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Do you think nurses will get their payrise?

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Comments

  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,452 ✭✭✭Twenty Grand


    If work was in the bed you would lie on the ground. I bet you spent most of your life on the dole

    Most of his posts are on this very thread. Makes you wonder who does pay him to spread lies and disinformation.

    Still clinging on dearly to the OECD report :rolleyes:


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,331 ✭✭✭Ninthlife


    alloywheel wrote: »
    I am too old to be joining, and if I was that age again everyone would say I had far too good a Leaving cert to be throwing my life away being a nurse. In addition, I would get frustrated only working less than half the days in the year, chatting and bitching about patients over long tea breaks etc
    Besides,not everyone in the country can get a pension pot worth over a million euro from the government.

    What did the public service do to you to make you so bitter towards it? Lol


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 16,161 ✭✭✭✭iamwhoiam


    Most of his posts are on this very thread. Makes you wonder who does pay him to spread lies and disinformation.

    Still clinging on dearly to the OECD report :rolleyes:

    I think a nurse rejected him in Coppers l


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,365 ✭✭✭Alrigghtythen


    Most of his posts are on this very thread. Makes you wonder who does pay him to spread lies and disinformation.

    Still clinging on dearly to the OECD report :rolleyes:

    If I recall correctly you are partial to posting lies and disinformation


  • Registered Users Posts: 181 ✭✭feckthisgenie


    Most of his posts are on this very thread. Makes you wonder who does pay him to spread lies and disinformation.

    Still clinging on dearly to the OECD report :rolleyes:

    Alloywheel has got grumpy in his old age. Word of advice, the nurses won't put up with that attitude of yours when your in the nursing home


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,357 ✭✭✭hawkelady


    3 weeks to vote yay or nay ..... I wouldn’t be surprised one bit when the inmo members study it in its fullest that the deal will be rejected. Paschal will have to root around the back of the couch for more coinage , perhaps.


  • Registered Users Posts: 181 ✭✭feckthisgenie


    alloywheel wrote: »
    I would say I done twice as much work in the past 35 years as any nurse.

    Yeah you would say no one else would. Deluded


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,331 ✭✭✭Ninthlife


    alloywheel wrote: »
    I would say I done twice as much work in the past 35 years as any nurse.

    Tell us what work you do so we can compare it to a nurses both in Ireland and your beloved NHS


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,331 ✭✭✭Ninthlife


    alloywheel wrote: »
    I am not bitter towards it, I just think the country is being very badly run and will end up in a very bad position after the next recession. I have paid a 7 figure sum in taxes and hate to see the money squandered and the futures of our children and grandchildren destroyed.

    So you've paid millions in taxes?


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,365 ✭✭✭Alrigghtythen


    hawkelady wrote: »
    So, if you apply for a job in the private sector , you might get vhi included , company car , shares etc. little perks .. nothing secretive about it

    The private sectors objective is to make money. The public sectors objective is to provide a service to the public.


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  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,452 ✭✭✭Twenty Grand


    If I recall correctly you are partial to posting lies and disinformation

    If I'm wrong or dismembered something I'll happily admit it.
    Sure we're only human :p
    The private sectors objective is to make money. The public sectors objective is to provide a service to the public.

    And it's every workers responsibility (both public and private) to negotiate the best pay and condition for themselves.
    If you have an in-demand, marketable skill then you're well placed to demand more money and benefits.

    No one is a charity.


  • Registered Users Posts: 181 ✭✭feckthisgenie


    Ninthlife wrote: »
    So you've paid millions in taxes?

    We know from his figures throughout this thread that he's not great with figures. It's a case of whatever pops into his head at any given time


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,331 ✭✭✭Ninthlife


    alloywheel wrote: »
    It is not my beloved NHS, I just pointed out facts and statistics about how the neighbouring system, and others around the world, compares to ours.

