A list of frequently asked questions, designed to help you during any period of industrial action.
Members who are employed on Agenda for Change terms by an NHS employer with whom we are in dispute can strike. NHS Employers for the purposes of industrial action are those organisations listed in Annex 1 to the NHS Terms and Conditions of Service handbook.
NHS Professionals is not an NHS Employer because the organisation is not listed in Annex 1.
Members can only strike if working for an employer in the list of Trusts where a strike ballot was achieved. If your employer is not in the list of Trusts with a successful ballot outcome, then you must not go on strike as you may face disciplinary action if you do so.
Strikes will be happening this week in the Trusts named in this list - see here.
If you do not work in one of these Trusts then there is no legal mandate for you to go on strike. You must attend for work as normal if your Trust is not named in the list of strike locations.
Yes you can.
The NHS Employers guidance says: “Anyone can join a picket line and employers cannot prevent individuals from doing so. What action managers/ trusts can take (if any) in response will depend upon the individual’s conduct whilst picketing and whether they retain their immunity from the legal action set out above or where members of the public/supporters join the picket line and whether they are committing a civil or criminal offence.”
If you are on sick leave do not attend a picket line or demonstration as this might put your sick pay in jeopardy.
No. You can only strike if you are on duty on a strike day. But you can support your colleagues and the cause in other ways.
For example, you could provide food and drink for those on a picket line, post about strike action on social media and speak to colleagues about being an SoR member.
No. You can only strike if you are on duty on a strike day. But you can support your colleagues and the cause in other ways if you feel well enough such as sending messages of solidarity.
PLEASE DO NOT attend a picket line or demonstration as this might put your sick pay in jeopardy.
Yes. There is no qualifying period of employment. You can strike from Day one.
You will be able to strike if:
you are an apprentice and
you are directly employed by an NHS employer and
you are on Agenda for Change terms and conditions.
No. You can’t strike if you are still a student even if you are waiting to
Start a job with an NHS Organisation. As soon as you start your employment you can strike.
Students should contact the university for advice. We advise that students should not be in the workplace during strike action.
Previously, some trusts have asked students to volunteer as HCAs to help with service delivery during strike action. We would advise you not to participate in this. It will not be counted towards your clinical placement hours.
Every member is entitled to take industrial strike action following a lawful and successful ballot, and if called upon to do so by the SoR.
No. You can only strike if you are on duty on a strike day. However, you can support your colleagues and the cause in other ways. For example, you can provide food and drink for those on a picket line, post on social media about strike action and speak to colleagues about joining the SoR if they are not already a member.
Members who belong to a different trade union may decide to strike on the days of SoR strike action. But this is not an official request from the SoR, and any consequences that may follow will be a matter for the individuals concerned. We strongly advise that they take advice from their own union. Please DO NOT advise members of other trade unions.
As an SoR member, you should attend work as normal when another union is organising industrial action. We also recommend that you:
don’t take on any work outside of your professional remit on the days of industrial action.
don’t cover the work of colleagues taking industrial action if that work falls outside your contract or remit.
don’t take on any voluntary overtime work to cover the work of those taking industrial action.
avoid taking any bank or agency work to cover the work of those involved in the industrial action.
SoR shares guidance for supporting industrial action by other unions | SoR
Yes, provided the ballot at your workplace has met the required legal thresholds.
No. Members can vote for strike action but taking part on a specific strike day is a decision for individual members. Voting ‘yes’ in the strike ballot increases the pressure on the government to fund fair pay for Radiography staff. It is important that any strike action is effective, and we would hope that where our members are called to action, they would support the action.
If the person who is rostered to work wants to strike then a volunteer who wants to work can. Don’t forget that the on-call service should not provide more than the life and limb cover even if it usually does.
You should inform your manager on the day of the strike that you are striking and not working from home. You should also try to join your colleagues on the picket line.
Members can only be on strike if they are on the rota for the day(s) of action. If members have multiple workplaces that are called to strike on the same day, members should support the picket activity at the workplace they were due to be at that day.
We welcome public support for strike action. Only those members who are employed where strike action is taking place can formally participate in a picket line.
Staff who are within the following groups can participate in the strike:
Staff working in the roles the strike mandate covers (see list above) can take strike action even if they are not members of the SoR or any other union. The SoR cannot and will not induce those staff to strike.
When deducting pay for participating in strike action NHS employers should only deduct a calendar day’s pay either 1/365th of your annual salary if you are paid monthly, or 1/30th or 1/31st of your monthly salary, depending on the number of days in the relevant month if you are paid weekly.
Any enhancements expected for working on a public holiday, bank holiday or unsociable hours would not be paid, but only basic pay would be deducted.
If you have seen the incorrect amount deducted from your pay due to strike action, please speak to your local SoR rep.
No. Taking industrial strike action does not break continuous employment if you return to work after the strike ends.
Taking strike action will not impact your entitlement to earned benefits through continuous service, such as paid sick leave or maternity leave.
However, days of strike action do not count towards relevant qualifying periods for certain statutory rights.
