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Agenda for Change. NHS terms and conditions of service handbook - PDF Free Download
Agenda for Change. NHS terms and conditions of service handbook
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Angelica Flynn
1 Agenda for Change NHS terms and conditions of service handbook January 2005
2 Introduction The terms and conditions of service set out in this Handbook apply in full to all staff directly employed by NHS organisations, except very senior managers and staff within the remit of the Doctors and Dentists Review Body. NHS organisations include Health and Personal Social Services organisations in Northern Ireland. References to the NHS throughout this document should be read as including these organisations where appropriate. Staff on contracts that incorporate national agreements will assimilate into the new system, and staff on local contracts will be offered the opportunity of transferring to it under the timetable it sets out. Agenda for Change: NHS terms and conditions of service handbook January
3 CONTENTS Part 1 Principles and partnership... 8 Part 2 Pay Section 1 Pay structure Section 2 Working or providing emergency cover outside normal hours Section 3 Overtime payments Section 4 Pay in high-cost areas Section 5 Recruitment and retention premia Section 6 Career and pay progression Section 7 Payment of annual salaries Sections 8 9 (Unallocated) Part 3 Terms and conditions of service Section 10 Hours of the working week Section 11 Part-time employees and employees on fixed-term contracts Section 12 Contractual continuity of service Section 13 Annual leave and general public holidays Section 14 Sickness absence Section 15 Maternity leave and pay Section 16 Redundancy pay Section 17 Mileage allowances Section 18 Subsistence allowances Section 19 Other terms and conditions Sections (Unallocated) Part 4 Employee relations Section 25 Facilities for staff organisations Section 26 Joint consultation machinery Section 27 Working Time Regulations Sections (Unallocated) Agenda for Change: NHS terms and conditions of service handbook January
4 Contents Part 5 Equal opportunities Section 30 General statement on equality and diversity Section 31 Recruitment, promotion and staff development Section 32 Dignity at work Section 33 Caring for children and adults Section 34 Flexible working arrangements Section 35 Balancing work and personal life Section 36 Employment break scheme Sections (Unallocated) Part 6 Operating the system Section 40 New bodies and procedures Sections (Unallocated) Part 7 Transitional arrangements Section 46 Assimilation and protection Section 47 Monitoring, reviews and appeals Annexes Annex A NHS employers Annex B Pay bands and pay points Annex C Pay bands and pay points Annex D Working or providing emergency cover outside normal hours Annex E Provisions for unsocial hours payments for ambulance staff and available to early implementer sites Annex F Examples of special cases under the provisions for work outside normal hours Annex G Good practice guidance on managing working patterns Annex H High-cost area payment zones Annex I High-cost area supplements Agenda for Change: NHS terms and conditions of service handbook January 2005
5 Contents Annex J Local recruitment and retention premium criteria Annex K Additional freedoms for trusts with earned autonomy Annex L Mileage allowances Annex M Lease car policies Annex N Subsistence allowances Annex O Other terms and conditions Annex P Coverage of nurses and other health professions review body Implementation annexes Annex Q Classification of leads and allowances (listed by staff group) Annex R Guidance on the application of national recruitment and retention premia Annex S Local appeals procedures Annex T Development of professional roles Annex U Arrangements for pay and banding of trainees Annex V NHSScotland: Partnership Information Network guidelines Agenda for Change: NHS terms and conditions of service handbook January
6 PART 1: PRINCIPLES AND PARTNERSHIP 1
7 Part 2: P Section 1: Pay Structure Part 1: Principles and partnership 1 All NHS employers are obliged to adhere to employment and tax law and other statutory provisions. The NHS Staff Council will seek to keep the Handbook up to date with any changes, but current law takes precedence over the Handbook. 2 In Scotland, the statutory framework includes legislation on staff governance as set out in the NHS Reform (Scotland) Act 2004 and the Staff Governance Standard. Compliance with this standard includes implementation of Partnership Information Network (PIN) guidelines, which define a minimum standard of best employment practice. This Handbook should be read in conjunction with the provisions of the PIN guidelines as listed in Annex V. 3 The provisions set out in this Handbook are based on the need to ensure a fair system of pay for NHS employees which supports modernised working practices. The provisions recognise that modern forms of healthcare rely on flexible teams of staff providing patient care 24 hours a day, seven days a week, 365 days a year and applying a wide range of skills. 4 The Agenda for Change partners agree to work in partnership to deliver a new NHS pay system that supports NHS service modernisation and meets the reasonable aspirations of staff. The signatories to the agreement will work together to meet the reasonable aspirations of all the parties to: ensure that the new pay system leads to more patients being treated more quickly and being given higher quality care assist new ways of working that best deliver the range and quality of services required, in as efficient and effective a way as possible, and organised to best meet the needs of patients assist the goal of achieving a quality workforce with the right numbers of staff, with the right skills and diversity, and organised in the right way improve the recruitment, retention and morale of the NHS workforce improve all aspects of equal opportunity and diversity, especially in the areas of career and training opportunities and working patterns that are flexible and responsive to family commitments meet equal pay for work of equal value criteria, recognising that pay constitutes any benefits in cash or conditions implement the new pay system within the management, financial and service constraints likely to be in place. Local partnership 5 The Agenda for Change partners will make every effort to continue to support, encourage and promote a partnership approach to implementation of the new pay 8 Agenda for Change: NHS terms and conditions of service handbook January 2005
