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Do you think nurses will get their payrise?

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  • Closed Accounts Posts: 245 ✭✭alloywheel


    STB. wrote: »
    The truth in the matter is that this government have run all infrastructure down to nothing.

    lol. There was a link earlier in the thread showing the hard pressed taxpayer here spends much more on healthcare per head of population than the OECD average, and our nurses are some of the best paid and pensioned in the world. And I think there are more nurses and union bots on this thread than FG bots or stay at home chaps as you call them. All I know is that I am none of the above, thank you.


  • Registered Users Posts: 1,258 ✭✭✭1641


    alloywheel wrote: »
    Including part time workers?. Including full time nurses only another study found it was €57,000

    Either way nurses have well paid, secure, pensionable jobs. Interesting the study above found that "pay rates do not appear to be unduly affecting the number of nurses, midwives and doctors applying to work abroad”.




    No - the finding was on the basis of Whole Time Equivalents. So two job-sharers would equal one WTE, etc. Presumably it was calculated by dividing the gross wages paid to staff/midwife grades and dividing it by the number of WTEs, or something like that.



    I think the €57000 figure comes from calculating the average when all grades are involved. As there are far fewer at the higher grade level, the increase in the overall average would not be very dramatic.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 5,593 ✭✭✭Wheeliebin30


    STB. wrote: »
    The telling thing of course here throughout this thread is the fg bots and stay at home chaps who make no contribution to soceity other than queue at the local dole office. The same chaps no doubt attempting to attribute headlines to nurses measured in hours from ten years ago.

    The truth in the matter is that this government have run all infrastructure down to nothing. Meanwhile Simon Harris was asleep at the wheel building a 2 billion euro hospital. The overspend would have paid for any type of pay gap for nurses.

    2 billion?

    Have you a link for your absolute nonsense lies?


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 245 ✭✭alloywheel


    1641 wrote: »
    No - the finding was on the basis of Whole Time Equivalents. So two job-sharers would equal one WTE, etc. Presumably it was calculated by dividing the gross wages paid to staff/midwife grades and dividing it by the number of WTEs, or something like that.



    I think the €57000 figure comes from calculating the average when all grades are involved. As there are far fewer at the higher grade level, the increase in the overall average would not be very dramatic.
    I have to go to work now but thanks for that, I had not the time to read the journal link fully 10 minutes ago.


  • Registered Users Posts: 7,239 ✭✭✭facehugger99


    STB. wrote: »

    The truth in the matter is that this government have run all infrastructure down to nothing.

    I agree - Government chose to prioritise cuts capital spending rather than reduce spending on PS pay and pensions during the recession.

    We're paying for those decisions now - but it's always been more palatable for Ministers to kick infrastructure spending down the road than to stand up to the greedy public servants.

    We're still running a deficit.

    200 billion in debt and rising.

    No more money for nurses.

    This thread has thoroughly demolished any arguments regarding poor pay - the basic pay and available allowances are ridiculously generous.

    The current strike actions are wholly unjustified, immoral and greedy.


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  • Registered Users Posts: 5,380 ✭✭✭STB.


    It's clear what you are alloy wheel from reading your posts. Regging in February to post about nurses pay increases and that you would stick in your throat to vote fg but you would do it if it meant that nurses didn't get a pay increase.

    The you pull stats measured in hours and attempt to attribute them to nurses. When u get caught u try and say it's the HSE which is an organisation made up of a third nurses. The u try and use figures that are measured against other sectors during the downturn whilst the reasons for the downturn in the other sectors was the reduced workers in that sector. Then u attempt to measure the bigger numbered UK health service against the Irish and don't recognise that 3% of a bigger figure is actually more people.

    Like I said earlier, it's evident what you don't do. Me I've work to do. Enjoy your daytime Jeremy Kyle programmes.


  • Registered Users Posts: 32,634 ✭✭✭✭Graces7


    I agree - Government chose to prioritise cuts capital spending rather than reduce spending on PS pay and pensions during the recession.

    We're paying for those decisions now - but it's always been more palatable for Ministers to kick infrastructure spending down the road than to stand up to the greedy public servants.

    We're still running a deficit.

    200 billion in debt and rising.

    No more money for nurses.

    This thread has thoroughly demolished any arguments regarding poor pay - the basic pay and available allowances are ridiculously generous.

    The current strike actions are wholly unjustified, immoral and greedy.


    From the RTE update today

    "It is the third day on the picket line with no sign of a breakthrough in the escalating dispute.