    You never factor in the cost of living though in those stats

    Even you have to admit Ireland is an overly expensive place to live


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,365 ✭✭✭Alrigghtythen


    If I'm wrong or dismembered something I'll happily admit it.
    Sure we're only human :p



    And it's every workers responsibility (both public and private) to negotiate the best pay and condition for themselves.
    If you have an in-demand, marketable skill then you're well placed to demand more money and benefits.

    No one is a charity.


    And no one expects anyone to be a charity. Nurses are fairly compensated. How will increasing wages improve conditions?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,331 ✭✭✭Ninthlife


    alloywheel wrote: »
    Over paying public servants only helps drive inflation.

    What should they be paid?


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,452 ✭✭✭Twenty Grand


    And no one expects anyone to be a charity. Nurses are fairly compensated. How will increasing wages improve conditions?

    Not according to nurses.

    They hold the upper hand in these negotiations. They're highly skilled, in high demand and in limited supply.

    The HSE can't work without them, can't hire anyone to replace them and they have plenty of opportunity abroad if their demands aren't met.

    I hope they go for gold.
    alloywheel wrote: »
    Over paying public servants only helps drive inflation.

    Nurses don't care about inflation, no more than anyone else cares about inflation when they're seeking a pay rise.


  • Registered Users Posts: 39 Parkender


    Alloywheel has got grumpy in his old age. Word of advice, the nurses won't put up with that attitude of yours when your in the nursing home

    I’m afraid if he works in the private sector it’s highly unlikely that he will be able to afford to be in a nursing home.


  • Registered Users Posts: 181 ✭✭feckthisgenie


    Parkender wrote: »
    I’m afraid if he works in the private sector it’s highly unlikely that he will be able to afford to be in a nursing home.

    Haha you obviously never heard of fair deal
    He would probably have to self fund rotten with €€€


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,452 ✭✭✭Twenty Grand


    alloywheel wrote: »
    Most nurses have family ties to Ireland ( eg their husbands work here or kids go to school here ) and will not emigrate. According to the economist Colm McCarthy on the radio, I think he said only two other countries in the world pay nurses more than Ireland does, and the property bubble has just burst in Australia, so we will see if Oz gets as soft a landing as we got.

    It is entirely up to nurses to decide whether they want to stay or go. Of course if they have commitments here they may stay, but it is completely their own choice. They are not beholded to the government or limited in alternatives to Ireland.

    As shown by the INMO and Government incentives, there are huge numbers of Irish nurses choosing to move abroad for better opportunities. This is not a pay issue, it is a conditions and under staffing issue which has been highlighted for the last decade.
    The government has failed to act, so nurses must and all power to them.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 6,667 ✭✭✭Damien360


    alloywheel wrote: »
    Well, as the respected Economist Colm McCarthy said today on the radio, its not fair that the taxpayer here spends up to a quarter of a million euro training each health professional, and they then scarper off to Australia when they qualify, to the benefit of the Australian economy. He made the valid point that pilots have to pay €100,000 for their training. Training all these nurses free of charge has been a massive drain on the Irish economy. He said either the nurses should reimburse us something towards the cost of their training, or else we should have a word with the Australian government. If they pay us for training all the nurses to go working over there, we will pay them to train whatever Oz architects come over here, he said (or words to that effect - we know that the Oz taxpayer does not spend much money training graduates to work in the Irish economy).

    To twist that a little. If people end up with large debts from college education then expect even higher salaries to cover the cost. Education is key to economic growth. More than nurses get free education and I also benefitted from that.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 517 ✭✭✭Varta


    daithi7 wrote: »
    Sorry, I got more than 2 honours in my leaving, so as a reward, I just have to pay for this ****eology ;)

    Are you suggesting that you can get into nursing with just two Hons in LC?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,067 ✭✭✭Gunmonkey


    It is entirely up to nurses to decide whether they want to stay or go. Of course if they have commitments here they may stay, but it is completely their own choice. They are not beholded to the government or limited in alternatives to Ireland.

    As shown by the INMO and Government incentives, there are huge numbers of Irish nurses choosing to move abroad for better opportunities. This is not a pay issue, it is a conditions and under staffing issue which has been highlighted for the last decade.
    The government has failed to act, so nurses must and all power to them.