8 Part 1: Principles and partnership system at local level. The agreement to work in partnership to deliver a new NHS pay system that supports NHS service modernisation and meets the reasonable aspirations of staff should, therefore, be replicated at local level. Working examples of staff involvement and partnership working are in the resource pack Staff involvement better decisions, better care, available at: StaffInvolvementAndPartnerships 6 To this end, employers should ensure that the representatives of trade unions and other staff organisations recognised for purposes of collective bargaining at local level are released appropriately to participate in the partnership process and that nominated officers of local staff representatives can be fully involved in the local partnership arrangements. The adequacy of facilities arrangements will be monitored by the NHS Staff Council. 7 Within NHSScotland the Staff Governance Standard applies. This can be found at: Wider human resources issues 8 Pay modernisation is an integral part of the human resource strategies of the NHS in England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland. All parties to this agreement therefore recognise that it should be implemented in a way that is consistent with the wider human resource policies set out in the relevant strategies. Agenda for Change: NHS terms and conditions of service handbook January
9 PART 2: PAY 2
10 Part 2: Pay Section 1: Pay structure Pay spines 1.1 The NHS pay system as a whole will have three pay spines or series of pay bands: one for staff within the remit of the Doctors and Dentists Review Body; one for staff within the extended remit of the Pay Review Body for Nursing and Other Health Professions; and one for other directly employed NHS staff, with the exception of the most senior managers. 1.2 This part of the Handbook sets out the pay spines and the associated arrangements for the second and third of these groups. Section 40 (Part 6) and Annex P also set out the extended coverage of the Pay Review Body for Nursing and Other Health Professions. 1.3 Both the second and third pay spines will be divided into nine pay bands. All staff covered by Agenda for Change will, on assimilation, be assigned to one of these pay bands on the basis of job weight as measured by the NHS Job Evaluation Scheme. 1.4 To assist this process a set of NHS jobs have been evaluated and national job profiles drawn up where the job evaluation score is agreed. Staff whose jobs match these profiles will assimilate on the basis of the profile score. Other jobs will be evaluated locally on a partnership basis. 1.5 The NHS Job evaluation handbook 1 sets out the basis of job evaluation, which underpins the new pay system and includes the factor plan, the weighting and scoring document and a guide for matching posts locally. The process for assimilation is set out more fully in Section The nine pay bands and their corresponding job evaluation scores are set out in Table 1 opposite. Within this structure, pay band 8 is sub-divided into four ranges. 1.7 There are separate arrangements for chief executives and directors at board level. These may also apply to other senior manager posts with a job weight over 720 points. 1.8 Within each pay band there will be a number of pay points to allow pay progression in post. Staff will progress from point to point on an annual basis to the top point in their pay band or pay range, provided their performance is satisfactory and they demonstrate the agreed knowledge and skills appropriate to that part of the pay band or range. Staff joining pay band 5 as new entrants will 1 Available, together with the nationally evaluated job profiles, on the Agenda for Change website at: 12 Agenda for Change: NHS terms and conditions of service handbook January 2005
11 Part 2: Pay Section 1: Pay structure Table 1 Pay bands and job weight Review body spine Non-review body spine Pay band Job weight Pay band Job weight a a b b c c d d have accelerated progression through the first two points in six monthly steps (that is, they will move up one pay point after six months and a further point after twelve months) providing those responsible for the relevant standards in the organisation are satisfied with their standard of practice. This twelve-month period will be referred to as preceptorship. 1.9 Section 6 sets out in more detail how the new system of career and pay progression will work and gives the details of the NHS Knowledge and Skills Framework that underpins it Annex B sets out the pay spines in full effective from 1 October The pay spines effective from 1 April 2005 are set out in Annex C. For some staff whose new pay band minimum is significantly above their current pay there are special transitional pay points which apply during the assimilation period (see Section 46). Transitional arrangements 1.11 Further information on assimilation and protection arrangements is set out in Part 7, including information on: the process for assimilation special transitional pay points for staff whose new pay band minimum is significantly above their current pay the replacement of existing leads and allowances existing bonus scheme payments the payment of long-term recruitment and retention premia in the case of a number of jobs where market pressures require continuing special measures. Agenda for Change: NHS terms and conditions of service handbook January