    Once again, all outpatient, inpatient and day surgery appointments are cancelled, as are routine community nursing services and health centre nurse clinics.

    As on Tuesday, the strike will hit respite and rehabilitation units for the elderly or those with intellectual disability.

    Three further consecutive strike days are scheduled for next week.

    Mental health services are also in the crossfire - after the Psychiatric Nurses Association escalated its overtime ban to run through the night".

    And such cheerful faces

    https://www.rte.ie/news/2019/0207/1028020-nurses_strike_day_3/

    The strike is causing suffering and that is its aim.

    Off out for a walk ....


  • Registered Users Posts: 582 ✭✭✭mooreman09


    Off to work here lads... Some serious creeps on here.

    Good luck to the nurses today.


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


    STB. wrote: »
    The telling thing of course here throughout this thread is the fg bots and stay at home chaps who make no contribution to soceity other than queue at the local dole office. The same chaps no doubt attempting to attribute headlines to nurses measured in hours from ten years ago.

    The truth in the matter is that this government have run all infrastructure down to nothing. Meanwhile Simon Harris was asleep at the wheel building a 2 billion euro hospital. The overspend would have paid for any type of pay gap for nurses.

    There is about a 1Bn overspend, so thats about 3 years of nurses extra pay (at the 300M a year forecast)! What then, do we remove the pay increase in 2022? Or just cancel the hospital outright and give the nurses a bump till 2025 and then "Its back down ya go!"

    Money spent on a capital works project cant be compared to a short window of pay increases. Just because they are both sums of money and from the same departments budget does not give them equivalence.


  • Registered Users Posts: 45,161 ✭✭✭✭Mitch Connor



    This thread has thoroughly demolished any arguments regarding poor pay - the basic pay and available allowances are ridiculously generous.

    So why is it so difficult for the hospitals to recruit full time staff? Why is the ward my wife works on consistently understaffed with respect to nurses/patient numbers?

    If the money is so great for such an easy job, why is it so hard to retain the staff that are trained (rather than them going to the UK or Aus) or get people in from foreign countries?


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


    Graces7 wrote: »
    [/B]

    From the RTE update today

    "It is the third day on the picket line with no sign of a breakthrough in the escalating dispute.

    Once again, all outpatient, inpatient and day surgery appointments are cancelled, as are routine community nursing services and health centre nurse clinics.

    As on Tuesday, the strike will hit respite and rehabilitation units for the elderly or those with intellectual disability.

    Three further consecutive strike days are scheduled for next week.

    Mental health services are also in the crossfire - after the Psychiatric Nurses Association escalated its overtime ban to run through the night".

    And such cheerful faces

    https://www.rte.ie/news/2019/0207/1028020-nurses_strike_day_3/

    The strike is causing suffering and that is its aim.

    Off out for a walk ....

    Leo and paschal better start talking to the nurses before Tuesday then .


  • Registered Users Posts: 32,211 ✭✭✭✭gmisk


    2 billion?

    Have you a link for your absolute nonsense lies?
    The latest figure I saw was 1.7 billion (and it is expected to exceed this)....whos to say where it will end.
    Ministers were also told in the memo that there could be further increases of up to another €145 million in the future.
    It started at 983 million then went to 1.433 billion...

    the running cost per year were also underestimated (now 366 million - which is 40 million more than expected)


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 4,732 ✭✭✭BarryD2


    So why is it so difficult for the hospitals to recruit full time staff? Why is the ward my wife works on consistently understaffed with respect to nurses/patient numbers?

    If the money is so great for such an easy job, why is it so hard to retain the staff that are trained (rather than them going to the UK or Aus) or get people in from foreign countries?

    As regards the former, maybe employing more nurse/ care assistants at lower wages will free up the degree qualified nurses and take some pressure off them.

    As regards the latter, I think the public are tired of this argument. If people want to go off to the UK or Aus or Dubai or wherever, they're doing that for a variety of reasons partic when young. It's not a bargaining chip - pay us €20K/ €30K more or we're all leaving etc. That's too simplistic.

    It'll be interesting to see what/if anything happens over the weekend. I'd bet the INMO leadership hadn't envisaged the strike going this far. It's easy to say, we'll be out this, this and this day. But if this carries on to next week, you'd wonder what their exit strategy is. The troops have been led to the top of the hill and it's lonely up there after a while. Take three days off next week and the sh*t will really hit the fan. And some of that crap will fall squarely on the unions.


