Mic 1972 wrote: » So your issue is with teachers getting full salary, that adds perspective It sounds even more selfish if you ask me
road_high wrote: » It worries me greatly. Not just the shortish term costs but the inevitable downturn that it’s caused which reduces tax revenues going forward coupled with increased welfare and health spending. We will be in the red for a very long time
oceanman wrote: » the government will just borrow what money is needed, there has in fact never been a better time to borrow than now with interest rates so low. its not all bad news.
gnf_ireland wrote: » Interest rates will rise and borrowings have to be paid back. Did people learn nothing from the Celtic Tiger borrowing culture?
Stateofyou wrote: » I honestly can't believe what I'm reading here. I think you already know that teaching 16-30 children in a single room all day and touching/grading their work, all touching the same doors, breathing the same air in a small room, and with people who often have very little concept of personal hygeine (harder not to touch face, cough/sneeze into elbows, washing hands properly, etc) is very different to the environment of a worker in a supermarket. You have to know this, and you've just decided to make a false comparison because it suits you.
gnf_ireland wrote: » Absolutely not. I have no issue with anyone getting paid while this is ongoing, whether from the private sector or public sector. However, if anyone is getting paid there is an expectation that a level of effort towards their job is being done. This applies to any job - public or private sector. From my experience (and I have said it in a few previous posts) is the level of engagement from our school has been poor and differs greatly between teachers. I think if this is going to continue until the summer, the engagement levels from the teachers has to increase (whether remote or not) and cannot continue to be radio-silence like what a large number of parents are experiencing
Deleted User wrote: » I work in the civil service and have worked throughout these restrictions (Essential Services). We are working with up to 15/20 adults in the same room, breathing the same air, touching the same doors, handling the same plastic pouches of documents etc. Our desks are further apart. Nobody has got sick. I will say we were nervous at the beginning , and the nervousness is a BIG part of this. After a week we all just got on with our jobs. We do not have plastic spit screens, we don’t wear gloves or masks, we have hand sanitizer but it is very hard to socially distance all the time. I’m happy to be still going in to a workplace. I think the FEAR is huge around this.
Deleted User wrote: » I work in the civil service and have worked throughout these restrictions (Essential Services). We are working with up to 15/20 adults in the same room, breathing the same air, touching the same doors, handling the same plastic pouches of documents etc. Our desks are further apart. Nobody has got sick. I will say we were nervous at the beginning , and the nervousness is a BIG part of this. After a week we all just got on with our jobs. We do not have plastic spit screens, we don’t wear gloves or masks, we have hand sanitizer but it is very hard to socially distance all the time. I’m happy to be still going in to a workplace. I am 59. I think the FEAR is huge around this. But life has to go on.
drunkmonkey wrote: » It is but they won't do it, can't have some of the country going back to normal and people from epicenters being discriminated against. Dublin is the big problem and we should treat it differently, it's the last place restrictions should be removed from. I don't know how your going to get kids back, my 5yr old is here refusing to go for a walk up the mountain because the virus is outside in the air. All air is bad now according to him.
iamwhoiam wrote: » I think the first to open should be hardware and gardening . If people had paint and garden compost etc it would keep many at home .The over 70 I know are all crying out to have paint and things to do . It could be done just like the supermarkets with controlled queues etc . If Woodies were delivery paint this week they would make a fortune
GazzaL wrote: » The masks are slipping and the salty tears are flowing since the Government and HSE started talking about easing restrictions. Your €350 a week payments to gorge on takeaways and guzzle cans from the offie will be drying up soon enough.
Cupatae wrote: » All the fluff outta the lift the lockdown brigade they want em lifted rapid as they are worried about the money but when put to the question on the issues around such a return to normality they have no answers just a load of fluff buzz word of the day they hide behind **hyperbolic** Kasier seems to think his a psychologist, and expert on why people think how they think , then there's the legion of sheep behind him... Boards is always good for a laugh.
polesheep wrote: » That was a deliberate tactic to get compliance from the populace. Honesty would have been better, in my opinion.
easypazz wrote: » This day 2 weeks this thread will be buzzing as we are counting down to the end of the lockdown.
Hearty80 wrote: » Surprise Surprise a teacher who doesn't want to go to work....... What about supermarket workers health care assistants, hospital porters, poundshop employees. All meeting the most at risk everyday. Take your head out of your posterior and go back to work. The economy needs schools and creches to reopen, it can't sustain you sitting at home being fully paid indefinitely.
Deleted User wrote: » If a person has a high risk condition, it's understandable that they are way more apprehensive about going back to work.
Edgware wrote: » Honesty really worked in that pub in Finglas. Scare the **** out of people is always a good way to get attention.
Stateofyou wrote: » Jesus. So much contempt for your fellow countrymen and women trying to get by and support their family's. WTAF.
Professor Moriarty wrote: » Eminently sensible suggestion. Logistics seem good. Maybe a concern for the teacher's health?
khalessi wrote: » In that quote I said I would work as I have ppe