld Govt broke down yesterday.

The Ambulance Employees Australia Union says negotiations with the Qld Govt broke down yesterday. (ABC TV-file image)

The union representing ambulance workers says paramedics are being shortchanged by the Queensland Government's wage offer.

Ambulance Employees Australia Union (AEAU) spokesman Jason Dutton says negotiations broke down yesterday because the State Government refuses to budge on its offer of a 3.25 per cent pay increase.

Mr Dutton says workers want a 6 per cent increase each year for three years.

"If we go back for the last 12 or 18 months, we've seen other health professionals in Queensland get pay rises in the vicinity of 30 per cent," he said.

"The claim that we're asking for at the moment has been delivered to other health professionals.

"More and more of our skills are life and death decisions and certainly paramedics deserve to be paid for those appropriately."

Mr Dutton says there is already a state-wide ban on administrative duties and patient transfers by paramedics from hospitals and other options are under consideration.

"There has been that warning and certainly we've given a very strong indication to the Government and the Queensland Ambulance Service that we're absolutely resolved and our members are absolutely resolved that a better offer must be coming forward before we will stop that action," he said.

"We're certainly looking forward to Government heeding that warning."

Tags: disasters-and-accidents, emergency-planning, government-and-politics, unions, health, doctors-and-medical-professionals, australia, qld, brisbane-4000, bundaberg-4670, cairns-4870, longreach-4730, mackay-4740, maroochydore-4558, mount-isa-4825, rockhampton-4700, southport-4215, toowoomba-4350, townsville-4810

Feature

Cliffs at Elliston

Old rocks

Even to palaeontologists, 500 million years is not just the blink of an eye.

Feature

Commuters crowd a subway train station in Beijing

Longer lifespan

A new United Nations report says Chinese people are living longer than ever before.

Listen

Mitchell Johnson celebrates a wicket

First Test

Australia's Mitchell Johnson speaks to Grandstand after taking four wickets against New Zealand.