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Civil & Public Service Stories

  • 22-01-2009 6:18pm
    #1
    Closed Accounts Posts: 3,591 ✭✭✭


    There must be tons of them, like you know the stories about how some in the civil and public service get away with 45 minute tea breaks, run sideline businesses from their desks etc.

    Here's mine, it came from the horses mouth.

    A Dublin Bus driver went on the razz after work. Stupidly he decided to drive home and got caught for drink driving after hammering his car into a wall. Anyway you would think that if you are a driver by profession and get convicted for drunk driving then its curtains for your career. Not in the case of Dublin Bus. The union backed him up and insisted he be re-deployed. The management thought they'd teach him a lesson by deploying him on permanent night-shifts.

    His new position involved arriving at 9pm and finishing in the early hours. His new job was to go around the garage where all buses were parked for the night, empty the coin boxes and put the takings into the safe. So he had around 80 buses to get through, on a typical night he would be finished by 1am. At that point as all the work was done he was allowed to go home. For this he got paid for a regular 39 hour week but he rarely worked more than 20-25 hours.

    On top of that he got a night shift allowance. He always thought it very funny that he could go home at 1am, open a bottle of whiskey and be getting paid to sit there and drink it. To add insult to injury there is a union rule that says if a worker finishes work when public transport isnt operational then the firm must pay for a taxi home. He took advantage of this too- every night a taxi dropped him home at a cost to Dublin Bus of €20.

    After his one year license suspension was up management wanted him back driving buses. He had such a handy number that he requested to continue on emptying coin boxes. He said they found him to be honest with cash so he remains in the position to this day.

    Unreal. Go drink driving, still hold on to your job and score an even easier one. Company pays for your taxi home because you lost your license and then you sit there and get pissed whilst getting paid for it.

    Anyone ever hear of the 'Rubber Room' in An Post?


«13

Comments

  • Closed Accounts Posts: 870 ✭✭✭Pen1987


    Rubber Room? Tell us...

    You could piss in the keyboard in most Civil Service jobs and not get fired.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,905 ✭✭✭Rob_l


    Pen1987 wrote: »
    Rubber Room? Tell us...

    You could piss in the keyboard in most Civil Service jobs and not get fired.


    why would you "piss in the keyboard"?

    you would also have to be pretty small to fit in the keyboard


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,567 ✭✭✭delta_bravo


    Of course nothing like this ever happens in the private sector. Nothing happens like a board member is able to take a loan off the company for €120 million, a company which is audited by another private company. That is completely unheard of, carry on with the public service attacks but remember its not some clerical officers fault that things arent going too smoothly for you


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 870 ✭✭✭Pen1987


    Rob_l wrote: »
    why would you "piss in the keyboard"?


    I don't know but I do know you would have to do something similar to risk getting sacked from the public service. That is a quote directly from a person working in the public service for a long, long time.

    I had an alcoholic teacher in secondary school who I complained about to the Principal. I met with her and my parents we were told they'd been trying to get rid of him for years but couldn't...


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 3,591 ✭✭✭RATM


    Pen1987 wrote: »
    Rubber Room? Tell us...

    You could piss in the keyboard in most Civil Service jobs and not get fired.

    Apparently it is a nickname for the room in which lots of management in An Post are based. They are surplus to requirements after a restructuring of the company but they cant be made redundant coz the union wont have it. They just sit in the rubber room all day doing crosswords and flicking rubber bands across the room and get paid for it. Some of them are on well over €60k p.a. and are literally paid to do nothing. Ive only heard this anecdotally so was hoping someone else might elaborate.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,905 ✭✭✭Rob_l


    Pen1987 wrote: »
    I don't know but I do know you would have to do something similar to risk getting sacked from the public service. That is a quote directly from a person working in the public service for a long, long time.

    I had an alcoholic teacher in secondary school who I complained about to the Principal. I met with her and my parents we were told they'd been trying to get rid of him for years but couldn't...