12 Part 2: Pay Section 2: Working outside normal hours Section 2: Working or providing emergency cover outside normal hours Working outside normal hours 2.1 Pay enhancements will be given to staff whose work in standard hours, excluding overtime and work arising from on-call duties, is carried out in unsocial hours. Standard hours are defined as those detailed in Section 10, paragraph 10.1 and in tables 8 and 9 and in Section From 1 October 2004 until a new system of payments is introduced the definition of unsocial hours and the enhancement payable will be as set out in the interim regime below. 2.3 The NHS Staff Council is reviewing and devising new harmonised arrangements for pay for unsocial hours The review will ensure that these new arrangements are consistent with equal pay for work of equal value. Agreement will be subject to the provisions of paragraph 6 of the terms of reference set out in Annex M of the Agenda for Change final agreement. Interim regime 2.4 Unless otherwise provided below, staff will continue to be paid for work in standard hours, excluding overtime and work arising from on-call duties, carried out in unsocial hours using the mechanism described within the relevant current Whitley Council provisions for each staff group, using Agenda for Change pay rates. 2.5 Basic salary for this purpose will include any long-term recruitment and retention premia. It will not include short-term recruitment and retention premia, high-cost area payments or any other payment. 2.6 Nurses and midwives above pay band 6 will have their unsocial hours payments calculation based on the maximum pay point in pay band 6, or their actual salary if that is lower. Staff covered by the Ancillary Staffs Council (ASC) who work unsocial hours will be paid in accordance with the standard ancillary provisions except for the arrangements for alternating and rotary shifts. These will be converted into allowances which are added to basic pay. The value of these allowances will be included for the purposes of calculating other unsocial hours payments. The two payments are 567 and 969 per annum respectively from 1 April Those maintenance staff within the remit of the Maintenance Staff NHS Management Advisory Panel (MAP) who work unsocial hours will be covered by the provisions in the maintenance staff handbook, including the provisions for shift allowances. 2.7 In the case of staff on contracts that are a combination of Whitley basic pay with locally determined unsocial hours provision, upon assimilation to the Agenda for Change package they will continue to receive unsocial hours payments in accordance with their existing local arrangements. 2.8 Ambulance staff (i.e. those staff who would have been subject to the provisions of the Ambulance Whitley Council had they been employed on Whitley contracts) who are employed by ambulance trusts and work unsocial hours will receive unsocial hours payments in accordance with Annex E and Annex F. Other staff 14 Agenda for Change: NHS terms and conditions of service handbook January 2005 Amendment number 3: Pay Circular (AforC) 1/2006
13 Part 2: Pay Section 2: Working outside normal hours employed by ambulance trusts will be subject to the relevant provisions of their old Whitley Council. (In Scotland the employers are ambulance boards.) 2.9 Staff employed on Whitley terms and conditions where there is no provision for unsocial hours payments or equivalent will be entitled to unsocial hours payments on the basis of the rules applicable to nurses and midwives. For staff in pay bands 1 to 4 the applicable percentages are per cent and per cent. For all other staff the applicable percentages are 30 per cent and 60 per cent Staff on local contracts who accept the Agenda for Change package will receive unsocial hours payments in accordance with the relevant Whitley provisions for that occupational group or, if there are none, on the basis of the rules applicable to nurses and midwives The agreed early implementer sites with the exception of ambulance trusts (which are covered by paragraph 2.8 above) may retain their current unsocial hours provisions for some or all staff by local agreement. Otherwise, they will adopt the arrangements set out in paragraphs 2.1 to 2.10 above, with effect from 1 October Annex D lists the relevant sections of the Whitley handbooks in relation to payments outside normal working hours. On-call and other extended service cover 2.13 From 1 October 2004 groups of staff will be able either to retain their current on-call provisions (both national and local) where agreed locally, as set out in paragraph 2.28, or to use the on-call provisions set out below. Staff for whom there is currently no on-call provision will be entitled to the arrangements set out below. Those staff previously covered by the PTA Whitley Council on the new pay band 5 who were paid at a higher grade for unsupervised work on-call should be paid as a minimum on the fourth point of pay band 5 (pay spine point 20) when on-call The NHS Staff Council will review and may devise new harmonised arrangements during the four-year period of protection for on-call, based on further monitoring of experience in early implementer sites and evidence from national roll-out. Interim regime 2.15 Employees who are required to be available to provide on-call cover outside their normal working hours will be entitled to receive a pay enhancement. This enhancement recognises both their availability to provide cover and any advice given by telephone during periods of on-call availability Subject to the provision for retention of current on-call provisions under the protection arrangements set out in paragraph 2.28, this enhancement will be based on the proportion of on-call periods in the rota when on-call cover is required. The on-call period in each week should be divided into nine periods of at least twelve hours. The enhancement for an individual staff member will be based on the proportion of these periods in which they are required to be on-call, as set out in paragraphs 2.17 to 2.22 below. Pay enhancements for on-call cover 2.17 An enhancement of 9.5 per cent will be paid to staff who are required to be on-call an average of one in three of the defined periods or more frequently. Agenda for Change: NHS terms and conditions of service handbook January 2005 Amendment number 2: Pay Circular (AforC) 2/
