
NHS Fife nurse at centre of controversial trans tribunal suing her own trade union
The Kirkcaldy nurse suing NHS Fife over her suspension following a trans changing room row has launched legal action against her own trade union.
Sandie Peggie is already embroiled in a tribunal with her employer after she told trans doctor Beth Upton she felt uncomfortable at the two sharing a women's locker room.
Now she is suing the Royal College of Nursing (RCN) over claims the medical union has failed to help in her lengthy legal battle against NHS Fife.
The decision comes just days after Ms Peggie's lawyer wrote to the RCN asking if bosses had written to Fife health board about the importance of single-sex spaces.
The letter states Ms Peggie had felt 'disappointment' at the trade union's apparent lack of support.
It's understood the Victoria Hospital A&E nurse first requested support from the RCN in early 2024, shortly after the changing room altercation.
Sex Matters, a gender critical charity, claimed trade unions across Britain had done little to help female members fighting for single-sex spaces.
Helen Joyce, the charity's director, said: 'Unions right across the economy have shamelessly abandoned members who've been penalised for asserting their right to single-sex spaces at work.
'Sandie Peggie's decision to sue RCN should be a wake-up call for every union representing employees who need single sex facilities for their basic privacy and dignity.'
Ms Peggie and Dr Upton both gave evidence to the Dundee employment tribunal during the first two weeks of hearings in February.
The hugely controversial case has sparked national headlines and caught the attention of celebrities like Harry Potter author JK Rowling.
The tribunal is set to reconvene in July.
The next round of hearings will come against the backdrop of the UK Supreme Court's ruling that the terms 'woman' and 'sex' in the equality act refer to biological women.
NHS Fife was told to admit defeat in the tribunal following the court's judgement.
Earlier this month we reported that the health board had failed in its bid to ban the public from watching the hearing online.
The RCN has been contacted for comment.

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The Guardian
a day ago
- The Guardian
Dame June Clark obituary
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Compromise did not come naturally, however, and supporters and friends would sometimes part company with her over the practicality of her policy ambitions or her impatience for faster change. She could also appear dismissive of some policy areas, such as learning disability nursing, which interested her less. Born in Sheffield to Marion (nee Walters), a homemaker, and Ernest Hickery, a steel industry trade union official, she was christened Margaret but was always known by her middle name, June. Her parents came from south Wales but her father had been temporarily relocated to Sheffield during the second world war. The family soon returned to Risca, near Newport, a community reliant on steel and coal. June excelled at Pontywaun grammar school, and became committed to pursuing a nursing career once she had begun volunteering as a teenager with St John Ambulance and then, every Saturday, at St Woolos hospital in nearby Newport. 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Rather than settling for a hospital job on qualification, she undertook further training to become a health visitor, beginning her work in that role in 1967 in Mortimer, near Reading, where she set up a family planning clinic and a health education programme in local schools. From then onwards, Clark was a fierce proponent of the value of health visiting, which, unlike many others, she considered to be an integral part of nursing. She particularly lamented the narrowing of the health visitor's remit from the 1970s onwards, and later, in 1985, as part of a doctorate at South Bank Polytechnic, she wrote an influential thesis on health visiting that set out a theoretical framework she believed it lacked. She also established an annual research workshop for health visitors. Similarly, Clark believed that personal care delivered by social care workers was also nursing, and called it a 'travesty' that such work was assessed and commissioned by social workers, not nurses. 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She later described this as her toughest job and, burned out, she took early retirement after five years. But she set Middlesex on course to be a leading centre of health education. After leaving Middlesex, Clark spent large parts of the next two years studying and advising in Europe and the US. Much of what she saw reaffirmed her faith in the NHS: she would often recall arriving at a nursing conference in Los Angeles to be asked by her hotel porter if she might look at a lump in his mouth as he could not afford to go to a doctor. Clark was made a dame in 1995 for her services to nursing and health visiting, and in 1997 was tempted back to academia and to Wales, becoming professor of community nursing at Swansea University. Thereafter she focused increasingly on Welsh health affairs, including leading reviews for the Welsh government and campaigning successfully for legislation on safe staffing levels. She grew disenchanted with the direction of the RCN, believing it was giving too much emphasis to its trade union function at the expense of its role as a professional body. However, she remained an active member and sat on the college's Wales board as recently as 2022. In retirement she also led the RCN's involvement in the National Pensioners Convention. Clark stepped down from her Swansea post in 2003, on the same day that Roger retired from Reading University. They had by then gradually relocated from Berkshire to Mumbles, near Swansea, where she died while picking flowers in their garden. She is survived by Roger, their children, Andrew and Gill, five grandchildren and her sister, Kay. Margaret June Clark, nursing leader, born 31 May 1941; died 14 May 2025


Daily Mirror
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