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


    BarryD2 wrote: »
    As regards the former, maybe employing more nurse/ care assistants at lower wages will free up the degree qualified nurses and take some pressure off them.

    As regards the latter, I think the public are tired of this argument. If people want to go off to the UK or Aus or Dubai or wherever, they're doing that for a variety of reasons partic when young. It's not a bargaining chip - pay us €20K/ €30K more or we're all leaving etc. That's too simplistic.

    It'll be interesting to see what/if anything happens over the weekend. I'd bet the INMO leadership hadn't envisaged the strike going this far. It's easy to say, we'll be out this, this and this day. But if this carries on to next week, you'd wonder what their exit strategy is. The troops have been led to the top of the hill and it's lonely up there after a while. Take three days off next week and the sh*t will really hit the fan. And some of that crap will fall squarely on the unions.

    You’re wrong on the former ... hca aren’t qualified to do half the tasks as nurses and if something went wrong do you think a hca would be prepared to be sued ?

    The latter has merit ..... I agree with you on next week .. if no talks take place this weekend it will be pure chaos next tues-thurs ... but I have the sense the inmo will stand firm on this.


  • Registered Users Posts: 23,257 ✭✭✭✭pjohnson


    hawkelady wrote: »
    Leo and paschal better start talking to the nurses before Tuesday then .

    What is there to talk about?


  • Registered Users Posts: 2,540 ✭✭✭Martina1991


    So why is it so difficult for the hospitals to recruit full time staff? Why is the ward my wife works on consistently understaffed with respect to nurses/patient numbers?
    Working abroad in a beautiful country is very enticing to young graduates. When you see people living a great life on social media in Australia, Dubai, Canada etc it looks fantastic. Nursing is a qualification that can be transferred to many countries, its a useful degree and easy to travel with.

    An irish women who is a qualified nurse has a huge following on social media and actively sells the dream that nurses live a great life in Australia earning loads on money working for agencies.

    This has been found to be a bit of a scam as loads of nurses have found out the hard way when there are too many nurses and not enough shifts to go around.

    I think young nurses are right to work abroad when theyre young and free, but it is resulting in staff shortages here.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,800 ✭✭✭tretorn


    The nurses are starting on a salary of 28 thousand euros and they are saying this is poor.

    I actually think this is quite a good salary for someone straight out of college. Most Accountancy and Law Graduates for example would start on the same money and they will work ten and eleven hours a day for this money and with no prospect of overtime.

    Nurses can do three day weeks and do caring work paying them fifteen euros an hour on their day off.

    We arent getting the full picture here. How many nurses are doing three twelve hour days and then doing agency work on the other four days in the week.


  • Registered Users Posts: 2,538 ✭✭✭Seanachai


    Being honest about it does anybody here in the private sector feel that if they had the union clout that the nurses have, they would be striking too. Why is nobody asking the question if the nurses pay is decent, then why is it so hard to get by on in this country? We can't all work in high paid IT jobs or become self made millionaires.


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


    pjohnson wrote: »
    What is there to talk about?

    Pay apparently??


  • Registered Users Posts: 1,258 ✭✭✭1641



    If the money is so great for such an easy job,


    In fairness, I don't think many people are either saying or thinking that it is an easy job.
    Some of the questions are

    -whether the current pay demand is justifiable, in light of the pay agreement the nurses have recently signed up to
    -whether the strike action is justifiable (that we are only doing it in the interests of patients)
    - whether the pay parity claim with "paramedics" is reasonable and jusified

    -whether pay increases like this are affordable and what the knock on effects might be.



    Different people have contrasting views on this. That is not denigrating nurses.


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  • Registered Users Posts: 3,049 ✭✭✭Patrick2010


    hawkelady wrote: »
    Pay apparently??


    Yep thats true, all the other talk about conditions, training etc is a smokescreen, bottom line is give us a 12% pay rise or we'll make the public suffer.


  • Registered Users Posts: 3,863 ✭✭✭mikhail


    1641 wrote: »
    Different people have contrasting views on this. That is not denigrating nurses.
    Even as someone broadly opposed to their strike action, I respect nursing as a profession. If they like to moan about their working conditions, that's more or less everyone. It's the nursing union I find a strike-happy bunch of lie-peddling narcissists.


  • Registered Users Posts: 5,788 ✭✭✭Old diesel


    Seanachai wrote: »
    Being honest about it does anybody here in the private sector feel that if they had the union clout that the nurses have, they would be striking too. Why is nobody asking the question if the nurses pay is decent, then why is it so hard to get by on in this country. We can't all work in high paid IT jobs or become self made millionaires.

