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Welsh Ambulance staff to vote on industrial action

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Union says below-inflation pay rise leaves NHS workers struggling

STAFF at the Welsh Ambulance Service are to be balloted for strike action over what unions describe as a below-inflationpay award.
UNISON Cymru said on Thursday (Oct 23) that the ballot will open on Friday (Oct 24) and run until November 21.

The union claims the Welsh Government’s decision to implement the NHS Pay Review Body’s recommended 3.6% rise for 2025/26 fails to reflect the rising cost of living. With inflation currently at 3.8%, UNISON says the increase amounts to a real-terms pay cut.

Dispute over pay settlement

The dispute centres on the government’s choice to follow the review body’s advice rather than negotiate a higher deal with unions.
UNISON says the move breaks a previous commitment to restore NHS pay to 2008 levels, describing it as “a betrayal of trust.”

If workers vote in favour, walkouts could begin around Christmas, during one of the NHS’s busiest periods.

‘We can’t keep taking pay cuts’

Carol Roberts, a triage nurse and UNISON representative, said: “It breaks my heart to see colleagues who care for others having to use food banks to feed their families. The government’s 3.6% award falls far short of what NHS staff need to get by.”

Paramedic and branch secretary Henry Garrard added: “Ambulance staff are working harder than ever, but this pay rise has been left trailing by soaring costs. It’s effectively a pay cut for workers already stretched to breaking point.”

Union says staff ‘ready to act’

UNISON Cymru’s head of health, Tanya Bull, said many of the lowest-paid NHS workers were excluded from salary sacrifice schemes because participation would push their hourly rates below the minimum wage.
“No one expects the people who provide essential services to be struggling to make ends meet,” she said. “They want a fair pay rise that keeps up with inflation and recognises their contribution.”

She confirmed that the Welsh Ambulance Service is the first target in a wider campaign to “Put NHS Pay Right”, with further ballots possible across the health service if no improvement is made.

Background

UNISON represents hundreds of Welsh Ambulance Service staff, including call handlers, paramedics, emergency medical technicians and patient transport workers.
In a union consultation held earlier this year, 82% of voting members said they would support industrial action over pay.

Ballot papers will be issued on Friday (Oct 24) and results announced after Friday (Nov 21).

 

News

Motorcyclist injured in Johnston crash after overtaking lorry

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Rider treated by paramedics following collision with van pulling out from junction

A MOTORCYCLIST was treated by paramedics after a collision with a van in Johnston on Monday morning (Mar 16).

The crash happened shortly after 9.15am as the rider was overtaking a lorry through slow-moving traffic on the main road. It is understood the lorry blocked the rider’s view of a van pulling out from a junction near KO Carpets.

Police units attended promptly to assist at the scene.

The motorcyclist is not believed to have been seriously injured.

The van suffered slight damage, including a broken wing mirror.

The road was not closed, police said.

 

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Health

Plaid Cymru to hold public meeting over Withybush hospital surgery cuts

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Candidates say residents must be heard after emergency services decision

PLAID CYMRU candidates for the Ceredigion Penfro constituency will host a public meeting in Pembrokeshire to discuss concerns over the future of services at Withybush Hospital.

The event will take place at 6:30pm on Monday (Mar 31) at Letterston Village Hall, giving residents the opportunity to share their experiences and concerns following Hywel Dda University Health Board’s decision last month to remove emergency general surgery from the hospital.

Campaigners say the move will force many patients requiring urgent treatment to travel further for care, raising fears about the potential impact on patient safety in rural west Wales.

Elin Jones, Plaid Cymru lead candidate for Ceredigion Penfro, said: “Withybush is such an important hospital for the community and residents of Pembrokeshire. The decision to remove its emergency general surgery will severely weaken the life-saving capacity of this hospital.

“Plaid Cymru has long championed small rural hospitals such as Bronglais and Withybush. We need to ensure these hospitals remain strong local services within our communities. Withybush should have the basic life-saving and everyday treatment services it needs to function as a full general hospital.”

Kerry Ferguson, Plaid Cymru candidate for Pembrokeshire within the Ceredigion Penfro constituency, said the recent success of a public petition had demonstrated the strength of local feeling.

“It’s great to see that the online petition calling for Welsh Government intervention to restore emergency surgery and essential services at Withybush has reached its target, meaning it will now be debated in the Senedd,” she said.

“We are extremely disappointed by the Health Board’s decision to remove emergency general surgery at Withybush. Increased journey times for anyone in need of urgent medical treatment will put lives at risk. We need government intervention now to overturn this decision.”

Residents across Pembrokeshire have continued to raise concerns about the future of services at the hospital, which has long been a focal point in debates about healthcare provision in rural west Wales.

 

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Climate

Research vessel begins mission to study seabed carbon in Irish Sea

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Bangor University scientists join £2.1m project investigating the impact of bottom trawling on carbon stored beneath the seabed

A STATE OF THE ART research vessel has set sail from Liverpool to investigate how bottom trawling may affect carbon stored in the seabed of the Irish Sea.

The scientific expedition is part of a £2.1 million research project funded by the Natural Environment Research Council and led by Professor Jan Geert Hiddink of Bangor University.

A team of eighteen scientists has embarked on the RRS Discovery, one of the world’s most advanced research vessels, for a three-and-a-half-week voyage studying the impact of fishing activity on carbon held in seabed sediments.

Before the ship departed, a number of local dignitaries were invited aboard for a tour of the vessel, including Liverpool City Region Mayor Steve Rotheram and National Oceanography Centre Operations Director Natalie Campbell.

Professor Jan Geert Hiddink, from Bangor University’s School of Ocean Sciences, said bottom-trawl fishing is both vital to global food supply and a major disturbance to seabed environments.

“Bottom-trawl fishing provides around a quarter of global seafood but is also the most extensive physical disturbance caused by human activities to stocks of carbon locked in seabed sediments,” he said.

“This is important because recent evidence suggests that disturbing the seabed could lead to the release of significant amounts of greenhouse gases from the seabed into the atmosphere.

“There are still major uncertainties about how this disturbance affects carbon stored beneath the seabed. As a result, the impact of these disturbances is largely unquantified and currently unregulated.

“The aim of this project is to gain a much clearer understanding of what is happening so that scientists, policymakers and regulators can make informed decisions in the future.”

Seven research organisations are collaborating on the project: Bangor University, the Centre for Environment, Fisheries and Aquaculture Science (CEFAS), Heriot-Watt University, the University of Leeds, Plymouth Marine Laboratory, the University of St Andrews, and Imperial College London.

Caption: Scientists prepare to begin their research aboard the RRS Discovery, one of the world’s most advanced research vessels.

 

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