14 Part 2: Pay Section 2: Working outside normal hours 2.18 An enhancement of 4.5 per cent will be paid to staff who are required to be on-call an average of between one in six and less than one in three of the defined periods An enhancement of 3 per cent will be paid to staff who are required to be on-call an average of between one in nine and less than one in six of the defined periods An enhancement of 2 per cent will be paid to staff who are required to be on-call an average of between one in nine and less than one in 12 of the defined periods For these purposes, the average availability required will be measured over a full rota, or over a thirteen-week period if no standard pattern is applicable. The reference period will not include any periods when the employee is absent from work on either annual leave or sickness absence Where on-call cover is limited or very irregular (averaging less than one in 12), pay enhancements will be agreed locally. These may be fixed or variable, and based on actual or estimated frequencies of on-call work worked, subject to local agreement. To ensure fairness to all staff qualifying under the national rules set out above, locally agreed payments may not exceed the minimum percentage in the national provisions. Table 2 Frequency of on-call Value of enhancements as percentage of basic pay 1 in 3 or more frequent 9.5% 1 in 6 or more but less than 1 in 3 4.5% 1 in 9 or more but less than 1 in 6 3.0% 1 in 12 or more but less than 1 in 9 2.0% Less frequent than 1 in 12 By local agreement On-call payments for part-time staff or other staff working non-standard hours 2.23 For part-time staff and other staff working other than 37 1 /2 hours a week excluding meal breaks, the percentage added to basic pay on account of on-call availability will be adjusted to ensure that they are paid a fair percentage enhancement of salary for on-call working. This will be done by adjusting the payment in proportion to their part-time salary so that they receive the same payment for the same length of availability on-call as full-time staff. Employees called into work during an on-call period 2.24 Employees who are called into work during a period of on-call will receive payment for the period they are required to attend, including any travel time. Alternatively, staff may choose to take time off in lieu. However if, for operational reasons, time off in lieu cannot be taken within three months the hours worked must be paid for For work (including travel time) as a result of being called out the employee will receive a payment at time and a half, with the exception of work on general 16 Agenda for Change: NHS terms and conditions of service handbook January 2005 Amendment number 2: Pay Circular (AforC) 2/2005
15 Part 2: Pay Section 2: Working outside normal hours public holidays which will be at double time. Time off in lieu should be at plain time. There is no disqualification from this payment for bands 8 and 9, as a result of being called out By agreement between employers and staff, there may be local arrangements whereby the payment for hours worked during a given period of on-call is subject to a fixed minimum level, in place of separately recognising travel time In addition, where employers and staff agree it is appropriate, the amount paid for work and travel time during periods of on-call may be decided on a prospective basis (for example, for a forward period of three months) based on the average work carried out during a prior reference period (for example, of three months). Where these arrangements are agreed, the actual work carried out during a given period would be monitored and, if the average amount assumed in the calculation of the payment is significantly different, the level of payment should be adjusted for the next period; there should be no retrospective adjustment to the amount paid in the previous period Where agreed locally, all current on-call arrangements may be protected for groups of employees for up to four years from the effective date of assimilation, irrespective of whether they were nationally or locally agreed. This extended protection will apply to existing staff and new staff during the period of protection On-call payments made under such arrangements should be excluded from the pre- and post-assimilation pay used in the calculation of any protected level of pay (see Section 46). Other arrangements to provide extended service cover 2.30 Some staff are required to be on the premises to provide emergency cover but are allowed to rest except for the times when they are required to carry out emergency work. Where employers consider this an essential arrangement to provide service cover, there should be an agreed local arrangement, at least equivalent to on-call payments, to recognise the type of cover provided A further group of staff, often in community services such as learning disabilities, have sleeping-in arrangements where they sleep on work premises but are seldom required to attend an incident during the night. In these circumstances, appropriate arrangements should be agreed locally. Christmas and New Year holidays at weekends 2.32 When public holidays during the Christmas and New Year period fall at weekends then alternative days will be designated as if they were paid public holidays and the appropriate payments applied Where staff are required to work on what would otherwise have been a public holiday other than for the provisions in 2.32 above, then the appropriate agreements (see Annex D) relating to work on public holidays and weekends will apply to those days. However, staff will not receive additional payments for both the alternative days and the days that would otherwise have been public holidays. Transitional arrangements 2.34 See Section 46 for further information on assimilation and protection. Agenda for Change: NHS terms and conditions of service handbook January 2005 Amendment number 2: Pay Circular (AforC) 2/
