Disgusting of course. As will be the apologists who will be along in a minute to say we simply can't afford it.
Does anyone actually believe, hand on heart, they gave £22 billion to a consultancy? I see it trotted out quite a lot, generally by people who despise the current government whatever they do. It simply isn't true.
Track and trace for a population of 60million is a huge task, I'm not surprise it's expensive to run.
https://fullfact.org/health/local-national-contact-tracing/
Certainly didn't appreciate that nurses salaries were so low in the first place - £24k starting salary and an average of £34k for what they do seems meagre to me. How do they survive on as little as that?
It's little wonder we find it hard to attract nursing staff and care workers into the sector. We've largely been bailed our by our fellow Europeans in the past but something has to give if we are to attract new staff into the NHS even more so since Brexit.
Suspect though that if a strike was called and they all suddenly upped and picketed that they'd certainly be some compromise by the Government. Let's hope so.
a) £22 billion for a track & trace system that doesn't work, straight into the pockets of a consultancy run by chums of the people in government.
That's £22,000,000,000
The Government have admitted that Serco track and trace has cost £22 billion.
Does anyone actually believe, hand on heart, they gave £22 billion to a consultancy? I see it trotted out quite a lot, generally by people who despise the current government whatever they do. It simply isn't true.
Track and trace for a population of 60million is a huge task, I'm not surprise it's expensive to run.
https://fullfact.org/health/local-national-contact-tracing/
Question I’d ask is why young people would go into Nursing, apart from the obvious that they want to make a difference to society, give care and rehabilitation, mend and support people through their most traumatic stages of life, of course but no one seriously enters the profession for financial reasons do they?
If in your world £34K a year isn't much, your a lucky person. Plenty of us survive on a good deal less than that.Certainly didn't appreciate that nurses salaries were so low in the first place - £24k starting salary and an average of £34k for what they do seems meagre to me. How do they survive on as little as that?
It's little wonder we find it hard to attract nursing staff and care workers into the sector. We've largely been bailed our by our fellow Europeans in the past but something has to give if we are to attract new staff into the NHS even more so since Brexit.
Suspect though that if a strike was called and they all suddenly upped and picketed that they'd certainly be some compromise by the Government. Let's hope so.
Quick check it appears the average pay is £33-36k obviously after training, not sure how accurate that is. If it is that's not a bad wage albeit for an intense job.
However nursing, unless your progressive in the role, has always had that element of care over pay. Like so many such roles they don't perhaps get the rewards they deserve especially when compared to others who sit there all day earning fortunes doing not a lot.
If in your world £34K a year isn't much, your a lucky person. Plenty of us survive on a good deal less than that.
Insulting wage rise for the NHS.
And has as been pointed out, it wasn't announced. It was buried in a 1000 page document. Sunak said he's levelling with us at the same time as burying this deep. Coward.
I understand that the national finances are screwed.
I'll happily vote for a party which proposes to raise income tax, as i'm happy to put in for this and to clear the national debt we've accumulated
I respect your view but I wouldn’t be so sure, many of us who have had to work through this pandemic have lost wages, lost jobs, relationships and future security.
Ask those people what they think about a Nurses strike.
Which people should I ask? The ones out beating pots and pans once a week in support of the NHS? The ones that helped Captain Sir Tom Moore raise £30M for the NHS? The ones with multiple family members suffering piss-poor wages in the NHS and Social Care sectors? Nobody's had it easy this past year my friend, but some people have been on the sharp end of the front line throughout and it's hard to see anyone other than the terminally hard-hearted turning on them anytime soon
Sorry, but if this was so expensive and a huge task (which it is and was) then it should have gone to public tender. It should not have just been awarded to chums and then justified by the "emergency measures" dictat. That is corruption in action.
Good points you raise, what sort of job do you do?