    :rolleyes::rolleyes:

    I have worked in many private sector jobs and some of the things I did and was never sacked for; well they even feckin shock me and why did your parents let you go to a bad school, bad parents, i reckon! Were they civil servants too?


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 870 ✭✭✭Pen1987


    Of course nothing like this ever happens in the private sector. Nothing happens like a board member is able to take a loan off the company for €120 million, a company which is audited by another private company. That is completely unheard of, carry on with the public service attacks but remember its not some clerical officers fault that things arent going too smoothly for you


    I'm not saying PS workers don't work hard. I'm saying they can get away with working less easier than most private sector workers because it's harder to sack them. If you really wanted you could do just about enough to reach your PS job description and get away with it without too much hassle, you wouldn't get promoted, but you wouldn't be sackable. Try that in the private sector and someone would find some way to get rid of you. PS sector workers work hard, very hard in a lot of cases - and have to deal with a lot of red tape and a lot of bull, but the ones who don't want to move on in their career can get away just clocking up hours if they have that mindset.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 9,273 ✭✭✭Morlar


    Once worked as an It contractor on a project for a commercial company.

    This project had been a public sector-run one which they mostly outsourced to this commercial company who hired contractors in.

    There was a continuing public sector involvement in the project.

    It was routine for the public sector people involved in this project to be online 3 days a week. The rest of the time they were 'working offline from home'. They never attended meetings or conf calls.

    The main player on the public sector side was pretty much a keyholder to the application and took 1 year career breaks. ie when I joined the project he was half way through a 1 year career break and when I left he was away again.

    The public sector side documented NOTHING in order that no one could ever replace them. There was no concern about this from the management on their side.

    Getting into the office at 12pm was not unheard of for the public sector people. Leaving the office at 2:30 pm (same person same day routinely) was not unheard of (for the pub sec peeps).

    The slightest thing they were ever asked to do took literally 3 weeks. They regularly updated all the pc's in their building to shiney new ones including unused training rooms with new pc's which were totally beyond what they needed (including monitors and laptops).

    Sending them an email was like sending a time capsule into a black hole.

    The amount of ass covering was literally the worst I have ever seen in my entire career. Before working there I had no notion that the public sector in Ireland was so out of control.

    They had a tendency to commission consultancy reports for any little thing, rather than ever make a desicion to which they could be accountable. One funny one I read cost €25k from a consultancy firm and It was to do with unix performance tuning and I can honestly (hand on heart) say I have read more comprehensive beginners linux faq's on the web.

    €25k down the toilet - this was the norm and there were other examples there was literally no accountability on their side whatsoever. They spent a fortune on new logo and website design twice in 2 years they completely changed their logo and colours etc.

    The concept of value for money or accountability was just not there. Things may have changed as that was several years ago but if I have my way I would never work in a project dealing directly with them again.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 870 ✭✭✭Pen1987


    Rob_l wrote: »
    :rolleyes::rolleyes:

    I have worked in many private sector jobs and some of the thinsg I did and was never sacked for well they even feckin shock me

    and why did your parents let you go to a bad school bad parents i reckon were they civil servanst too?


    Dead on, bad parents yeah. Is that what you're talking about? I can't tell with the lack of punctuation - seriously...


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,905 ✭✭✭Rob_l


    Pen1987 wrote: »
    Dead on, bad parents yeah. Is that what you're talking about? I can't tell with the lack of punctuation - seriously...


    :rolleyes:
    Uh huh!

    I am still wondering how someone got in a keyboard to piss.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,050 ✭✭✭gazzer


    Pen1987 wrote: »
    Rubber Room? Tell us...

    You could piss in the keyboard in most Civil Service jobs and not get fired.

    I must mention this to the 6 people that I worked with in various government departments who have been fired from the civil service over the last 4 years


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,536 ✭✭✭Mark200


    gazzer wrote: »
    I must mention this to the 6 people that I worked with in various government departments who have been fired from the civil service over the last 4 years

    If you know 6 people who have pissed on their keyboards in work then you're hanging out with the wrong crowd


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 9,560 ✭✭✭DublinWriter


    RATM wrote: »
    Anyone ever hear of the 'Rubber Room' in An Post?
    I've had an ex-Customs man tell me about the 'Blue Room' in Customs, but that's another story...