16 Part 2: Pay Section 3: Overtime payments Section 3: Overtime payments 3.1 All staff in pay bands 1 to 7 will be eligible for overtime payments. There is a single harmonised rate of time-and-a-half for all overtime, with the exception of work on general public holidays, which will be paid at double time. 3.2 Overtime payments will be based on the hourly rate provided by basic pay plus any long-term recruitment and retention premia. 3.3 Part-time employees will receive payments for the additional hours at plain time rates until their hours exceed standard hours of 37 1 /2 hours a week. 3.4 The single overtime rate will apply whenever excess hours are worked over fulltime hours unless time off is taken in lieu, provided the employee s line manager or team leader has agreed with the employee to this work being performed outside the standard hours. 3.5 Staff may request to take time off in lieu as an alternative to overtime payments. However, staff who, for operational reasons, are unable to take time off in lieu within three months must be paid at the overtime rate. 3.6 Senior staff paid in pay bands 8 or 9 will not be entitled to overtime payments (see Section 2, paragraph 2.25). 3.7 Time off in lieu of overtime payments will be at plain time rates. Section 4: Pay in high-cost areas 4.1 High-cost area supplements will apply to all NHS staff groups in the areas concerned who are covered by this agreement. The supplements will be expressed as a proportion of basic pay (including the value of any long-term recruitment and retention premium), but subject to a minimum and maximum level of extra pay. 4.2 High-cost area supplements will be pensionable. They will not count as basic pay for the purposes of calculating the rate of overtime payments, unsocial hours payments, on-call availability payments or any other payment excluding sick pay. 4.3 The level of high-cost area payments effective from 1 October 2004 and 1 April 2005 are set out in Annex I. Beyond 2005 the value of the supplement will be reviewed annually, based on the recommendations of the Pay Review Body for Nursing and Other Health Professions and the Pay Negotiating Council. 4.4 The definitions of the Inner London, Outer London and fringe zones for high-cost area payments are set out in Annex H. Where staff who were previously entitled to extra-territorially managed (ETM) payments do not fall within the inner, outer or fringe definitions these payments should be converted into long-term recruitment and retention premia. If staff working in the designated inner, outer or fringe zones were previously in receipt of ETM payments with a higher value than the applicable new high-cost area payment, the difference should be converted into a long-term recruitment and retention payment. 4.5 Current payments for London weighting, fringe allowances and cost of living supplements in these areas will be discontinued once the new arrangements are in force. 18 Agenda for Change: NHS terms and conditions of service handbook January 2005
17 Part 2: Pay Section 4: Pay in high-cost areas 4.6 Employers who employ staff in more than one high-cost area zone can agree locally a harmonised rate of payment across their organisation, provided they agree with neighbouring employers if the proposed rate would exceed the average rate payable in their area. 4.7 Current entitlements for cost of living supplements in areas outside London and fringe zones will continue but will be re-expressed as long-term recruitment and retention premia. 4.8 It will be open to the Pay Review Body for Nursing and Other Health Professions and/or the Pay Negotiating Council to make recommendations on the future geographic coverage of high-cost area supplements and on the value of such supplements. 4.9 It will be open to NHS employers or staff organisations in a specified geographic area to propose an increase in the level of high-cost area supplement for staff in that area or (in the case of areas where no supplement exists) to introduce a supplement. But this can only be implemented where: there is evidence that costs for the majority of staff living in the travel-to-work area covered by the proposed new or higher supplement are greater than for the majority of staff living in the travel-to-work area of neighbouring employers and that this is reflected in comparative recruitment problems there is agreement amongst all the NHS employers in that area there is agreement with staff organisations there is consultation with strategic health authorities and workforce development confederations in England The payment of a high-cost area supplement will not impinge on the ability of local NHS employers in that area, in consultation with staff representatives, strategic health authorities and workforce development confederations, to award recruitment and retention premia for particular staff groups in particular localities (see Section 5). Transitional arrangements 4.11 Further information on assimilation and protection arrangements during the transition to the new system is set out in Part 7, including information on: the position on current payments for London Weighting, fringe allowances and cost-of-living supplements the position of staff where the new level of supplement falls short of the combined entitlement to such former payments. Section 5: Recruitment and retention premia 5.1 A recruitment and retention premium is an addition to the pay of an individual post or specific group of posts where market pressures would otherwise prevent the employer from being able to recruit staff to and retain staff in sufficient numbers for the posts concerned at the normal salary for a job of that weight. 5.2 Subject to the provisions below, NHS employers may apply a recruitment and retention premium to posts of a specific class or type. They may also be applied to Agenda for Change: NHS terms and conditions of service handbook January
18 Part 2: Pay Section 5: Recruitment and retention premia individual posts where the post is unique within the organisation concerned (such as the head of a department or service). 5.3 Recruitment and retention premia may also be awarded on a national basis to particular groups of staff on the recommendation of the Pay Review Body for Nursing and Other Health Professions and/or the Pay Negotiating Council where there are national recruitment and retention pressures. The Review Body and the Pay Negotiating Council must seek evidence or advice from NHS employers, staff organisations and other stakeholders in considering the case for any such payments. Where it is agreed that a recruitment and retention payment is necessary for a particular group the level of payment should be specified or, where the underlying problem is considered to vary across the country, guidance should be given to employers on the appropriate level of payment. Guidance on the application of national recruitment and retention premia is set out in Annex R. 5.4 Recruitment and retention premia will be supplementary payments over and above the pay that post holders receive by virtue of their position on their pay band, any high-cost area supplements, or any payments for unsocial hours or on-call cover. 