    If Nurse pay and conditions were as some in this thread think it is - there should be queues of Nurses for every HSE position.

    We live in a world where the way to address the fact you feel screwed by getting less then you did 10 years ago is to hope some other person also gets screwed.

    Where unpaid hours are seen as okay.


  • Registered Users Posts: 1,813 ✭✭✭Lillyfae


    Seanachai wrote: »
    Being honest about it does anybody here in the private sector feel that if they had the union clout that the nurses have, they would be striking too. Why is nobody asking the question if the nurses pay is decent, then why is it so hard to get by on in this country. We can't all work in high paid IT jobs or become self made millionaires.

    We don't know that it is- some nurses get by on it and some don't. The fact of the matter is, that's life, some people can become millionaires and some can't.

    As an aside my own father is a retired nurse (retired at 55 after 35 years of service) and for the life of me I cannot fathom where my parents get their money from. He even went back to night duty for his last 2 years because that's what counts for the pension. The 30 - 35k remark is total rubbish, unless the guy is doing way less than full time work


  • Registered Users Posts: 6,080 ✭✭✭TheRiverman


    Just read that Leo Varadkar,who is forty has the metabolic age of a fifty three year old.He will soon need a nurse.


  • Registered Users Posts: 8,369 ✭✭✭Rossi IRL


    Could they get rid of all allowances and give them a higher starting pay? and even have less increments to up the starting pay.

    Would current nurses be happy if there was no overtime available to them if the nurses abroad return.

    Could get into dodgy territory if nurses get a pay rise as it would lead to other unions going on strike looking for more pay aswell.


  • Registered Users Posts: 1,813 ✭✭✭Lillyfae


    Rossi IRL wrote: »
    Would current nurses be happy if there was no overtime available to them if the nurses abroad return.

    The thing I think about is if they are choosing to do all the overtime and/ or do agency or HCA work as a second job then how could anyone but the individual be blamed for their poor condition due to overwork or stress? Work yourself into the ground if you want but you can't call burnout when you collapse.


  • Registered Users Posts: 13,999 ✭✭✭✭markodaly


    So why is it so difficult for the hospitals to recruit full time staff? Why is the ward my wife works on consistently understaffed with respect to nurses/patient numbers?

    If the money is so great for such an easy job, why is it so hard to retain the staff that are trained (rather than them going to the UK or Aus) or get people in from foreign countries?

    This is a wider issue I think. It's difficult to hire qualified staff in many different fields. From IT to Health Care.

    Now, if a company can't hire a bunch of good software developers then it may lead to delays of a project.
    But if a hospital or health care provider cant hire that nurse or specialist then it impacts on patient care.

    Fixating on core pay is the wrong way, in my opinion, to fix this. The nursing Unions could look for reform in how the HSE operates, for example, to make working conditions better.

    More could also be done to incentivize people into these professions. One could also hire from abroad. The HSE should be recruiting from places like Poland directly. This helps everyone in the long term.

    Giving nurses an extra 12% pay does nothing to fix or reform the HSE and the working conditions. It does not open up one extra ward or bed either.


  • Registered Users Posts: 13,999 ✭✭✭✭markodaly


    A graduate starting out on 28k a year is pretty decent. Lots of allowances and tiers ready to bring that pay up. Nursing is a hard job, no question and should be paid well, but I think it is already paid quite well. What is more, you have massive job security. If you are a qualified nurse you will never be out of work.

    Spare a thought for the Early Childcare Teacher who may have 4 years of University behind them, yet get paid the guts of €10 an hour.


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  • Moderators, Category Moderators, Computer Games Moderators, Society & Culture Moderators Posts: 8,466 CMod ✭✭✭✭Sierra Oscar


    So why is it so difficult for the hospitals to recruit full time staff? Why is the ward my wife works on consistently understaffed with respect to nurses/patient numbers?

    If the money is so great for such an easy job, why is it so hard to retain the staff that are trained (rather than them going to the UK or Aus) or get people in from foreign countries?

    Also don't forget that many hospital wards are closed right across the country because there aren't enough nurses to staff them. The HSE themselves acknowledge that there is a staffing problem.

    There are people arguing that money should be invested in new hospital beds instead of sorting out working conditions for nurses. There ain't much point spending money on new wards if they cannot be opened due to staffing issues.


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