Unions have suspended a planned bin collection strike to ballot members on a new pay offer.
Staff represented by Unite, GMB and Unison were due to walk out for more than a week from Wednesday but local authority body Cosla made the updated deal on Friday after the Scottish Government was able to offer extra funding.
The new offer – a 4.27% overall rise – will now be put to members of the three unions.
The deal is worth £1,292 for the lowest paid workers, while the Scottish local government living wage will also increase by 5.63%.
The new terms came out of an emergency meeting of council leaders on Friday, after ministers said “additional funding” would be found for an improved pitch to workers.
Graham McNab, Unite’s lead negotiator for local government, said: “Unite members across all of Scotland’s councils should be applauded for standing firm.
“They have remained resolute in an effort to secure a fairer and better pay offer.
“Unite will now suspend the eight days of strike action so a ballot can take place on the new offer.”
Keir Greenaway, the senior organiser in public services for GMB Scotland said: “It is better than that offered to council staff in England and Wales, would mean every worker receives a rise higher than the Retail Price Index and, importantly, is weighted to ensure frontline workers gain most.
“As a gesture of goodwill, we will suspend action until our members can vote on the offer.”
“For months, we have been forced to waste time discussing a series of low-ball offers when it was already clear the Scottish Government needed to be at the table,” he added.
“The obvious reluctance of some council leaders to approach ministers has only caused needless uncertainty and threatened disruption.
“That is no way to run a railroad or conduct serious pay negotiations.”
Unison Scotland local government lead, David O’Connor, said: “Unison has suspended recycling and street cleansing strikes while staff are consulted on Cosla’s latest offer.
“Unison’s view is that it’s still not enough. Council staff have seen the value of their pay reduced by 25% over the past 14 years and any pay deal needs to do more to reverse this.
“The union has been clear all along that the wage deal needs to work for everyone in local government. This pause will provide some breathing space for further dialogue.”
The strikes had caused worry across the 26 of Scotland’s 32 local authorities which were slated to face action, especially with the Edinburgh Festival under way.
Recent years have seen rubbish piling up on the streets of the capital as unions and councils struggled to agree to terms.
Cosla and the Scottish Government have been contacted for comment.