(June 2017) The three main public serivce federations, FP-CGIL, CISL-FP and UIL-FPL, have welcomed proposals to increase funding for provincial and city authorities following their protests last month. However, they say that it falls well short of what is needed to invest in infrastructure, schools and cover salary increases. For 2017 alone estimates put the funding shortfall at over EUR 600m when the government has increase provisions to only EUR 170 million. The unions say they will continue to mobilise and campaign for the increased funding.
Unions continue campaign for more funding
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Health and social care unions launch campaign for more funding
The GPA and vida trade unions that organise in private health and social care have launched a new campaign, “Words are not enough” with the support of their confederation, the ÖGB. The unions are calling for increased funding for the sectors to improve pay and conditions, increase staffing by at least 20000, reduce workloads and provide a further COVID bonus and additional time off. The unions say that applause and praise for health and social care staff is not enough and action is needed to increase the funding that covers private health and social care.
Science union demonstration calls for more funding
(June 2016) The union for National Academy of Sciences Workers organised a demonstration outside the parliament on 15 June call for a major increase in spending on science spending. The union points out that, according to the final provisions of the Law on Science, such funding should be 1.7% of GDP by 1 January 2020, but last year it was only 0.3% of GDP, and this year is 0.2%. The lack of funding is having a direct impact on science workers and if there is no increase then employees of the National Academy will either have to go on unpaid leave or work part-time. This is part of a long
Union calls for more funding for hospital sector
Services union ver.di has criticised the German government’s increased funding for the hospital sector as an inadequate reaction to the crisis that doesn’t provide a long-term solution. The union says that the creation of 21,000 jobs is an indication that the government admits to the seriousness of the situation but is little compensation for the 100,000 jobs that have been cut from the sector in recent years, the effect of which has been to place enormous pressure on the remaining health workers. [Read more at > ver.di (DE)->http://presse.verdi.de/pressemitteilungen/showNews?id=f942bc0a-8651