Edinburgh's streets on day 6 of bin strikes
Scottish councils are set to meet unions today in a bid to stop the spread of industrial action.
Scottish councils are set to meet unions in a bid to stop the spread of strikes which have left Edinburgh's bins overflowing and its streets strewn with rubbish.
Waste workers walked out on Thursday in the capital in protest at a 3.5% pay rise offer unions blasted as "derisory" and "pathetic".
The strike is scheduled to last until August 30th.
Already rubbish is piling up, with city centre streets covered in litter, bins overflowing in tourist hotspots and black bags rapidly piling up outside people's homes.
On Friday, council umbrella body Cosla offered a 5% pay deal to workers, a move First Minister Nicola Sturgeon said on Monday she hoped would resolve the dispute.
"Nobody wants to see the kind of disruption and impact of strikes that many people are witnessing in Edinburgh right now," she said.
Cammy Day, leader of the City of Edinburgh Council, said he believed "that our council colleagues have the right to be paid fairly".
"I'm continuing to push hard for a resolution as quickly as possible," he said.
"We also need to carry on pressing the Scottish Government to give us more flexibility on how we use our resources and as well as providing fairer funding for our services."
Cosla is set to meet the unions today , but the unions have warned there was "insignificant detail" in the proposals so far and said the strikes would continue as planned.
How the capital looks on day 6 of bin strike
Rubbish bins overflowing in the Grassmarket due to industrial action by Edinburgh council workers.
An overflowing bin can be seen outside the Waverley Market next to the station.
Rubbish pilling up in residential streets in Gorgie.
Tourists walk past overflowing bins, at the height of festival season in the Capital.
The sixth day of the Waste Service Strike has led to central Edinburgh becoming an unsanitary mess.
Rubbish bins overflowing outside Edinburgh Waverley.
Rubbish pilling up in residential streets in Gorgie.
Bins overflowing with rubbish are being taped up as they begin to overflow with waste, at the height of festival season.
"Insignificant detail" in the 5% pay offer
Alison Maclean, industrial officer at Unite, said: "Our members have taken the brave stance of taking strike action to get the pay rise they deserve and we are determined to ensure that this happens."
If the dispute is not solved, the scenes which have met festival-goers in the capital could be replicated across Scotland, with Edinburgh scheduled as the first in a series of strikes north of the border.
Ms Maclean said the walk-outs would "continue as planned", and added: "There remains insignificant detail on the 5% pay offer, and what this in reality means for the lowest paid workers.
"At this moment the offer from Cosla remains a vague aspirational pledge but Unite can't take anything to our wider membership unless we have specifics and guarantees."
The strikes are expected to hit 14 local authorities across Scotland, with workers set to walk out in areas including Glasgow, Aberdeen, Dundee, East Renfrewshire and West Lothian.
A Scottish Government spokeswoman said: "We urge local authority and union representatives to come to an agreement to resolve the dispute as soon as possible.
"The Scottish Government is treating councils fairly and providing a real terms increase of 6.3% to local authority budgets this year, as well as providing an extra £140 million of funding on a recurring basis to support a higher pay award for council staff."