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 43,311 ✭✭✭✭K-9


    Mark200 wrote: »
    If you know 6 people who have pissed on their keyboards in work then you're hanging out with the wrong crowd

    Damn beat me to it!

    If it was the Private Sector you'd have to buy a new keyboard, or wash it. Cutbacks!

    Mad Men's Don Draper : What you call love was invented by guys like me, to sell nylons.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 7,447 ✭✭✭Calhoun


    know of a certain public authority who purchased a huge amount of computers for training ect. The plan was to store them and install them over the space of a year.

    About a year and a half later there is still a huge amount of computers in storage and we were pushing them to install as we wanted to get rid of them from storage.

    The end up turning around and saying they no longer had a need for them and we could return them without a refund. As the company no longer owned them management gave everyone a free system ( the specs were still pretty decent at the time) . It wasnt a small amount either it was about 250K's worth of equipment that went to waste .

    We got some good use out of them though :) turned mine into a home server .


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 9,560 ✭✭✭DublinWriter


    RATM wrote: »
    Apparently it is a nickname for the room in which lots of management in An Post are based. They are surplus to requirements after a restructuring of the company but they cant be made redundant coz the union wont have it. They just sit in the rubber room all day doing crosswords and flicking rubber bands across the room and get paid for it.
    They are known within An Post as 'teepees', as all they do at work in drink tea and go to the toilet.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 21,727 ✭✭✭✭Godge


    There are stories about nearly every profession. From bankers on liquid lunches to the antics of stockbrokers, from estate agents to solicitors who solicit. Mostly urban myths, I presume, because apart form the An Post story above, the public sector ones listed are urban myths.

    Funny how you don't hear much about medical consultants drink on the job or firemen holding hoses at the wrong end. But they are public sector workers doing a good job. oops, was that an obscenity I just wrote.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 414 ✭✭ElBarco


    I was renewing my motor tax. They sent me out a form with a link and code to do it online.

    So I did it with no hassle.

    'twas gas


  • Moderators Posts: 24,367 ✭✭✭✭ChewChew


    RATM wrote: »
    There must be tons of them, like you know the stories about how some in the civil and public service get away with 45 minute tea breaks, run sideline businesses from their desks etc.

    dude you're takin the píss?? boll*x off will ya with that crap. I work in the public sector and I dont get away with nothing!

    infact i'm the one that has to deal with everyone else's crap.

    NO it's not my fault A&E is overcrowded.
    NO it's not my fault the waiting lists are so long.
    NO it's not my fault Mary Harney is apparently incompetent of running the health service.
    NO it's not my fault your appointment letter went missing in the post.
    NO it's not my fault there was a misdiagnosis.

    but I have to deal with this every single day. but every day I am there working in a hospital because I like you people. and I want to help!!!


    /Rant


  • Moderators, Computer Games Moderators, Social & Fun Moderators Posts: 18,809 Mod ✭✭✭✭Kimbot


    Seriously, how many threads of Public Servant/Civil Servant bashing needs to be on Boards?


    Should we rename the site to:

    www.boards.ie : Now your Civi Bashing?

    I would like to hear all the stories of what people seen first hand (Not what someone said to you), which depts etc before I would believe any of this media driven tripe!!


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,733 ✭✭✭Nermal


    Of course nothing like this ever happens in the private sector. Nothing happens like a board member is able to take a loan off the company for €120 million, a company which is audited by another private company.

    They're not paid out of taxes, bar the Anglo example, but I don't think anyone is presenting them as a model of efficiency.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 4,662 ✭✭✭Trinity


    ChewChew wrote: »
    dude you're takin the píss?? boll*x off will ya with that crap. I work in the public sector and I dont get away with nothing!

    infact i'm the one that has to deal with everyone else's crap.

