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13
May 2023
Staff at Harrogate District Hospital sold back almost 2,000 days off that they were entitled to in just six months, figures reveal.
Harrogate and District NHS Foundation Trust, which runs the hospital, introduced a policy last year where staff could ‘sell’ time off they had accrued back to the trust in order to receive extra money in their pay packets.
It was hoped the move would ease the financial burden that many staff have been under throughout winter as the cost-of-living crisis deepened.
At the time, chief executive Jonathan Coulter even said the finances of some people working for the trust were putting them under more stress than the benefit of having a holiday.
The policy, which has now closed, was capped at a maximum of five days off sold per employee.
The Local Democracy Reporting Service sent a freedom of information request to the trust, which employs around 3,500 people, asking how many staff had taken the trust up on its offer.
The figures show that between September 2022 and March 2023, 492 employees sold back 14,480 hours.
If this were divided into seven-and-a-half hour shifts, it equates to around 1,800 individual days off sold.
Since the policy was introduced in September, members of health unions have gone on strike over low pay, which they argue is compromising patient safety and leading to an exodus of trained professionals from the NHS.
Ben Kirkham, GMB Union regional organiser, said the move by the trust to let staff sell days off is exacerbating staff burnout and sickness. He added:
A Royal College of Nursing spokesperson said:
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