The Unison Strike Ballot at University of Staffordshire
Unison, the United Kingdom's largest union representing public sector workers, has launched a formal strike ballot among its members at the University of Staffordshire. This action targets non-academic staff, including student advisors, catering personnel, and administrative workers, who are voicing frustration over a disputed pay offer and growing concerns about job security. The ballot comes at a tense time for the higher education sector in Europe, particularly in the UK, where financial pressures are mounting on universities.
The university, located in Stoke-on-Trent with additional campuses, employs thousands in support roles essential to daily operations. These workers provide critical services that keep the institution running smoothly, from advising students on their academic journeys to ensuring catering meets diverse needs. Now, they feel undervalued amid economic challenges.
Breaking Down the Pay Offer Dispute
At the heart of the conflict is a proposed 1.4% pay increase for the 2025/26 academic year, part of the national higher education pay negotiations led by Universities and Colleges Employers Association (UCEA). This offer has been branded 'insulting' by Unison, as it falls significantly below recent inflation rates. For context, the UK Consumer Prices Index (CPI) stood at 3.4% in December 2025 and 3.0% in January 2026, meaning the rise offers no real-terms gain and effectively cuts purchasing power.
Compounding the issue is the university's decision to delay implementation. The uplift was due in August 2025 but has been pushed back to July 2026, with no back pay promised for the 11-month gap. This deferral exacerbates financial strain on staff already grappling with rising living costs, including energy bills and groceries.
A Decade of Real-Terms Pay Erosion
Staff at the University of Staffordshire have endured a cumulative 20% drop in real-terms pay over the past 10 years, with no uplift matching inflation since the 2008 financial crisis. This erosion stems from a series of below-inflation awards amid austerity measures, pandemic recovery, and stagnant public funding for universities.
UCU (University and College Union) and other bodies highlight that higher education pay has lagged behind other public sectors. For instance, while some areas saw 5-6% rises, HE staff received offers as low as 1.4%. This disparity fuels resentment, especially as senior leaders' packages remain substantial—the vice-chancellor's total remuneration hit £326,000, though the university disputes recent increases for executives aligning with staff.
- 2008-2019: Average annual HE pay rise ~1.5%, vs CPI ~2.5%
- 2020-2025: Pandemic freezes compounded losses
- 2025/26: 1.4% offer amid 3%+ inflation
Job Security Under Threat: Recent Cost-Cutting Measures
Beyond pay, job losses loom large. The university announced plans for £6.4 million in savings, including axing 66 positions—31 academic and 35 support roles—plus not filling vacancies and reducing casual contracts. This marks the third consecutive year of cuts: 100 roles in 2024 and 40 in 2025.
These moves respond to sector-wide pressures: declining domestic enrollment, international student visa curbs, and frozen tuition fees until recently. With UK home fees now rising with inflation from 2026 (£9,535 for 2025/26), relief is slow. Support staff fear a 'two-tier workforce' where redundancies hit hardest.
Unison's Perspective: 'Years of Below-Inflation Suffering'
Jim Price, Unison West Midlands regional organiser, stated: 'Staff have suffered years of below-inflation pay awards and seen their pay collapse by 20% in the past decade. They think it's nothing short of an insult for bosses to come to the table with just 1.4%.' He called for fair offers to avert strikes.
Unison nationally rejected the UCEA offer, joining UCU, Unite, and EIS in demanding above-inflation rises and job protections. Ballots like Staffordshire's signal coordinated action potential.
Read Unison's full HE pay campaign detailsThe University's Response and Sector Challenges
A spokesperson acknowledged: 'We recognise colleagues' concerns about the future and their roles, and will continue working constructively with Unison and UCU during this challenging period for higher education.' They cite sector finances, with many UK universities facing deficits.
Staffordshire isn't alone; over 12,000 HE jobs cut UK-wide last year per UCU. Government funding shortfalls and reliance on volatile international fees exacerbate issues.
National Pay Negotiations: A Wider UK Crisis
The 1.4% offer, UCEA's 'full and final', was rejected by unions seeking 5-10% rises. Joint claims demand pay restoration and spine point protections. Inflation outpacing awards has widened the gap—staff entry salaries ~£23,000 struggle against £1,200+ monthly rents in some areas.
| Year | HE Pay Rise | CPI Inflation | Real Terms Change |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2024/25 | 3% | 2.3% | +0.7% |
| 2025/26 | 1.4% | 3.2% | -1.8% |
Ongoing Strikes at Other UK Institutions
Strikes are underway: Unison at Bristol (rejecting 1.4%), Manchester Met; UCU ballots nationwide. Russell Group unis like Imperial face action. These disrupt lectures, exams, highlighting sector fragility.
- Bristol: 92% yes vote on 60% turnout
- SOAS, KCL: Library staff striking
- National: 10,000+ potential days lost
Impacts on Students, Staff, and University Operations
Potential strikes could halt advising, catering, admin—disrupting student support. Past actions led to rescheduled classes. Staff face lost pay (~£100/day), morale dips. Long-term, talent flight to better sectors looms.
For students, check Rate My Professor for course insights amid uncertainties.
Negotiations Ahead: Solutions and Outlook
Ballot closes soon; 50% turnout needed for action. History shows pressure yields concessions—e.g., 2023's 6.5%. Government tuition hikes from 2026 may ease finances, but unions push for fair distribution.
Explore higher ed career advice for navigating disputes.
Implications for Higher Education Careers in Europe
This dispute underscores UK HE volatility, mirroring European trends like funding squeezes in Germany, France. Job seekers: Prioritize stable institutions. Check higher ed jobs, university jobs, professor salaries for benchmarks.
Prospective staff: Unions offer protections; consider faculty roles or admin positions. For employers, fair pay aids retention amid 12,000+ cuts.
In conclusion, resolution via dialogue benefits all. Stay informed via AcademicJobs Europe. Explore openings at higher-ed-jobs, rate-my-professor, and career advice.