Most employers respect the rights of workers to strike. An employer could try to discipline you for striking but it would have to take action against every employee. To do so on a large-scale would-be counter-productive and create further unnecessary industrial unrest. That’s why we believe disciplinary action is unlikely.
If you take part in lawful industrial strike action, you’re protected against Unfair Dismissal. It would also be automatically unfair to dismiss any member after 12 weeks if that member had stopped taking part in strike action within the first 12 weeks, or the employer had not taken reasonable steps to resolve the dispute at the date of dismissal.
Any effect of strike action on your pension will depend on which NHS pension scheme/section you are in.
The calculation for pension benefit is based on your best pensionable pay of the last three years. Therefore, if you are not planning to retire in the next three years, taking strike action has no impact on your 1995 section pension benefit. If you are planning to retire within three years, there may be an impact on your pension benefit. However, you can mitigate this either by using a previous year’s pensionable pay figure or making additional voluntary contributions to your pension if you chose.
The calculation for pension benefit is based on ‘total reckonable pay’ which is the average of the best three consecutive years pensionable pay in the last ten. Each year’s pensionable pay in the last ten years before retirement is increased by cost of living to bring that pay figure up to what it would be worth on the day of leaving. Therefore, if you are not planning to retire in the next ten years, taking strike action has no impact on your 2008 section pension benefit. If you are planning to retire within ten years, there may be an impact on your pension benefit. However, you can mitigate this either by using a previous year’s pensionable pay figure or making additional voluntary contributions to your pension if you chose.
The calculation for pension benefit is based on the ‘build up rate’ which is a fraction of your pensionable earnings each year. In the 2015 scheme you earn a pension of 1/54th of your pensionable earnings for each year in the scheme. Therefore, taking part in strike action is likely to have a small impact on your 2015 pension benefit you could mitigate this by making additional voluntary contributions to your pension if you chose.
It is important to seek both pensions advice and financial advice before making any pension related decision.
Whichever scheme you are in it is unlikely to make a significant impact in the long term.
Taking strike action will not impact most member’s entitlement to maternity pay. However, if you take strike action in the eight-week period before the fifteenth week prior to your expected week of childbirth, there may be an impact on the amount of maternity pay you receive. This is because your maternity pay is calculated based on your average weekly earnings and regularly paid supplements.
If the trust you work in has been called to take strike action by the SoR you can take strike action and have the same protections afforded to SoR members and non-trade union members alike under the legal ballot. Taking strike action will not affect your visa or future employment prospects.
No, the SoR doesn’t have a strike fund.
If you are a locum with a short-term substantive contract (e.g. to cover maternity leave) then you can strike.
If you are an agency worker who is employed by the agency and deployed to an NHS Trust then we ask
that you inform the employer (your agency) that you can’t work on the strike days.
Yes, if you pull out of study leave you may not get the opportunity again. You will still be out of the department. This
will support the strike. You also may be asked to refund any payment made by the department to the training provider.
There are no legal rules as to what services should be covered (if any) during a strike. It is for those taking strike action to determine what service they will provide using their clinical knowledge. If members are happy not to include two week wait patients (bearing in mind that life and limb is just that; examinations or treatment that will immediately cause loss of life or limb/brain/heart etc.) then that is fine.
The SoR is asking agency staff, particularly those who are members, not to work on strike days. There is nothing we can do to stop them coming to work but if there are more staff than you require to provide life and limb cover then substantive staff can come out on strike and leave the agency staff to run the service.
The SoR does not have a strike fund however there are other ways that you can support striking colleagues.
No, that is not correct. You are on strike for a working day, not for 7.5 hours. So whatever your working day is normally is the time you will be on strike for therefore you don’t owe any time back. Regardless of how long your normal working day is you should not be deducted any more than 1/365 of your annual salary.
This is confirmed in the advice from Capsticks to NHS Trusts - pages 28-31,
The dispute which the SoR is striking to resolve is with the NHS, not private employers. If you have an employment contract with this private company – as opposed to providing the service through an agency – then you should work these shifts as they are for a different employer. However, if you provide the service through an agency you can tell the agency you are not available to work on those evenings.
Unfortunately, the NHS Pay Review Body was stood down when negotiations commenced with those NHS Trade Unions involved in strike action in 2022.
This means that the NHS Pay Review Body did not make a recommendation on pay and therefore the recommendations for other public sector workers will not affect the 5% pay for NHS workers. This means that, in the absence of a better offer, the SoR strikes will go ahead.
We have advised that if a member takes a day of strike then they should not be deducted anymore than 1/365th of their salary per day of strike. This is the max amount, so if someone is covering for a few hours then it should be the hours deducted up to a max of 1/365th. This should be agreed with the employer beforehand.
Page 28 of the Capsticks guidance states:
“If the contract specifies normal working hours and pay is calculated by the hour, then the deduction will be determined by reference to the hours which are not worked. For a shift worker who works part of a shift on a non-strike day, the employee should be paid for those hours and only the hours which fall within the strike day and which are not worked should be deducted unless the employer is not willing to accept part performance.”
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