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DEBATE the countrys mass strike
| Profile | Posted by | Options | Post Date |
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Annx | Report | 10 Dec 2011 12:47 |
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I couldn't believe that had happened. Don't quote me but I think the papers said lower paid NHS workers earning between £15,000 and £26,557 wouldn't have to pay increased contributions next year. Most Civil Servants including first line managers earn less than nurses so how unfair is that!! I can't see the Unions being happy at the inconsistency. |
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Guinevere | Report | 9 Dec 2011 16:10 |
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Well, the govermnement has made some concessions on Health Service and teaching pensions, so that would be a yes. |
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Dermot | Report | 9 Dec 2011 16:08 |
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Did the strikers win? |
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Jane | Report | 2 Dec 2011 09:10 |
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What worries me is that at the moment they have increased the retirement age to 67 going up to 68 I am only 47 and my retirement age has already gone up by 7 years since I started working at aged 17. We know it is going up to 68 in a few years time. BUT how many more years will they add on to this before I get to retire. They say that we are living longer but how do they know I will and when I eventually retire will I be in a fit state to enjoy it. |
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ChrisofWessex | Report | 2 Dec 2011 02:48 |
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Annx - apparently the same number of persons is switching/swopping - the staff have not and cannot find out the reasons why. The switch is only for 3 years and then they all switch back again. |
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Annx | Report | 2 Dec 2011 00:15 |
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Chris, usually moving staff to other offices like that is for reasons like some kinds of work being moved to particular locations to be more cost efffective. They have to transfer people if there are not enough people who want to move with the work. |
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Helen in Kent | Report | 1 Dec 2011 23:58 |
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Bernard and Janet, i agree with both of you. I think that for too long the public sector workers have been protected from what the private sector workers have suffered from forever. |
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JoyBoroAngel | Report | 1 Dec 2011 17:25 |
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Thank you everybody a nice debate |
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ChrisofWessex | Report | 1 Dec 2011 15:54 |
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There is so much wastage in civil service. Speaking to an acquaintance this morning whose daughter works in CS she informed me that some staff from daus. office will be transferred to an office in another town about 12 miles away and staff from that office will be transferred to hers!!! |
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Janet | Report | 1 Dec 2011 15:18 |
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Instead of striking about future pensions I think there ought to be strikes about groups who don't contribute to the system,immigrants who receive better benefits than our own society, to the youngsters who are bringing children into this world living on benefits and young people who refuse to do menial jobs because they are only paid the standard rate of pay. |
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AnninGlos | Report | 1 Dec 2011 12:05 |
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So every cloud has a silver lining for some then. At least the shops benefitted. |
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Rambling | Report | 1 Dec 2011 10:19 |
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Just to go back to what I was saying about the shopping centre being busier , from the Daily Mail this morning , |
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+++DetEcTive+++ | Report | 1 Dec 2011 10:10 |
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The Strike wouldn't have done any good - the Government has made up its mind already. PS workers for years have contributed less, and their employers more (percentage wise) than the private sector. And even though the PS workers don't realise it, their funds are tied in with the Stock Markets. |
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ElizabethK | Report | 1 Dec 2011 10:06 |
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Hayley-are you sure they will not be able to opt out of the pension scheme in the future ? |
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DIZZI | Report | 1 Dec 2011 07:43 |
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MY OH RETIRES IN 6 MONTHS |
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Guinevere | Report | 1 Dec 2011 06:50 |
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If I was still teaching in schools I would have supported the strike, I only went on strike once for one day in my entire teaching career so it wouldn't have been an action I'd take lightly. |
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Annx | Report | 1 Dec 2011 00:18 |
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I am a retired Civil Servant and like Hayley could never see the point of strikes either. I don't think they will get any sympathy in today's climate.....not when everyone else is suffering too. But I do feel sorry for those who have also recently lost jobs with Public Sector cuts as this is another blow on top of that. |
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Rambling | Report | 30 Nov 2011 22:58 |
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Don't you think though it's really less about the pensions per se than the fear that the country's economy is slipping so far into decline that every penny of any pension you might have is becoming too precious to risk losing, given that any increase in the state pension is likely to be very small in relation to the way inflation is going in the foreseeable future? |
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Porkie_Pie | Report | 30 Nov 2011 22:48 |
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Well said Bernard, |
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Muffyxx | Report | 30 Nov 2011 22:40 |
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he pension I now receive is not index linked. Where were these union leaders and strikers when Gordon Brown was robbing the private pension funds? |
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