Media Release: 7 July 2009

Aged care nursing staff yet again 'short-changed'

Australia’s aged care workers have been “short-changed” by today’s decision by the Fair Pay Commission to put a freeze on minimum wages, the Australian Nursing Federation (ANF) said today.

The Fair Pay Commission ruled today that the minimum wage would remain unchanged at $543.78 a week. Pay and classification scales will remain at $14.31 an hour.

The ANF’s assistant federal secretary, Lee Thomas, said nursing staff had been left disappointed by the Fair Pay Commission’s ruling.

“Our hard working nursing staff, particularly those working in the aged care sector have been short-changed by this decision,” Ms Thomas said today.

“Our aged care nursing staff are among the lowest paid in the country – on average they are being paid up to $300 a week less than their colleagues in the public hospital system.”

Ms Thomas said the wage gap between aged care nursing staff and nurses working in other areas was one of the key objectives of its current national political and media campaign, Because We Care, which calls for major reform in the aged care sector.

The objectives include:

A guarantee that taxpayer funding is used for nursing and personal care for each resident.

 

Media Contacts
Lee Thomas, ANF Assistant Federal Secretary, 0419 576 590
Libby Muir, ANF Communications Officer, 0413 834 979

 

The ANF, with 170,000 members, is the professional and industrial voice for nurses and midwives in Australia.