    So what was the strikes for then, as every piece of literature from the INMO and every interview with strikers made it out to be about pay.

    Why were they not pushing forward policy changes with the threat of industrial action if its a "conditions" issue? If they know what needs to be fixed, why not provide everyone with their recommendations; they are the ones who will be impacted most and would want it changed.

    Link me the INMO list of demands on their website, since they seem to have time to run a "trolley-watch" there must be a big list of ways to fix the HSE on there. If they are pointing out the numbers of folks on trollies then surely they would want that to end...so there must be a list of ideas attached to it but I never found it. Even the Q&A file for the recent strikes only listed the nurses pay scales and comparisons to other public sector workers; maybe I missed it in the pdf, but would probably remember something like that.

    Also odd that as soon as the labour court intervenes and looks like a nice pay rise is on the horizon..."This is not a pay issue"


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 517 ✭✭✭Varta


    Most of his posts are on this very thread. Makes you wonder who does pay him to spread lies and disinformation.

    Still clinging on dearly to the OECD report :rolleyes:

    As I've said before, FG tactic. They really believe they can influence public opinion by using morons to post social media sites.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 54,707 ✭✭✭✭Headshot


    Im watching the Tonight show about the Nursing situation.

    Makes my blood boil seeing the likes of the populist group People Before Profit letting the nurses have anything they want and they give the rest of the public sector their pay rise too

    The day they are out of Government the better

    On a separate note I'm really annoyed the Government caved on this issue


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,452 ✭✭✭Twenty Grand


    alloywheel wrote: »
    Well, as the respected Economist Colm McCarthy said today on the radio, its not fair that the taxpayer here spends up to a quarter of a million euro training

    Tough sh*t.
    If the HSE listened and made Irish hospitals attractive places to work then people wouldn't leave.

    This isn't the fault of nurses. It's a systematic fault of the HSE and it's been aware for years. it's not just new graduates leaving either.

    Everyone is leaving or threatening to leave.


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  • Posts: 8,647 [Deleted User]


    You must of arrived late into the HSE. I have 29 I think must double check. Some of my colleagues have 30 or 31 on the older contacts at senior grade

    I got a proper education in the NHS. But unfortunately the HSE don't recognise that ;)


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,452 ✭✭✭Twenty Grand


    I got a proper education in the NHS. But unfortunately the HSE don't recognise that ;)

    Got higher standards ;)


  • Posts: 8,647 [Deleted User]


    If I'm wrong or dismembered something I'll happily admit it.
    Sure we're only human :p



    And it's every workers responsibility (both public and private) to negotiate the best pay and condition for themselves.
    If you have an in-demand, marketable skill then you're well placed to demand more money and benefits.

    No one is a charity.
    You haven't admitted it though?


  • Posts: 8,647 [Deleted User]


    Got higher standards ;)

    I feel you mean higher wages. Strange that NHS nurses are more capable than Irish ones. #stir


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,452 ✭✭✭Twenty Grand


    You haven't admitted it though?
    Sorry, I thought i did. Yep, mea culpa, I wrote something I thought I read elsewhere in this thread and I probably misremembered it.
    I feel you mean higher wages. Strange that NHS nurses are more capable than Irish ones. #stir

    If Ireland has higher wages, then why are Irish nurses flocking to the UK and elsewhere? Its doubtful to live in exotic UK. Maybe it's because they offer a better package than the HSE?


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,398 ✭✭✭topmanamillion


    alloywheel wrote: »
    Well, as the respected Economist Colm McCarthy said today on the radio, its not fair that the taxpayer here spends up to a quarter of a million euro training each health professional, and they then scarper off to Australia when they qualify, to the benefit of the Australian economy. He made the valid point that pilots have to pay €100,000 for their training. Training all these nurses free of charge has been a massive drain on the Irish economy. He said either the nurses should reimburse us something towards the cost of their training, or else we should have a word with the Australian government. If they pay us for training all the nurses to go working over there, we will pay them to train whatever Oz architects come over here, he said (or words to that effect - we know that the Oz taxpayer does not spend much money training graduates to work in the Irish economy).