    NO it's not my fault A&E is overcrowded.
    NO it's not my fault the waiting lists are so long.
    NO it's not my fault Mary Harney is apparently incompetent of running the health service.
    NO it's not my fault your appointment letter went missing in the post.
    NO it's not my fault there was a misdiagnosis.

    but I have to deal with this every single day. but every day I am there working in a hospital because I like you people. and I want to help!!!


    /Rant


    + 1.

    I'm a civil servant that is actually civil :D

    I try my best to help people and spend hours on the phone with them, following up, gathering info for them, calling them back, but being in Education i get the boll*x knocked out of me daily (verbally of course)

    They take it out on the wrong people Chew, we dont make the rules unfortunately and we dont even have to agree with them but if it wasnt for co's fcuk all would get done.

    You get a tea break in the morning and one in the afternoon. You can have a lunch up to 2 hours but you have to work the time back up by either coming in early or staying late. Well thats the ones that are on flexi time which is probably why it looks like a permanent break but we are on clocks and personnel are quick to contact you if your hours are down.


  • Moderators Posts: 24,367 ✭✭✭✭ChewChew


    Trinity wrote: »
    They take it out on the wrong people Chew, we dont make the rules unfortunately and we dont even have to agree with them but if it wasnt for co's fcuk all would get done.
    in my dept I'm the one that follows up on the things the doctors 'forget' or mislaid. I'm the one that goes and pulls your chart from medical records (not my dept) and then brings it to a doctor to sign off on admittance approval.

    so tell me this? where does the 45 minute tea break come in??

    I love my job. Thats why I do it. but I dont get time to take a 5 minute tea break let alone a 45 minute one. I start work at 8am. I have a cup of tea and my breaky at my desk. i'm eating while working. I then take a half hour lunch. at my desk. and then I leave at 4.30!!!

    :mad:


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 4,662 ✭✭✭Trinity


    ChewChew wrote: »
    in my dept I'm the one that follows up on the things the doctors 'forget' or mislaid. I'm the one that goes and pulls your chart from medical records (not my dept) and then brings it to a doctor to sign off on admittance approval.

    so tell me this? where does the 45 minute tea break come in??

    I love my job. Thats why I do it. but I dont get time to take a 5 minute tea break let alone a 45 minute one. I start work at 8am. I have a cup of tea and my breaky at my desk. i'm eating while working. I then take a half hour lunch. at my desk. and then I leave at 4.30!!!

    :mad:


    Actually come to think of it, i dont take a tea break either, i eat at my desk as well! I run down for a quick smoke and then straight back into it. :mad:

    This is why i never reply to these types of threads !


  • Moderators Posts: 24,367 ✭✭✭✭ChewChew


    Trinity wrote: »
    Actually come to think of it, i dont take a tea break either, i eat at my desk as well! I run down for a quick smoke and then straight back into it. :mad:

    This is why i never reply to these types of threads !

    We are clearly are the only 2 mugs in the public sector in that case!!! ppffftttt! :rolleyes:


  • Moderators, Category Moderators, Music Moderators Posts: 14,321 CMod ✭✭✭✭The Master


    ChewChew wrote: »
    We are clearly are the only 3 mugs in the public sector in that case!!! ppffftttt! :rolleyes:

    FYP you can include me in that , no cushy number for this public sector worker


  • Moderators Posts: 24,367 ✭✭✭✭ChewChew


    The Master wrote: »
    FYP you can include me in that , no cushy number for this public sector worker
    Isn't it stomach turning though when someone like the muppet who started this thread goes and slates you when all you do is your best for them?? it really makes ya wonder 'why do I bother'


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 431 ✭✭dny123456


    ChewChew wrote: »
    Isn't it stomach turning though when someone like the muppet who started this thread goes and slates you when all you do is your best for them?? it really makes ya wonder 'why do I bother'

    Would it be the money?


