Average salary for a barrister is a smidge under 90K (May 2022). Not convinced that they represent the most needy sector of society. I'm not aware that barrister's jobs are under threat. They aren't low paid. Yes, they will be suffering the same price increases as the rest of us but are in a far more secure financial position than many.
Ah! But they live in expensive properties and have large mortgages I hear you cry. Yes. But they can downsize. Not so easy to downsize from a council flat, or a room in a HMO, or living rough.
Striking for more wedge when the average sector salary is nearly £90K is greedy opportunism.
https://www.thelawyerportal.com/car...yer-salary-barrister-salary-solicitor-salary/
Triple lock applying to pensioners next year. 10% increase for them.
Average salary for a barrister is a smidge under 90K (May 2022). Not convinced that they represent the most needy sector of society. I'm not aware that barrister's jobs are under threat. They aren't low paid. Yes, they will be suffering the same price increases as the rest of us but are in a far more secure financial position than many.
Ah! But they live in expensive properties and have large mortgages I hear you cry. Yes. But they can downsize. Not so easy to downsize from a council flat, or a room in a HMO, or living rough.
Striking for more wedge when the average sector salary is nearly £90K is greedy opportunism.
https://www.thelawyerportal.com/car...yer-salary-barrister-salary-solicitor-salary/
Average salary for a barrister is a smidge under 90K (May 2022). Not convinced that they represent the most needy sector of society. I'm not aware that barrister's jobs are under threat. They aren't low paid. Yes, they will be suffering the same price increases as the rest of us but are in a far more secure financial position than many.
Average salary for a barrister is a smidge under 90K (May 2022). Not convinced that they represent the most needy sector of society. I'm not aware that barrister's jobs are under threat. They aren't low paid. Yes, they will be suffering the same price increases as the rest of us but are in a far more secure financial position than many.
Ah! But they live in expensive properties and have large mortgages I hear you cry. Yes. But they can downsize. Not so easy to downsize from a council flat, or a room in a HMO, or living rough.
Striking for more wedge when the average sector salary is nearly £90K is greedy opportunism.
https://www.thelawyerportal.com/car...yer-salary-barrister-salary-solicitor-salary/
Mate, I'm not saying that. I'm glad those people are earning their £30k or whatever, because it would be a lot less if it wasn't unionised. But then there is nothing in the passage that you quoted that suggests otherwise.
What I do care about is the intransigence on both sides that means the country grinds to halt at a time when fuel is prohibitive to some who rely on the trains, and it's not as if either side have seemingly really tried to compromise. Nobody is saying "striking is a last solution but let's try and come to a solution because of our customers". Neither side gives a shit about the customers - that much was already apparent before we had to suffer this.
Triple lock applying to pensioners next year. 10% increase for them.
Bribe-tastic.Triple lock applying to pensioners next year. 10% increase for them.
I struggle to take sides in this dispute and I don't want to blame the government or Labour either.
The fact is, this industry is a f**king shambles from top to bottom. The people running the train companies don't know their arses from their elbows and the people doing the work are already paid way in excess of what their skills would command elsewhere. The facts seem to be that the unions want 11%, the owners want to pay 2-3% (with attached conditions) and inflation is running at 11%. With literally every other industry you'd think "well there's a LOT of room for negotiation before resorting to a strike" but not with this lot. The union calls a strike whilst alleging that the owners haven't even contacted them.
I tell you what, it makes me think we can do without the pious "don't abuse our staff" posters we see, which largely happens because their service is absolute dog shit. The bottom line is quite clearly that nobody in the industry really gives a shit about the people paying through the nose for their appalling service. The customer always comes last in railway world.
It's funny how people moan like **** about the unions, in particular with their regards for the unions concerns regarding "safety" - but I'm guessing would be the first to point the finger of blame when another Clapham Junction crash happens!
This stance regards the unions reminds me a lot of the "what did the Romans do for us" skit in Monty Pythons Life of Brian.
It's funny how people moan like **** about the unions, in particular with their regards for the unions concerns regarding "safety" - but I'm guessing would be the first to point the finger of blame when another Clapham Junction crash happens!
This stance regards the unions reminds me a lot of the "what did the Romans do for us" skit in Monty Pythons Life of Brian.
I'm not going to get into the ins and outs of this dispute but if ANYONE is stupid enough to have watched this rancid, lying, corrupt government over the past few years and still believe them over the RMT and don't believe that they want to de-skill, cut corners, divide workers and make it a race to the bottom then you need to give your heads a wobble.
It's funny how people moan like **** about the unions, in particular with their regards for the unions concerns regarding "safety" - but I'm guessing would be the first to point the finger of blame when another Clapham Junction crash happens!
This stance regards the unions reminds me a lot of the "what did the Romans do for us" skit in Monty Pythons Life of Brian.
safety isnt their responsibility. when any crash or incident occurs the finger is firmly on the managment and organisation that are responsible. Network Rail reckons it can do more safety checks more consistently with tech, so will need fewer workers to traipse up and down lines. i havent heard union complain the tech wont be able to do the job, just loss of members.
I read a tweet earlier where it was suggested drones could inspect the tracks, which was answered with, a drone can’t tighten up nuts.