    You've been spouting this bitter strawman argument for the last few days, interspersed with self righteous grandstanding along the lines of "I pay tax, I'm great".

    The simple flaw in your argument is if nurses (and I presume all college students?) were forced to pay loans they would be more motivated to emigrate in search of better salaries to repay debts or they just wouldn't be able to go to college in the first place.


  • Posts: 8,647 [Deleted User]


    Sorry, I thought i did. Yep, mea culpa, I wrote something I thought I read elsewhere in this thread and I probably misremembered it.


    If Ireland has higher wages, then why are Irish nurses flocking to the UK and elsewhere? Its doubtful to live in exotic UK. Maybe it's because they offer a better package than the HSE?

    The majority of Irish nurses in the UK are ones who trained in the UK. Never met an Irish nurse in the UK who trained in the republic. Not saying it does'nt happen but I imagine it's rare.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,853 ✭✭✭Glenbhoy


    Tough sh*t.
    If the HSE listened and made Irish hospitals attractive places to work then people wouldn't leave.

    This isn't the fault of nurses. It's a systematic fault of the HSE and it's been aware for years. it's not just new graduates leaving either.

    Everyone is leaving or threatening to leave.

    I thought the dept of public expenditure found turnover rates were very low by comparison to both other industries in Ireland and half the turnover rates experienced in nursing in UK and Australia?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 12,720 ✭✭✭✭machiavellianme


    alloywheel wrote: »
    There is a 10 to 15% of nurses even in Australia churn rate too. People leave for all sorts of reasons - to see the world, to take up other areas of interest, to chase dreams, to follow partners work, to have kids or whatever.

    Exactly. Nursing is a skill that travels. You can go anywhere with that qualification. Even if you doubled the pay here, you'd still have nurses leaving for the UK, Australia, Canada, wherever for a few years. The right answer here is a weighting factor for nurses in Dublin and other high cost rental areas OR a more sustainable approach by building on-site accommodation for nurses/doctors etc and giving them options before/after long shifts.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,452 ✭✭✭Twenty Grand


    alloywheel wrote: »
    To those who say our HSE is understaffed:

    Quote: Ireland has " a high number of nurses per capita compared to other OECD countries in 2015. This resulted in Ireland having a significantly high ratio of nurses to doctors at 3.8 in 2015, well above the OECD average."
    [URL="file:///C:/Users/John%20Greer/Downloads/3.-HSE-Pay-and-Staffing%20(5).pdf"]file:///C:/Users/John%20Greer/Downloads/3.-HSE-Pay-and-Staffing%20(5).pdf[/URL]

    In the shambles that is the HSE, the Examiner says that the HSE: hires almost three times more office staff than nurses:https://www.irishexaminer.com/.../hse-hires-almost-three-times-more-office-staff-than-n

    Too many Chiefs and not enough Indians.

    As I always said, if absenteeism in the HSE was not such a chronic problem, with sick days of 100,000 per month not unknown, then our hospitals would be much better places for everyone. Irish nurses have only themselves to blame for taking so many more sickies than those nurses in the NHS.


    Listen [Redacted]. we've gone over all those numbers before many times.
    They've all been discredited I'm not going to revisit them.

    Every nursing group has said that nurses are understaffed and thousands are emigrating. You're quick to write that off as a normal occurance, but thousands are being poached to the UK and beyond.

    You keep touting the official line that everything is AOk but we have nurses on the street in their thousands and the government caving to their demands straight away. There are failed government initiatives to bring nurses back to Ireland. There are horror stories from nurses and patients. How can you say that staffing is even at a normal level with all this going on?


  • Registered Users Posts: 1,303 ✭✭✭daithi7


    Health at a Glance 2015
    How does Ireland compare?
    KEY FINDINGS
     Although expenditure on pharmaceuticals in Ireland fell over the past few years, it still
    remains well above the OECD average.
    The number of doctors per population is Ireland is lower than the OECD average,
    while the number of nurses is higher. This does not mean that there are no shortages
    of nurses if the demand for their services exceeds their supply
    .
    Despite recent cuts, expenditure on pharmaceuticals in Ireland remains well above th....