  • Moderators, Category Moderators, Music Moderators Posts: 14,321 CMod ✭✭✭✭The Master


    ChewChew wrote: »
    Isn't it stomach turning though when someone like the muppet who started this thread goes and slates you when all you do is your best for them?? it really makes ya wonder 'why do I bother'

    Exactly


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  • Moderators, Computer Games Moderators, Social & Fun Moderators Posts: 18,809 Mod ✭✭✭✭Kimbot


    Trinity wrote: »
    Actually come to think of it, i dont take a tea break either, i eat at my desk as well! I run down for a quick smoke and then straight back into it. :mad:

    Like most civil servants.

    The media are looking for a scape goat for the down turn in the economy.

    Realistically its the greedy developers that hired cheap labour and sold mental expensive houses that started the down turn. People couldn't afford the "Lego houses" that they were buying but still went and got in heavy debt to get "their" houses.

    Think about the amount of labourers that went around boasting they were claiming the dole and working at the same time... is there multiple threads whinging about that on here??

    Think about those scamming the disability, they can work but choose not to cos the tax payers cover it all!!

    Think about all the idiots getting into stupid fights overs drugs and clogging up the healthcare system because they can't handle drink/drugs.

    Pop into the motor forums on some sites and see how they are telling each other how to avoid paying VRT and Road Tax. Do they not deserve some of the blame?

    Look at people importing/buying goods from Non-EU countrys that are avtively boasting about avoiding paying their taxes etc, should they not should some of the blame?

    Or people that litter, draw graffiti on walls, destroy public property etc, should they not should some blame??

    Drug addicts waste valuable garda resources, pranksters ringing the fire brigade/ambulance/gardai, nearly everyone at some point is going to have to hold their hands up and say "Yes, I contributed to this mess".


    All of the above cost the tax payers a fortune every year, don't they?

    Are any of those people getting some blame for this recession?? NO... so can anyone tell me why they aren't??


  • Moderators Posts: 24,367 ✭✭✭✭ChewChew


    dny123456 wrote: »
    Would it be the money?

    no love. Why do I bother breakin my boll*x for patients when tney clearly DO NOT appreciate what I do!

    A consultant wouldn't get out of bed for what I earn. he'd probably have earned it by his 10am tea break on a monday morning!!
    The Master wrote: »
    Exactly
    Civil servant or in the public sector? I'm clerical in a hospital!


  • Moderators, Society & Culture Moderators Posts: 40,344 Mod ✭✭✭✭Gumbo


    RATM wrote: »
    There must be tons of them, like you know the stories about how some in the civil and public service get away with 45 minute tea breaks, run sideline businesses from their desks etc.

    did you just make up all that stuff on your sofa with a cuppa tea in your hand.

    i get no where near a 45 min tea break! i get 15 mins at 10.30 for breakie and 30 mins at 1.30 for lunch!

    you really need to think before you talk.

    all this Public Service bashing is beginning to get boring!


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,050 ✭✭✭gazzer


    Trinity wrote: »
    Actually come to think of it, i dont take a tea break either, i eat at my desk as well! I run down for a quick smoke and then straight back into it. :mad:

    This is why i never reply to these types of threads !

    Same here. I would love to know who all these Civil Servents are taking long tea breaks :P . I have a cup of tea at my desk in the morning but I am still working. My colleagues are the same. I love these urban legends about the 45 minutes tea breaks. Its up there with the free cars that refugess that came here get.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 315 ✭✭321654


    My sons football team went to Blackpool for the weekend last year and the year before. 4 teachers went with them to look after them.

    Wouldnt take a penny.

    Some of the teachers take the football team after school twice a week. They also take them to matches at the weekends. Others chess teams etc. They dont take any money.

    Some of them do a breakfast club before school and a homework club after school for kids with problems at home.

    Much respect from me.


  • Moderators Posts: 24,367 ✭✭✭✭ChewChew


    gazzer wrote: »
    Same here. I would love to know who all these Civil Servents are taking long tea breaks :P . I have a cup of tea at my desk in the morning but I am still working. My colleagues are the same. I love these urban legends about the 45 minutes tea breaks. Its up there with the free cars that refugess that came here get.

    thats the thing. there is probably one person that get away with being a lzy sod and then thole employee force are tarred with the same brush!


