VICTORIA'S top health bureaucrats were given a 46 per cent pay rise last financial year, worth more than $57,000 each.
The increase has infuriated nurses, who are locked in a wage row with the state government, which is offering a basic 2.5 per cent pay rise, plus any negotiated productivity savings.
The Victorian Department of Health's annual report shows its 47 executives were paid an average of almost $180,975 each last financial year, compared with $123,614 the year before.
It was by far the biggest increase in the state bureaucracy, with executives typically given 15 per cent more pay across 11 government departments, excluding bonuses.
Australian Nursing Federation state secretary Lisa Fitzpatrick said it was disgusting, with the average pay rise for each executive enough to employ a nurse with eight years experience.
''The thought that comes to mind is pigs around a trough,'' she said.
The shadow minister for industrial relations, Tim Pallas, said it was incumbent on Premier Ted Baillieu to explain why government executives deserved pay rises far in excess of that being offered nurses, teachers and other public servants.
''While the Department of Health is looking to lock out nurses, its department executives have each happily pocketed a 46 per cent increase in total remuneration,'' he said.
''Mr Baillieu wants to keep down wages of hard-working nurses and cut nurse numbers, yet he is happy for departmental executives to receive significant salary increases well above the government's 2.5 per cent pay offer for public sector workers.'
A spokeswoman for Health Minister David Davis said the assessment for was not valid for health department executives because the reporting requirements were different between the two financial years. Nor did the analysis consider other entitlements ''outside of normal salary provisions,'' she said.
An analysis of the annual reports of 11 government departments shows there were 639 executives in 2010-11. That was 33 fewer than the previous year, although the total wage bill jumped to $118.5 million from $108.0 million. The best-paid executives were from the Department of Education and Early Childhood Development, with an average wage of $214,754, up from $196,429 the previous year.
Department of Human Services executives got the second-biggest increases, with the annual average salaries rising by 34 per cent, a jump of $40,622.
But Mr Baillieu appears to have practiced what he is preaching when it comes to his own department. Executives from the Department of Premier and Cabinet collected an average of 2.3 per cent less, although numbers there increased from 41 to 44. The government also awarded members of Parliament a basic 2.5 per cent increase, well below a remuneration tribunal recommendation, and well below the pay offer set to be received by federal politicians.
Nurses remain locked in talks after previously defying an order by the industrial umpire to cease a campaign of bed closures. This follows revelations in The Sunday Age of a cabinet plan to slash the annual nursing budget by cutting nurse-patient ratios.
Read more: http://www.theage.com.au/victoria/health-bureaucrats-win-46-pay-rise-20111201-1o976.html#ixzz1fJbcmRbu