Norman Potting
Well-known member
After taking early retirement from the public sector (and receiving a - reduced - pension as a consequence), I'm now working in the voluntary sector, where pay levels are hardly excessive. Reading this thread, it strikes me that quite a lot of my current work colleagues have a similar employment history. Enough of us, in fact, for me to put forward a claim that it's a positive BOON TO SOCIETY that public sector pensions (and the options for early retirement that go with them) can ensure that voluntary sector organisations are in place to deliver what Call Me Dave thinks will transform the lives of millions - The Big Society!
Marvellous.
Water down public sector pensions, make folk stick with their jobs until they are approaching 70, and who knows what might be lost?
Precisely Lord B. A bit OT but I am one of the ones likely to be affected by The Big Society/Localism (hopefully in a good way). I wonder, and so do many others I feel, where the volunteers are going to come from to make it work. The ethos now seems to be "work until you drop". In the past there appeared to be an abundance of early retirers with comfortable pensions able to give something back to organisations such as the Citizens Advice Bureau on a regular basis, who probably still struggled to get volunteers prepared to make a regular commitment.
I was at a presentation recently and one of the speakers raised the thought that, whilst people are usually willling and able to give up a little bit of time for "nice" things such as the odd bit of litter picking or helping clean the village duck pond, are they going to be williing/able to volunteer to cover services previously provided by the Govt. out of our our taxes?