5.5 Recruitment and retention premia will apply to posts. Where an employee moves to a different post that does not attract a recruitment and retention premium, either within the same organisation or elsewhere in the NHS, their entitlement to any previous recruitment and retention premium will cease. 5.6 NHS employers and staff representatives, in partnership, will follow the procedure set out in Annex J in deciding the award of a recruitment and retention premium. Long-term and short-term recruitment and retention premia 5.7 The body responsible for awarding a recruitment and retention premium shall determine whether to award a long-term or short-term premium. 5.8 Short-term recruitment and retention premia will apply where the labour market conditions giving rise to recruitment and retention problems are expected to be short-term and where the need for the premium is expected to disappear or reduce in the foreseeable future. 5.9 Long-term recruitment and retention premia will apply where the relevant labour market conditions are more deep-rooted and the need for the premium is not expected to vary significantly in the foreseeable future Short-term recruitment and retention premia: may be awarded on a one-off basis or for a fixed-term will be regularly reviewed may be withdrawn or have the value adjusted subject to a notice period of six months will not be pensionable, or count for purposes of overtime, unsocial hours payments or any other payments linked to basic pay Long-term recruitment and retention premia: will be awarded on a long-term basis will have their values regularly reviewed 20 Agenda for Change: NHS terms and conditions of service handbook January 2005
19 Part 2: Pay Section 6: Career and pay progression may be awarded to new staff at a different value from that which applies to existing staff; and will be pensionable, and will count for the purposes of overtime, unsocial hours payments and any other payments linked to basic pay Both long-term and short-term recruitment and retention premia will be expressed as cash sums and will be separately identifiable from basic pay, any high-cost area supplement and any other component of pay The combined value of any nationally awarded and any locally awarded recruitment and retention premium for a given post shall not normally exceed 30 per cent of basic salary. It will be the responsibility of employers to ensure that any premia awarded locally do not normally result in payments in excess of this amount, taking into account any national awards for the posts in question. See also the provisions concerning earned autonomy in Annex K. Transitional arrangements 5.14 Further information on assimilation and protection arrangements during the transition to the new system is set out in Part 7, including information on those jobs where it is agreed that there is prima facie evidence that a premium is necessary to ensure the position of the NHS is maintained in relation to the relevant external labour market during the transitional period (see Table 19 in Annex R). Section 6: Career and pay progression 6.1 A new NHS Knowledge and Skills Framework (KSF) 2 will be applied to all jobs covered by Agenda for Change no later than October The output from the NHS Knowledge and Skills Framework for an individual job will be a list of descriptions and/or standards (KSF post outline) specifying the minimum applied knowledge and skills required for a job and how this should develop during a person s time in post. It will provide prompts for action by individuals and their managers to update or develop their knowledge and skills, or address areas for development in the application of knowledge and skills. Development review procedures should be jointly agreed by management and staff representatives locally. 6.3 It must be clear which elements, as identified in the NHS Knowledge and Skills Framework, should be demonstrated at both the foundation and second gateway (see paragraphs 6.14 to 6.18 below). 6.4 The KSF post outlines within an organisation will be available to all staff members to help them identify the knowledge and skills requirements likely to be needed for future career steps and identify the development needed to support them. These requirements are not, however, fixed and will be reviewed in partnership when posts become vacant or changes need to take place for service development and other reasons. 2 Available at: AgendaForChange/KnowledgeAndSkillsFramework.htm and at: Agenda for Change: NHS terms and conditions of service handbook January
20 Part 2: Pay Section 6: Career and pay progression Development review process 6.5 All staff will have annual development reviews against the NHS Knowledge and Skills Framework, which will result in the production of a personal development plan. Similar to current practice, development reviews will take place between staff and their manager or, where appropriate, their supervisor, a professional adviser or another appropriately trained senior team member. Development review procedures should be jointly agreed by management and staff representatives locally. 6.6 The main purpose of the development review will be to look at the way a member of staff is developing with reference to: how the duties and responsibilities of the job are being undertaken, based on current agreed objectives the application of knowledge and skills in the workplace the consequent development needs of the individual member of staff. 6.7 The primary output of a development review for an employee will be a record of the above against the relevant KSF post outline and an individual personal development plan, which links to the needs of the employee in the post. During the development review process, discussion should cover the duties and responsibilities of the job that is being undertaken as outlined in paragraph 6.6 above. This will help to define future objectives and learning needs. 