Skintagain 1983
And Smith Did Score!
As one of the people striking tomorrow I find some of the comments above rather strange. Local Govenment workers have for years been the poor relations when it comes to pay raises and pay in general.
The government have said that no one in the public sector can have a payrise over 2%. This they say is to keep down inflation. Yet the RPI is currently running at nearer 5% and even the governments own way of recording inflation that does not include mortgage or fuel increases is running at nearly 3.5%.
I am chairperson for our branch and I joined the union not because of my political views but to help those people who for one reason or another have got in to trouble. Sometimes this is their own fault by most of the time it is because they have been treated badly by others. I spend a lot of my own time unpaid helping these people out.
Unlike the private sector where payrises are normally reflected by the performance of either you or the company, in local government that is not the case.
The current offer by the employers is in effect a pay cut. We are not asking for much, just to be paid the going rate for what we do. Most of the people striking tomorrow will be on less then £15000 a year so are not the fat cats the press like to make out.
Hi Wardy.
Some of my PCS colleagues in different Departments in the Civil Service will also be taking action alongside public sector workers over pay. In my Department we have been taking discontinuous action for over a year over our terrible imposed 3 year pay offer, and have finally got some movement. No-one wants to take action and lose pay but sometimes you are left with no alternative. All the best to you.