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  • Closed Accounts Posts: 315 ✭✭321654


    kceire wrote: »
    did you just make up all that stuff on your sofa with a cuppa tea in your hand.

    i get no where near a 45 min tea break! i get 15 mins at 10.30 for breakie and 30 mins at 1.30 for lunch!

    you really need to think before you talk.

    all this Public Service bashing is beginning to get boring!

    I get 1 hour whenever i want And can take short breaks throughout the day whenever i feel like it.

    I can take a 45 minute tea break if i feel like it. Nobody says a word. If i want to go stay in bed and dial in from home. no problem.

    I get 28 days holidays a year and work a 35 hour week.

    Life is great. Ive earned it over the years.


    Oh yeah. I work in the private sector.

    And there are people i work with who spend at least 3 out of 5 days solid on the internet.

    A report landed on my desk a couple of weeks ago with the websites they've been visiting. They are heavy posters on boards. So i got someone to match the urls in the report with names and posts on boards. Very interesting reading i can tell you :)

    Now myself and the other guys have a list of Usernames against staff and laugh at it every day. I have to talk to these people but i cant yet as i will just burst out laughing at them.


  • Moderators, Society & Culture Moderators Posts: 40,344 Mod ✭✭✭✭Gumbo


    321654 wrote: »
    I get 1 hour whenever i want And can take short breaks throughout the day whenever i feel like it.

    I can take a 45 minute tea break if i feel like it. Nobody says a word. If i want to go stay in bed and dial in from home. no problem.

    I get 28 days holidays a year and work a 35 hour week.

    Life is great. Ive earned it over the years.

    maybe your still in bed now dreaming of your dream job!
    but on the other hand, if you've earned it and make the effort, fair play then.


  • Moderators Posts: 24,367 ✭✭✭✭ChewChew


    kceire wrote: »
    maybe your still in bed now dreaming of your dream job!
    but on the other hand, if you've earned it and make the effort, fair play then.

    dont feed the troll!!! :rolleyes:


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 4,662 ✭✭✭Trinity


    ChewChew wrote: »
    We are clearly are the only 2 mugs in the public sector in that case!!! ppffftttt! :rolleyes:


    COme to think of it, all of my colleagues eat at the desk for the most part. It really is a busy job!

    And, and and the public fcuking know this cos the phone is always hopping at lunch time esp between 1 and 2 :D

    Must be the OP trying to catch us out :p


  • Moderators Posts: 24,367 ✭✭✭✭ChewChew


    Trinity wrote: »
    COme to think of it, all of my colleagues eat at the desk for the most part. It really is a busy job!

    And, and and the public fcuking know this cos the phone is always hopping at lunch time esp between 1 and 2 :D

    Must be the OP trying to catch us out :p

    I rarely get to leave my desk. even for a píss. I work in an office that is freezing cold because we have no heating in it. We have other issues which I care not to speak of on the interweb. lol. but I have to deal with these conditions in order to do my job.

    I work on flexi time. fine, it sounds nice but when I work over my allowance i lose hours that i have worked and dont get paid for. I dont get to take my extra days off because we are seriously under staffed! so this subject just really makes my blood boil because to be quiet frank, we burst our balls for the big shots to get the credit!


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  • Closed Accounts Posts: 431 ✭✭dny123456


    ChewChew wrote: »
    no love. Why do I bother breakin my boll*x for patients when tney clearly DO NOT appreciate what I do!
    Sounds a bit moaney to me. We all "break our boll*x", public and private sector... and most of us would prefer it if we didn't have to. I did the lotto last weekend! Point is we _all_ have to, because we need the money. Difference with the public sector is the incompetents can't be cleared out and so give everyone a bad name. I've no doubt there are plenty of very hard working individuals in the public sector. But there's a right shower of chancers. I lived for 4 years with a girl working in the corporation (This is first hand experience, not someone I heard about). The numbers of 'sickies' I could not believe. I would say about two or three every month. Then she got 'depressed' and took the guts of a year off, on full pay. She said she had 'ME'. Returned to the service got pay rise, by virtue of years of service. Sickening.