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,452 ✭✭✭Twenty Grand


    daithi7 wrote: »
    Health at a Glance 2015
    How does Ireland compare?
    KEY FINDINGS
     Although expenditure on pharmaceuticals in Ireland fell over the past few years, it still
    remains well above the OECD average.
    The number of doctors per population is Ireland is lower than the OECD average,
    while the number of nurses is higher. This does not mean that there are no shortages
    of nurses if the demand for their services exceeds their supply
    .
    Despite recent cuts, expenditure on pharmaceuticals in Ireland remains well above th....

    What is that? Is it a separate study or just referencing the same ridiculous disproven OECD study?


  • Registered Users Posts: 1,303 ✭✭✭daithi7


    By contrast with other OECD countries, the number of nurses per population in Ireland was not
    greater in 2013 than what it was in 2000, but nonetheless remains higher than in most other OECD
    countries, except in Nordic countries and in Switzerland and Germany.
    Practising nurses per 1 000 population, 2000 and 2013 (or nearest year)

    Number of Nurses per 1000
    Ireland: 12.4
    OECD average: 9.1

    So Ireland employs 25% more nurses per capita than the OECD average

    Source: OECD Health Statistics 2015, http://dx.doi.org/10.1787/health-data-en.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,452 ✭✭✭Twenty Grand


    daithi7 wrote: »
    By contrast with other OECD countries, the number of nurses per population in Ireland was not
    greater in 2013 than what it was in 2000, but nonetheless remains higher than in most other OECD
    countries, except in Nordic countries and in Switzerland and Germany.
    Practising nurses per 1 000 population, 2000 and 2013 (or nearest year)

    Number of Nurses per 1000
    Ireland: 12.4
    OECD average: 9.1

    So Ireland employs 25% more nurses per capita than the OECD average

    Source: OECD Health Statistics 2015, http://dx.doi.org/10.1787/health-data-en.
    Had a read of the most recent one.
    Here's a few choice passages.

    On the topic of staffing.
    . In Ireland and Israel, the number of
    nurses per capita declined between 2000 and 2015 as the
    size of the population grew more rapidly than the number
    of nurses
    staff levels in decline??? What??


    On the topic of nurses per population (popular topic here)
    .. Data include not only nurses providing direct care to patients, but also those working in the health sector as managers, educators, researchers, etc.
    etc etc etc.. highest numbers but not all involved in direct care. Front line nurse shortage??


    On the topic of remuneration:
    . Definition and comparability
    The remuneration of nurses refers to average gross
    annual income, including social security contributions
    and income taxes payable by the employee. It should
    normally include all extra formal payments, such as
    bonuses and payments for night shifts and overtime.
    Data refer only to registered (“professional”) nurses
    in Chile, Ireland and the United States, resulting in
    an over-estimation compared to other countries
    where lower-level nurses (“associate professional”)
    are also included
    What??? Overestimated?? Who'd have thunk it??
    The Oecd also puts Irish nurse wages at a ratio of 1.01 to the average wage here.
    . Ireland and Israel had the highest rate of hospital
    bed occupancy at approximately 94%, followed by Canada
    at 92% and the United Kingdom at 84%.
    Highest occupancy rates in the world. Bed shortage. Trolley crisis!

    There's loads more that show Irish hospitals to be in a shambles and nurses to be average paid at best, even with their "over-estimates" figures.

    Lads please read the links before you post them.


