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Public pressure mounting on Govt as police pay negotiations stall

Author
Adam Pearse,
Publish Date
Mon, 18 Mar 2024, 12:22pm
Photo / Mark Mitchell
Photo / Mark Mitchell

Public pressure mounting on Govt as police pay negotiations stall

Author
Adam Pearse,
Publish Date
Mon, 18 Mar 2024, 12:22pm

The Government is under increasing pressure to provide an acceptable pay offer to police as negotiations stall.

Prime Minister Christopher Luxon and Police Minister Mark Mitchell both made social media posts from Christchurch last week, in which they paid testament to emergency service staff who responded to the mosque terror attack five years ago.

Many in the public commented on the posts and urged Luxon and Mitchell to improve the latest police pay offer, which听some officers rejected as 鈥渋nsulting鈥 and 鈥渄isgusting鈥.

鈥淢aybe give them a non-insulting pay offer, then,鈥 one person said under Luxon鈥檚 post thanking Christchurch St John and police first responders for their service.

鈥淗ow about paying these heroes more,鈥 was another.

Today鈥檚 Cabinet meeting is another opportunity for Mitchell to pitch for more money to boost the latest offer, which included a wage increase of $5000 from November 1, 2023 and wage increases of 4 per cent from from September 1 this year and July 1 next year.

The next meeting between the Police Association and police - the parties negotiating the offer - was set for tomorrow morning.

However, Police Association president Chris Cahill said last week鈥檚 meeting indicated there had been no increase in what the Government could offer.

Backpay remained a central issue. Cahill argued police had been waiting months for a pay offer that had been delayed and believed no offer would be agreed to without backpay to July last year.

Cahill was not surprised by the feedback Luxon and Mitchell had received online.

鈥淲e realise we鈥檝e got great support from the public,鈥 he said, saying people were aware of how the Government鈥檚 proposed gang policies would increase police鈥檚 workload.

Police Association president Chris Cahill has received an unprecedented response from officers following the pay offer. Photo / Mark Mitchell

Police Association president Chris Cahill has received an unprecedented response from officers following the pay offer. Photo / Mark Mitchell

He said there had been an 鈥渦nprecedented鈥 response from association members critical of the offer. Cahill said it was stark just how 鈥渉and-to-mouth鈥 some officers were living, including waiting for payday to clear their bills and resorting to using food banks.

Earlier this year, Mitchell warned one of the Government鈥檚 promises to train 500 new police officers in two years would be challenged by recruitment drives from Australia, where police were better paid.

Cahill said talk of moving to Australia had 鈥渋ncreased greatly鈥 among members but he hadn鈥檛 seen large numbers leave yet. He noted how many had been waiting for the pay offer to be finalised before deciding.

Mitchell, a former police officer and a vocal advocate for police, has been largely unable to comment on the response to the offer as it was still being negotiated. However, he has cited the economic challenges facing the current Government as one factor restricting improvements to the offer.

Cahill said officers were aware of that but said their 鈥渟ympathy drained a bit鈥 when they saw the Government 鈥渕aking other choices to spend or to give up potential income鈥 - such as the听$2.9 billion the Government wouldn鈥檛 receive听over four years by reinstating full interest deductions for residential property.

Finance Minister Nicola Willis would need to sign off an increase in funding to improve the police pay offer. Photo / Mark Mitchell

Finance Minister Nicola Willis would need to sign off an increase in funding to improve the police pay offer. Photo / Mark Mitchell

He accepted Mitchell was in a difficult position but hoped public pressure would help him secure extra funding.

鈥淚 would think that the feedback he鈥檚 had from this offer must give him ammunition to give Christopher Luxon and [Finance Minister] Nicola Willis a pretty clear message that they need to look after us better than they鈥檝e offered at the moment.鈥

Cahill was critical of Luxon, claiming the Prime Minister had shown through his public comments that he wasn鈥檛 across the issue.

If both sides couldn鈥檛 agree on an offer, it would go to final arbitration where one proposed offer from either side would be chosen.

Adam Pearse is a political reporter in the NZ Herald Press Gallery team, based at Parliament. He has worked for 九一星空无限 since 2018, covering sport and health for the Northern Advocate in Whang膩rei before moving to the NZ Herald in Auckland, covering Covid-19 and crime.

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