    ChewChew wrote: »
    A consultant wouldn't get out of bed for what I earn. he'd probably have earned it by his 10am tea break on a monday morning!!
    I think this is indicative of the problem in the health service. People comparing themselves to consultants/doctors, who are living in another world and are grossly overpaid, even by international standards. Don't compare your situation to theirs, their levels of pay are crazy compared to anyone.

    BTW, private sector contractor here. Havent had a holiday since 2003, apart from 4 days off each Christmas/New year. Have to keep working to pay mortgage. Work from 8:30 to about 6:30 everyday, no overtime, no time in lieu, no coffee breaks. Have an hour at desk for lunch. Can be made redundant with 1 weeks notice at any time. This is normal in our company.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 431 ✭✭dny123456


    ChewChew wrote: »
    I work on flexi time. fine, it sounds nice but when I work over my allowance i lose hours that i have worked and dont get paid for. I dont get to take my extra days off because we are seriously under staffed!

    It makes my blood boil to hear that you think 'lose' hours that you have worked. Every private sector company I have ever worked for, people are expected to put in extra hours. No one gets paid for it, no one gets time off in lieu. Your post reminds me of the FAS interview, where the MD, was arguing his 'entitlement' to first class travel. Couldn't see any problem with his swapping first first class ticket for two tickets so that his wife could come, because he was 'entitled' to it. This twisted sense of entitlement seems to be prevalent.


  • Moderators Posts: 24,367 ✭✭✭✭ChewChew


    dny123456 wrote: »
    Sounds a bit moaney to me. We all "break our boll*x", public and private sector... and most of us would prefer it if we didn't have to. I did the lotto last weekend! Point is we _all_ have to, because we need the money. Difference with the public sector is the incompetents can't be cleared out and so give everyone a bad name. I've no doubt there are plenty of very hard working individuals in the public sector. But there's a right shower of chancers. I lived for 4 years with a girl working in the corporation (This is first hand experience, not someone I heard about). The numbers of 'sickies' I could not believe. I would say about two or three every month. Then she got 'depressed' and took the guts of a year off, on full pay. She said she had 'ME'. Returned to the service got pay rise, by virtue of years of service. Sickening.
    For some reason I think you are clearly missing my point. I dont work my ass off and then moan about it. I work my ass off because I love my job. I love dealing with the public and trying to make their lives that little bit better. I make the sacrifices of eating my breakfast or lunch at my desk so I can continue to work away. why should the public patients have to suffer just because there are budget cuts, staff shortages, incompentant chiefs and not enough indians? I work in the HSE because I want to help. all my patients didn't ask to get sick. now do ya get my point?

    dny123456 wrote: »
    I think this is indicative of the problem in the health service. People comparing themselves to consultants/doctors, who are living in another world and are grossly overpaid, even by international standards. Don't compare your situation to theirs, their levels of pay are crazy compared to anyone.
    I'm not making a comparison. i'm saying I am left to pick up the pieces that these people who are in such high paying jobs neglect. they are the ones that dont get the ear bashing, but i am the one that is more than happy to help the patient, thats why I do what I do! If I wanted to be a consultant, I bloody well would be!
    dny123456 wrote: »
    BTW, private sector contractor here. Havent had a holiday since 2003, apart from 4 days off each Christmas/New year. Have to keep working to pay mortgage. Work from 8:30 to about 6:30 everyday, no overtime, no time in lieu, no coffee breaks. Have an hour at desk for lunch. Can be made redundant with 1 weeks notice at any time. This is normal in our company.
    Are you a dosser? by the sounds of it, I really dont think so. so thats where we are alike.
    dny123456 wrote: »
    It makes my blood boil to hear that you think 'lose' hours that you have worked. Every private sector company I have ever worked for, people are expected to put in extra hours. No one gets paid for it, no one gets time off in lieu. Your post reminds me of the FAS interview, where the MD, was arguing his 'entitlement' to first class travel. Couldn't see any problem with his swapping first first class ticket for two tickets so that his wife could come, because he was 'entitled' to it. This twisted sense of entitlement seems to be prevalent.
    dear god you really are in a bit of strop there! and AGAIN are missing my point. I signed a contract to work a certain amounts of hours per week. I SIGNED A CONTRACT. I work way over that, but I dont come out every day bítching and moaning about it. thats my point. which you are clearly missing! I do not mind making these sacrifices in order to do right by my patients. and then to have the píss taken out of my colleagues and I for taking a 45 minute tea break really makes my blood boil!!! so buddy, get off your high horse. re-think your comparing me to some mother fúckin MD because even you know that that is out of order! re-read my posts, do what ya want, but just sit back and realise that you are contradicting me on this issue when I am clearly stating that I do NOT take the píss out of YOUR health service!