  • Registered Users Posts: 1,303 ✭✭✭daithi7


    OECD health spending, poorest outcomes
    BY: MICHAEL HENNIGANCATEGORY: IRISH ECONOMY
    Ireland has the second-highest health spending ratio in OECD area which comprises of 34 mainly developed countries but it has some of the worst health outcomes among advanced countries.

    http://www.finfacts.ie/Irish_finance_news/articleDetail.php?Ireland-second-highest-OECD-health-spending-poorest-outcomes-506


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  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,452 ✭✭✭Twenty Grand


    daithi7 wrote: »
    OECD health spending, poorest outcomes
    BY: MICHAEL HENNIGANCATEGORY: IRISH ECONOMY
    Ireland has the second-highest health spending ratio in OECD area which comprises of 34 mainly developed countries but it has some of the worst health outcomes among advanced countries.

    http://www.finfacts.ie/Irish_finance_news/articleDetail.php?Ireland-second-highest-OECD-health-spending-poorest-outcomes-506

    Firstly, it's well accepted the HSE is a black hole. I'm not arguing that. Very little is the fault of nurses and they shouldnt be financially punished for the fault of the HSE.

    Secondly, what the hell is finfacts.ie???
    Founded in 1997? Website looks like it's from 1997 :rolleyes:


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 988 ✭✭✭brendanwalsh


    Handmaids won't be accepting this chicken feed offer. They wanted 12 % and will be back on the pickets soon


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,357 ✭✭✭hawkelady


    Handmaids won't be accepting this chicken feed offer. They wanted 12 % and will be back on the pickets soon

    Wtf is this handmaiden crap Brendan ?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 16,715 ✭✭✭✭Galwayguy35


    Considering the health spend is 15.3 billion of taxpayers money per year we should have the best health service in the world for a country of less than 5 million people.

    This is something that everyone employed in the health service from the top down needs to answer before anyone should be talking about pay rises.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 7,427 ✭✭✭facehugger99


    Considering the health spend is 15.3 billion of taxpayers money per year we should have the best health service in the world for a country of less than 5 million people.

    It's even worse than that - our population is quite young compared to most countries so our health spend should be considerably lower than the average.

    We're being absolutely screwed over by the public service in this country and getting a load of sh;te in return.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 4,105 ✭✭✭Kivaro


    Watched 2 nurses being interviewed last night on RTE news. They had just put their banners/placards etc. into the boot of their cars and then they answered questions from the reporter. "We're not dumping our signs", one said, "we're just putting them into storage".

    Yep, it will be constant striking even if they did get 12%.
    I am hoping that the striking nurses refuses the latest offer; all of which I happened to agree they should get. That actually surprised me that I did not have a problem with what was offered. I thought it was reasonable.
    This is the opportunity for Government to say "no" when the nurses officially reject the offer. Hold firm. Recruit more foreign nurses. Let the striking ones emigrate if they wish. Holding patients and their families to ransom is an abomination. They also broke an existing agreement and every one of the striking nurses should be penalised for that.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 16,013 ✭✭✭✭James Brown


    Pascal, Simon and the boys were not aware that costs can go up. They never did a cost analysis, they merely took the lowest quote and hoped for the best. Next time they'll look more closely. Now move along. It seems any one of us could have put in a tender and won the contract.
    But these Nurses, crooks... :rolleyes:


  • Registered Users Posts: 4,941 ✭✭✭omega man


    A lot of social media commenting, including from nurses, about rejecting this ‘government’ deal. The reality is rejecting a labour court recommendation will surely lead to a less sympathetic public and I suspect the INMO will be cognisant if this.


  • Registered Users Posts: 157 ✭✭Randle P. McMurphy


    I really doubt that.

    I always wondered what studying would have been like pre internet.
    Suppose if you couldn't find an answer in the library, then you had to start phoning people.


    Yeah. That's what we did in my day. Whip out the mobile phone and ask around. Oh wait...


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,357 ✭✭✭hawkelady


    omega man wrote: »
    A lot of social media commenting, including from nurses, about rejecting this ‘government’ deal. The reality is rejecting a labour court recommendation will surely lead to a less sympathetic public and I suspect the INMO will be cognisant if this.

    Not as simple as that though. If you read the document it states that basically new contracts will be signed , without stating if the new contract has the new pension agreements in it , which would be worse than a contract signed in the early 2000s regarding pensions alone .... it’s a wait and see but any nurse with a pre 2003 contract would be mad to agree to something that might affect her pension without knowing every detail.


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