
More than 2,000 college support staff are to strike later this month amid a row over wages and job security, a union has said.
Unison announced on Friday that librarians, IT specialists, administrators, cleaners, canteen workers and estate management staff at 21 Scottish colleges will walk out on Thursday February 29.
The union claimed staff have not had a wage rise in 18 months, branding the lack of an increase in pay “completely unacceptable”.
It said staff have still not received a wage increase that was due in September 2022.
It also wants colleges to guarantee pay rises will not come at the cost of redundancies.
Workers voted by 81% in December in favour of strike action to continue their fight for better pay and to protect jobs.
College support staff deserve a fair pay rise without the threat of compulsory redundancies
The union has now called on college bosses at College Employers Scotland to approach workers with a better pay offer, and to guarantee there will be no mandatory redundancies as a result.
Unison Scotland’s further education branch secretary Chris Greenshields said: “College support staff deserve a fair pay rise without the threat of compulsory redundancies.
“Nobody wants to be on strike, but staff have been left with little choice.
“The union submitted a revised proposal to try and move things along back in December and it took college bosses two months to reject it.”
Collette Bradley, chairperson of Unison Scotland’s further education committee, added: “Further education in Scotland is in chaos. It’s time for ministers to step and get this dispute sorted.
“College staff have not had a pay rise for 18 months, which is completely unacceptable in the middle of a cost-of-living crisis.
“Employees are simply demanding fair pay and no compulsory redundancies. If colleges want to avoid further disruption, they need to start taking those demands seriously.”
College Employers Scotland and the Scottish Government have been asked for comment.

