The Irish Nurses and Midwives Organisation (INMO) and the Psychiatric Nurses Association (PNA) are lobbying and campaigning against a recent government initiative to recruit 1000 graduate nurses. The unions argue that the jobs being offered effectively replace agency and temporary staff but on lower rates of pay. The new rate (€22000 a year) is 80% of the reduced salary scale introduced in February 2012 but 39% lower than the effective starting rate that applied in 2009 before the public sector pay cuts.
Read more at > INMO
And at > INMO
And at > INA
Nurses campaign against low-paid graduate scheme
More like this
Local authorities need to work harder to recruit graduates
The SKTF white collar union for local government argues that municipalities need to do more to attract graduates to the sector. A survey earlier in the year showed that many students are unaware of the range of jobs and career development opportunities available in local government. Municipalities are trying to do more and another survey found that six out of 10 authorities were promoting themselves in colleges, up from four in 10 last year. Read more at > SKTF (SE)
Threat to protection for low-paid workers
Unions are concerned about drastic economic measures that could include abolition of Employment Rights Orders. These provide minimum pay rates and employment conditions in a number of sectors. They are currently under review but if they are abolished it could mean, for example, cleaners seeing their minimum hourly rate cut from €9.50 to €7.65 which is the new, lower rate of the legal minimum wage. The SIPTU general union organized a petition and a delegation of members delivered the petition to the review. [Read more at > SIPTU (EN)->http://www.siptu.ie/PressRoom/NewsReleases/2011/Name,12141
17% of full-time workers are low-paid
A new analysis of statistics by Eurostat finds that 17% of full-time workers are low-paid – that means they are paid less than two-thirds of national median earnings. The data comes from the 2006 structure of earnings survey that excludes public administration. However, the statistics do cover the energy sector, which has the lowest proportion of low-paid workers, and the health sector where nearly 15% of full-time employers are low-paid. The report also reveals that 23.1% of women workers were low-paid compared to only 13.5% of men. [Read more at > Eurostat (EN)->http://epp.eurostat.ec.europa