Holiday Pay Compensation Negotiations with Barnet Council – Barnet UNISON Fights for Every Penny

Barnet UNISON is currently in negotiations with the London Borough of Barnet over compensation for underpaid holiday pay for workers who regularly work overtime.
In the middle of a cost of living crisis, when our members are struggling with rent, mortgages, food, fuel and rising debt, it is simply not acceptable that money which should have been in workers’ pay has not been paid. Our job as your union is clear:
👉 Get as much money into our members’ pockets as possible, as fairly and as quickly as we can.
We have another negotiation meeting with the employer on Monday 15 December 2025 and our aim is to secure a compensation offer that we can put to members early in the New Year.
What is the issue about?
For years, depot workers and other council staff have:
- Worked regular, predictable overtime, and
- Taken annual leave, during which their holiday pay did not reflect the overtime they usually earn.
The law – backed up by court decisions – says that when you are on holiday, you should not be financially penalised for taking that leave. Where overtime is regular, it should form part of your “normal pay” for at least part of your annual leave.
Barnet Council only started making an extra holiday-related payment on overtime from 1 April 2025. That leaves a period where many staff who worked regular overtime were very likely underpaid while on holiday.
Because of strict time limits in the legal system, we are not pursuing this through the Employment Tribunal. Instead, Barnet UNISON is:
🔹 Pursuing a collective compensation deal with Barnet Council for all affected workers.
This is not a “nice to have” – it is money our members should have had at a time when every pound really matters.
Why this matters now – hardship and the cost of living crisis
We are hearing, day in, day out, from members who are:
- Skipping meals or relying on foodbanks
- Struggling with rent and mortgage payments
- Cutting back on heating
- Juggling multiple jobs and overtime just to stay afloat
Many of the workers affected by this issue are low paid depot workers and other frontline staff who have kept services running through austerity, the pandemic and the current financial crisis facing the Council.
For years they have worked overtime, often at short notice and under pressure, and then lost out on pay when they took their annual leave. That is not just a legal issue – it is a fairness and dignity issue.
Barnet UNISON is absolutely clear:
We will not allow this to be swept under the carpet or reduced to a token gesture.
We are fighting for real money, for real people, facing real hardship.
What are we trying to secure?
Our objectives are:
- A fair compensation package for all affected workers who have regularly worked overtime and were underpaid while on annual leave.
- A deal that recognises the higher impact on low paid workers, especially depot staff and other frontline roles.
- A clear, lawful and transparent system going forward so that:
- Holiday pay properly reflects regular overtime; and
- This situation cannot happen again.
We are not interested in a token, one-size-fits-all gesture that barely touches what’s been lost. Any offer will be:
- Modelled and tested against what members could reasonably have expected to receive, and
- Consulted on with members before UNISON takes a position.
What happens next?
- 15 December 2025 – Barnet UNISON meets with Barnet Council alongside the other unions. We will push to agree:
- Terms of Reference
- Information disclosure
- A negotiation timetable
- Early 2026 – Our goal is to secure a compensation proposal to take to members early in the New Year.
- Any proposal will be:
- Explained clearly
- Subject to consultation
- And, if appropriate, a ballot of affected members.
If the Council drags its feet or presents an offer that is clearly unfair, Barnet UNISON will consult members on next steps, including the possibility of industrial action.
Solidarity statement from Helen Davies, Branch Chair, Barnet UNISON
“Our members are living through a brutal cost of living crisis.
The very people who keep this borough going – depot workers, street scene staff, care workers, those working long hours on overtime – have been short-changed on their holiday pay for years.
Barnet UNISON is absolutely determined to get every penny we can back into our members’ pockets. This is not abstract negotiation – it’s about heating, food, rent, debt and dignity.
We will go into the meeting on 15 December with a clear message: our members cannot afford more delay, and they will not accept a token gesture.
We are asking all our members to stand together in solidarity. When we fight together, we win together.” – Helen Davies, Branch Chair, Barnet UNISON
If you are a Barnet Council worker who regularly works overtime and you’re not currently a UNISON member, now is the time to join.
📩 If you have questions about whether you may be affected by this issue, please contact the Barnet UNISON office.
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