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 431 ✭✭dny123456


    "re-think your comparing me to some mother fúckin MD because even you know that that is out of order"
    I didn't compare you to a MD, you did.

    "come out every day bítching and moaning about it"
    Just today then?

    "I SIGNED A CONTRACT" == I am entitled to


  • Moderators Posts: 24,367 ✭✭✭✭ChewChew


    dny123456 wrote: »
    "re-think your comparing me to some mother fúckin MD because even you know that that is out of order"
    I didn't compare you to a MD, you did.
    you compared my situation his. (pardon my confusion:rolleyes:) I am not entitled to first class travel or a €400 hair do, why? because its not in my contract, like I doubt it was in theirs. . . ya get me now?
    dny123456 wrote: »
    "come out every day bítching and moaning about it"
    Just today then?
    no love. . . this is debating. not bítching or moaning. difference.
    dny123456 wrote: »
    "I SIGNED A CONTRACT" == I am entitled to
    I did sign a contract. If I signed my contract to earn €100k PA does that not mean I am entitled to it? I am entitled to my annual leave like everyone else because its in my contract. it is NOT in my contract to get first class travel etc. but I already stated that.

    but AGAIN :rolleyes: you've missed my point. I dont mind missing out on the days, or losing a few hours because I know I am working my ass off to make sure I do my job right, and to the best of my ability and then to be called a lazy so and so who takes a 45 minute tea break when this is not true.

    Now dear god please tell you understand me this time!!! please!


  • Moderators, Society & Culture Moderators Posts: 40,344 Mod ✭✭✭✭Gumbo


    dny123456 wrote: »
    It makes my blood boil to hear that you think 'lose' hours that you have worked. Every private sector company I have ever worked for, people are expected to put in extra hours. No one gets paid for it, no one gets time off in lieu. Your post reminds me of the FAS interview, where the MD, was arguing his 'entitlement' to first class travel. Couldn't see any problem with his swapping first first class ticket for two tickets so that his wife could come, because he was 'entitled' to it. This twisted sense of entitlement seems to be prevalent.

    every private company i have worked in i got overtime or time off for my extra hours. in the PS i lose them as stated in an earlier post.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 431 ✭✭dny123456


    No love! .... but I am beginning to see why Mary is hitting a brick wall!

    I'm off to bed, early start!


  • Moderators Posts: 24,367 ✭✭✭✭ChewChew


    dny123456 wrote: »
    No love! .... but I am beginning to see why Mary is hitting a brick wall!

    I'm off to bed, early start!

    fail. epic, epic fail. :rolleyes:


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 431 ✭✭dny123456


    ChewChew wrote: »
    fail. epic, epic fail. :rolleyes:
    Absolutely, you win. Well done.


  • Banned (with Prison Access) Posts: 5,671 ✭✭✭BraziliaNZ


    I worked in the public sector for 3 years before leaving Eire.
    We didn't get any internet access.
    Had to pay for our own tea/coffee.
    Had to pay for our own Xmas parties, or any social events.
    I had to work my arse off and learn new technologies on the job with no training as they couldn't afford training.
    Working in private sector now and I spend hours and hours doing nothing but surfing the web, as I'm doing right now at work, and I get paid a lot more.
    So give them a break, where were these threads when you were all rolling in it during the boom? Maybe you should have joined the public sector!


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