6.8 The review of learning achievements demonstrated in the workplace will be demonstrated by reference to the current personal development plan. 6.9 Development will primarily focus on helping members of staff to carry out their current job to the standard specified in the KSF outline for the post, although personal interests and opportunities for career progression will also be taken into account. Approaches to development will not just consist of courses but will also involve distance learning, private study, opportunities to participate in particular projects or work areas, short secondments, work shadowing, peer review and other continuing professional development activities Development plans will distinguish between goals for the year ahead and those applying to the longer term. There will be a commitment from both parties to make all reasonable efforts to meet the developmental goals for the year ahead in that year and elements not completed through force of circumstance will be carried over to the following year, unless agreed otherwise Managers and staff will work together to fulfil agreed development plans. Employers will encourage staff members to progress and develop and, where training and/or development needs have been identified and agreed, employers will ensure sufficient financial support is provided. Where appropriate, employers should ensure that staff have appropriate time to fulfil training and/or development needs related to their current job and appropriate financial and other support. If an employer fails to do this, they cannot defer pay progression. Wherever possible employers will also provide similar encouragement and support for elements of the personal development plan that reflect personal interests or help staff prepare for a more senior role or transfer to a different area of work within the NHS Staff members will contribute to undertaking the agreed personal development plan through their personal effort. They may individually choose, where 22 Agenda for Change: NHS terms and conditions of service handbook January 2005
21 Part 2: Pay Section 6: Career and pay progression appropriate, to commit personal time and resources, especially in those areas relating to longer-term career development. It is the employer s responsibility to support individuals and their personal efforts appropriately. Where development needs essential to the post are agreed with the employer there will not normally be any requirement for the employee to use his or her unpaid personal time Local development and review processes must be designed to ensure that parttime staff and those working outside normal hours have equal access to them. Gateways 6.14 Gateways are points on a pay band where assessment of the application of knowledge and skills necessary to progress will be made. There are two gateway points: the foundation gateway and the second gateway. Foundation gateway 6.15 The foundation gateway applies no later than twelve months after appointment to the pay band, regardless of the pay point to which the person is appointed. Second gateway 6.16 The foundation gateway will be followed by a second gateway, which will vary between pay bands as set out in Table 3 below: Table 3 Position of second gateway Pay band Pay band 1 Pay bands 2 4 Pay bands 5 7 Pay band 8, ranges A D Pay band 9 Position of second gateway Before final point Before first of last two points Before first of last three points Before final point Before final point 6.17 The review at the foundation gateway will be based on the agreed subset as specified in the KSF outline for the post. The review at the second gateway will be based on the relevant dimensions, levels and indicators as specified in the full KSF outline for the post The gateway review should take place in time for staff to progress on their normal incremental date. Robust jointly agreed local arrangements must be in place to deal with cases where this is not possible (for example because the relevant manager is ill). These should ensure that there is no incentive to abuse the process. Pay progression 6.19 Newly appointed or promoted staff joining a pay band under the new system will serve an initial foundation period of up to twelve months. During this initial period all staff will have at least two discussions with their manager (or the person acting Agenda for Change: NHS terms and conditions of service handbook January
22 Part 2: Pay Section 6: Career and pay progression as their reviewer) to review progress, guided by the KSF foundation outline for the post. The first of these discussions should normally be during the induction period. The aim of these discussions and any resulting support and development will be to help staff make a success of the new job and confirm as quickly as possible that they are applying the basic knowledge and skills needed for the job and can pass through the foundation gateway and commence progression up their pay band (see Annex T, paragraph 3) Once progression has been agreed, a member of staff will normally progress to the next point on their pay band twelve months after appointment and to subsequent points every twelve months thereafter, subject to meeting the criteria for progression when they pass through the second gateway point Before moving through the second gateway, there will be an assessment as part of the process of development review, against the full KSF outline for the post. Staff will normally expect to move through the second gateway at this point, but, subject to the safeguards set out below, progression may be deferred if the review indicates that they are not yet applying the full range of knowledge and skills required for the post The gateway system will only become fully operational when an employer has put in place reasonable arrangements to ensure that staff have access to development reviews, personal development plans and appropriate support for training and development to meet the applied knowledge and skills required at the gateway concerned. This must be done for all posts covered by this agreement no later than October Existing staff with at least twelve months experience in post will be assumed to have met the criteria for passing through the foundation gateway. Where the gateway system is operational, they will however be subject to the normal operation of the new system at the second gateway The following safeguards will also apply. There will be a normal expectation of progression and no national or local quotas will apply. All staff must have an