Aged Care
Allity staff won higher wages after ‘No’ vote
Allity nurses have a history of standing together to win a better deal.
In 2017 and 2018, Allity made two unsuccessful attempts to push staff onto a substandard agreement.
A majority of staff voted ‘No’ to Allity’s offers in two secret ballots arranged by the company.
As a result, the company was forced to improve its pay rise offer from 1.8 per cent to 3 per cent.
The current NSWNMA log of claims for Allity includes shift-by-shift staff-to-patient ratios and a fair pay increase.
It also includes a minimum of two RNs on site 24 hours a day for any facility with 90 beds or more.
Six owners in 20 years
Allity operates 45 residential facilities in four states, including 14 facilities in NSW.
The business has had six owners in the past 20 years.
Four have been private equity firms, which typically attract money from outside investors to buy companies, restructure them to cut costs and boost profits, then sell them.
Allity’s current owner, the aged care provider Bolton Clarke, bought it from private equity firm Archer Capital for a reported $700 million in December 2021.
Archer made a tidy profit, having paid $270 million to buy Allity from Lendlease in 2013.