The NHS Pay Deal – Year 2

Agenda for Change Pay UNISON News

Recap of the three-year deal in England

In 2018 the NHS Staff Council agreed to reform the NHS pay structure over a three-year period covering April 2018 to March 2021. This reform delivered the following:

  • Won the argument that the top of the band was the full rate for the job
  • Secured an additional £4.2 billion to fully fund the deal for directly employed NHS staff
  • Living wage as the lowest rate of pay
  • Re-profiling band 1 jobs in to band 2
  • Increases of 6.5% over the three years for staff at the top of Bands 2-8c
  • Reducing the length of time to get to the top of the band by deleting pay points
  • Removal of overlaps between pay bands by deleting pay points
  • Improvements to starting salaries
  • No detriment clause – everyone better off compared to what they would have had with 1% + increments

1 April 2019 marks the start of year two of the agreement. Further pay points are deleted as part of the move to increase starting salaries and reduce the length of time it takes to reach the top of most pay bands.

Summary of main changes in Year 2 – from 1 April 2019

Staff at the top of the pay band
Staff at the top of their pay band will see their annual basic pay increase through the annual pay uplift
effective on 1 April. For bands 2-8c this increase is 1.7%.

Staff employed on the top of their band on 31 March 2019 will receive a one-off 1.1 per cent non-consolidated lump sum cash payment. This will be paid in April salaries.

For staff at the top of bands 8d and 9 their basic pay increase and their one-off non-consolidated lump
sum will be capped at the level of the increase for the top of band 8c.

Staff not yet at the top of their pay band
Some staff will have their pay point deleted this year as part of the pay restructure. These staff will
receive both an annual pay uplift and transitional pay progression on 1 April, effectively receiving their
pay progression early.

Other staff will receive an annual pay uplift on 1 April and then receive their transitional pay progression on their pay step date (formerly known as their incremental date).

The NHS Staff Council pay journey tool will show individual staff how their pay will change year on year
including annual pay uplifts and individual progression, if they are not at the top of their pay band. To
use the tool staff will need to know their spine point on 31 March 2018 if they were employed on or
before this point. Staff employed on or after 1 April 2018 will not need to know any spine point
information.

Additional information

From 1 April 2019 the minimum basic pay rate in the pay structure will increase to £17,652. This means
the lowest paid staff will see their hourly rate rise to £9.03 which is higher than the Living Wage Foundation rate for 2019.

The high cost area supplements from 1 April 2019 are set out in Annex 9 of the NHS terms and
conditions of service handbook. Where staff are eligible to receive this supplement, payment is made
in addition to their annual base salary.

Changes to earnings can result in changes to tax, National Insurance, pension contributions, student
loan repayments and eligibility for tax credits and benefits.

One off non-consolidated cash lump sum

Staff at the top of band 2-9
Staff employed on the top of bands 2-8c on 31 March 2019 will receive a one-off non-consolidated
lump sum cash payment worth 1.1% of the value of annual basic pay. Part-time staff will receive
payment on a pro-rata basis.

This will be paid in April 2019 and will appear on pay slips as “Non Consol Pay NP”. NP stands for non-pensionable.

Staff at the top of bands 8d and 9 on 31 March 2019 have the value of the one-off non-consolidated
lump sum cash payment capped at the value of the payment for staff at the top of band 8c.

Annex 2 of the NHS terms and conditions handbook confirms the full-time equivalent value of the 1.1
per cent non-consolidated lump sum payments that a full-time staff member in bands 2-9 should
receive.

Staff in post but not at work, including staff on maternity, paternity, or sickness absence, will receive
the lump sum.

ESR will automatically make payment of the 1.1% lump sum where a member of staff is at the top of
their band on 31 March 2019 and remains there on 1 April 2019.

Staff are still eligible to receive the payment if they are on top of band on 31 March 2019 but not in
post on 1 April, but where this is the case organisations will need to make the payment manually.

For staff who are eligible to receive the non-consolidated cash lump sum but change employers before
they are paid the lump sum, this should be paid by the organisation in which they were employed as at
31 March 2019. Local arrangements will need to be put in place to ensure accurate and timely payment
is made. Employers have been told that the process for doing this should be discussed in partnership
between joint staff side and employers, so UNISON branches should approach the employer to ensure
that happens.

Staff in band 1
A non-consolidated cash lump sum worth 1.1% of the value of band 1 annual basic pay from 1 April
2019 will be paid to all band 1 staff in April, regardless of whether they remain in band 1, have already
transitioned to band 2, or will transition to band 2 on 1 April via the national process.

New entrants to band 2 that have not transferred as part of the national process will not be eligible for
this payment. Staff who move in to a band 2 role via a promotion, i.e. staff who apply for a band 2 role
and have the provisions as set out in Section 6, England of the NHS TCS Handbook applied are also not
eligible for this payment.

Staff working less than full time will receive payment on a pro-rata basis. In all cases the payment will
be worth 1.1% of annual basic pay of band 1 from April 2019.

ESR will automatically make the payment to band 1 staff in post at 31 March who remain in post on 1
April. ESR will not be able to make these payments automatically for band 1 staff transferring to band 2
as part of the national process and therefore, local arrangements will need to be made to ensure this is
paid. UNISON branches should take the lead and approach employers to talk about that process.

Pay Progression

Existing staff
Existing staff for the purposes of pay progression are those staff who were in post before 1 April 2019.
Staff who change roles but still work in the same band will also be considered existing staff as they
have not been promoted.

For these staff, their current organisational pay progression procedures will continue to apply until 31
March 2021. From 1 April 2021 the new arrangements will apply. The effect of this is that during
transition staff not yet at the top of their pay band will receive a combination of pay uplifts and pay
progression as per current arrangements

New staff and promotions on or after 1 April
With effect from 1 April 2019, all staff commencing NHS employment and those staff who are
promoted on or after this date will be subject to the new pay progression arrangements. Promotion is
considered to be moving to a higher banded role.

Further detail on pay progression
The NHS trade unions have published joint guidance for staff side representatives.

Reading the pay scales

From April 2018 until March 2021 the pay structure is in transition. Pay can change at two points
during the year, once on 1 April through the pay uplift (move across the table) and once on your
incremental date as you move to the next pay point in your band (move down the table).

Pay points are deleted to make starting salaries higher and to reduce the length of time it takes to
reach the top of most bands. This means there are moments when some pay values appear the same,
this is where staff receive both an annual pay uplift and transitional pay progression on 1 April
effectively receiving their pay progression early. No-one will miss out on their increment during this
transition. In all cases a duplicate pay value in the same year shows that staff receive their increment
early.

The reference to “Years of experience” works for most staff. If staff started higher than the lowest
point in the band the pay scale should be read as if they have automatically gained the experience for
points they skipped.

Lots of these issues are a result of using pre-existing payroll systems to deliver the transition to a
reformed pay structure. Once we have reached the final pay structure by 1 April 2021 the full pay
scales will be much simpler.

The full pay scales are available in Annex 2 of the NHS terms and conditions handbook.

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