equal opportunity to demonstrate the required standard of knowledge and skills to progress through the gateways and pay points. The applied skills and knowledge required at the foundation and second gateways should be clearly stated during recruitment. The KSF outlines may be changed subsequently by local agreement within the work area concerned where changes apply to a number of posts, or with the individual where they apply only to a single post. They may also be changed where it is necessary to reflect a change in professional standards as agreed by the relevant professional body or authority. The demonstration of knowledge and skills must be that used within each dimension, level and indicators in the KSF. Employers must ensure there is a robust jointly agreed process for checking managers decisions and reviewing disagreements with an agreed timescale for re-review. Pay progression cannot be deferred unless there has been prior discussion between the individual and the person undertaking their review, which should be recorded, about the knowledge and skills that the individual needs to 24 Agenda for Change: NHS terms and conditions of service handbook January 2005
23 Part 2: Pay Section 6: Career and pay progression develop and apply and the member of staff has been given the opportunity to achieve the necessary development. Employers and staff representatives, acting in partnership, will monitor decisions on pay progression to ensure that there is no discrimination or bias in relation to race or ethnicity, gender, sexual orientation, disability, religion, age or trade union membership, or pattern of employment, for example part-time, flexible and night workers. Development of professional roles 6.25 Guidance on the development of professional roles for healthcare professionals on pay band 5 is set out in Annex T. Exceptional grounds for deferral of pay progression 6.26 Where significant weaknesses in performance in the current post have been identified, discussed and documented with the staff member concerned and have not been resolved despite opportunities for appropriate training/development and support, exceptionally pay progression may be deferred at any pay point until the problems are resolved Significant weaknesses are those that prevent a staff member from continuing to apply consistently, across a recognised normal workload, the knowledge and skills specified under the KSF foundation post outline for the foundation gateway or, for staff above the second gateway, the full range of knowledge and skills specified under the full KSF post outline, without continued supervision and support inappropriate to the post. Career development moves 6.28 Where a member of staff moves to another job in the NHS covered by this agreement, where the necessary arrangements to support the operation of the gateways are in place, pay progression will normally depend on demonstrating the knowledge and skills specified in the KSF outline for the post within the first 12 months of appointment Where, however, an individual re-trains in a different area of work for wider service or operational reasons with the explicit agreement of the employer concerned, their existing level of pay should be protected. Once protection is agreed, it may not be withdrawn until the person concerned has had a reasonable opportunity to complete their re-training and progress to a point where pay protection is no longer required. Explicit employer agreement in this context cannot be deemed to have been given solely because the employer has agreed to re-employ someone following redundancy. Temporary movement Into a higher pay band 6.30 Individuals may be moved into a higher pay band where it is necessary to fill a post on a temporary basis when a vacancy is unfilled but being advertised, or the post is being held open for someone who is due to return, for example from long-term sick leave, maternity leave or from extended training Pay should be set either at the minimum of the new pay band or, if this would result in no pay increase (by reference to basic pay plus any recruitment and retention premium if applicable), the first pay point in the band that would deliver an increase in pay. Temporary movement into a new pay band should Agenda for Change: NHS terms and conditions of service handbook January
24 Part 2: Pay Section 7: Payment of annual salaries not normally last more than six months or less than one month, except in instances of maternity leave or long-term sick leave where a longer period may be known at the outset. In circumstances where the individual is not required to carry out the full responsibilities of the post, pay will be determined by job evaluation Where temporary movement into a higher pay band results in only one extra pay point the incremental date remains the same. Where temporary movement results in more than one extra pay point the incremental date for the period of the temporary movement becomes the date the movement began. Pay on promotion 6.33 Pay on promotion should be set either at the minimum of the new pay band or, if this would result in no pay increase, the first pay point in the band that would deliver an increase in pay (by reference to basic pay plus any recruitment and retention premium, if applicable). Transitional arrangements 6.34 Further information on assimilation arrangements during the transition to the new system is set out in Part 7, including information on: the arrangements that need to be put in place before the gateway system can become fully operational and the need for this to be done for all posts by no later than October 2006 the position of existing staff in relation to the foundation and second gateways the position of existing staff in relation to their current incremental date. Section 7: Payment of annual salaries 7.1 The annual salaries of full-time employees who are paid monthly shall be apportioned as set out in Table 4 below. Table 4 For each calendar month For each odd day (including Sundays and Saturdays, in the case of a working week of five days) 1 /12 of the annual The monthly sum divided by the number salary of days in the particular month 26 Agenda for Change: NHS terms and conditions of service handbook January 2005
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