SHADOW ATTORNEY- GENERAL | CHANSEY PAECH
Wednesday 24 September 2025
The CLP Government has been dealt a humiliating blow, with thousands of Northern Territory public servants rejecting its proposed Northern Territory Public Sector 2025 - 2029 Enterprise Agreement.
Almost 5,000 workers voted NO, compared to fewer than 3,000 in support. This is a clear message that Territorians have lost confidence in the Government’s approach to its largest workforce.
Instead of addressing job security, workload pressures and retention incentives, the CLP tried to push through a deal that undervalues public servants and leaves them worse off in real terms.
This failure comes on top of hospital pharmacists and pharmacy technicians threatening to go on strike citing worsening staff shortages that are pushing our hospitals into crisis and leaving patients at risk of missing out on vital medications and essential care.
Allied Health Professionals remain among the lowest paid health workers in the country, and the CLP has offered nothing to fix staff shortages, unsafe workloads and the exodus of experienced professionals.
The rejection of the Northern Territory Public Service EBA proves the CLP has no plan to recruit, retain or respect the workers who keep the Territory running.
Wages are going backwards, allied health workers remain at the bottom of national pay scales, and there are no meaningful incentives to attract or keep staff in remote and regional areas.
From schools to hospitals, police to frontline community services, Territorians are being let down by a Government that refuses to back its own workforce.
Quotes from Shadow Minister Public Service Chansey Paech:
“Nearly 5,000 public servants voted against Jo Hersey’s EBA, that is a resounding rejection of her handling of this process.”
“Health workers are already taking industrial action because the CLP has left them with the worst conditions in the country. Jo Hersey has failed to put forward a plan that keeps workers in the Territory.”
“Lia Finocchiaro and Jo Hersey are presiding over a government that has no answer to the staffing crisis in our schools, hospitals and frontline services.”