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Samantha Lock

Biggest pay boost in 20 years for NSW public workers

More than 80,000 public sector workers in NSW will receive a four per cent pay rise. (Dave Hunt/AAP PHOTOS)

School support staff and prison officers are among more than 80,000 NSW public sector workers in line for an immediate four per cent pay rise.

The state's wages umpire signed off on the government's deal with the Public Service Association for the pay bump and a 0.5 per cent increase in superannuation.

Public sector wages had been capped at 2.5 per cent under the previous coalition government.

Professions covered by the salary increase include prison officers, park rangers, school support staff, child protection workers, Rural Fire Service employees, State Emergency Service staff and Service NSW workers.

It's the first major award finalised since Labor came to power in March promising wage increases.

"This is the biggest increase to public sector wages since 2003-04 and comes after years of campaigning and lobbying," the Public Service Association said on Friday.

The union said its latest member survey found 80 per cent of respondents agreed to accept the increase.

Negotiations with unions for nurses, teachers and other public servants are ongoing.

The public sector union previously campaigned for a wage increase of at least 5.2 per cent for all public sector workers, with any increase to superannuation to be paid on top.

Industrial Relations Minister Sophie Cotsis said the pay rise would help address recruitment and retention in the public service.

"This will benefit the people that keep the state’s essential services like schools, prisons and national parks up and running," she said.

“The people of NSW deserve world-class public services."

The previous wages cap had been in place for 12 years and will be officially abolished on September 1.

Also dead and obsolete, in the Opposition's eyes, is Labor's promise to ensure above-cap wage rises were fully offset by productivity gains.

"To say the wages cap is dead does not absolve Labor of that promise,” shadow treasurer Damien Tudehope said.

The higher wages offer would cost up to $3.3 billion over four years, his office said.

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