Monty Burnz wrote: » So we only fix some of the closed shops?
whiskey_bar wrote: » unfortunatley their are not near enough people earning over 100 k for cuts there to make a dent in the deficit , their are still too many people earning between 45 and 60 k per year , teachers , guards , nurses etc , harsh reality
kippy wrote: » As a rough guide. A PS Staff member on 45K per annum gross, would take home roughly 28K per annum. Assume a mortgage of 1000 per month. Assume childcare of 700 per month. Assume heating bill of 1500 per annum Assume insurances of all types (Car, Home (and associated), Health,) 1600 Per annum Assume soon to be arriving to a house near you, water and house tax. Perhaps 700 per annum, We're up at 24+K per annum on those expenses alone. Without getting into, food, clothing+footwear, Motor Tax, Motor Maintenance, and other expenses which could be reduced if required, TV/Phone/Broadband etc Thats having 1 young kid.
ahnowbrowncow wrote: » It is grossly unfair. She's no better qualified, in some cases they are less qualified because a lot of new teachers these days also have their masters. There is no valid reason why they should be paid more than new teachers and hopefully they'll be brought down to that level fairly soon.
ahnowbrowncow wrote: » Sorry to be harsh but having an unsustainable mortgage is not a valid reason not to have a pay cut, if you had waited a couple of years you would also be able to avail of these half price houses you think these new teachers are benefiting from.
ahnowbrowncow wrote: » What extra hours? The provision, with effect from the start of the 2010/11 school year, of an additional hour per week to be available to facilitate, at the discretion of management, school planning, continuous professional development, induction, substitution and supervision (including supervision immediately before and after school times).
TeddyTedson wrote: » This country is ****ing ridiculous. You have a minister for health trying to cut spending in the HSE yet he can't cut the wages of the workers. Consultants on €250,000 a year, then they have their private patients on top of that. They will all agree that it's disgraceful that he's now trying to take money from the disabled, but will you see any offering to take a cut, no. The way things are no minister for health can possibly do a good job. It's actually impossible. And 2013s budget is going to be the toughest Budget by FG yet, according to Enda Kenny himself. Most of us are not going to have a pot to piss in by the end of things. Something has to give. I'm thinking their will come a time that people just ****ing lose it. People argue that Irish people never do anything. But even the most tolerant people have their limits, and I think we're going to see the straw that really breaks the camels back in the next few years.
tomtherobot wrote: » Wouldn't that person be entitled to a single family tax allowance? Or else their OH would most likely be doing the childminding? I know very little about tax rates outside my own, but it sound's like a lot of tax for a working one parent family?
goz83 wrote: » I disagree. They know what their salary will be, before they take the job. They also get paid extra for whatever qualifications they have. AFAIK, someone with a masters is paid more than someone with a degree, regardless of where that qualification lies, so you could have someone with a masters in history, teaching English and getting paid more, simply because they have a masters. Can you imagine what would happen if salaries were brought down to that level for people who are already struggling/failing to keep food on the table?
goz83 wrote: » Don't be arrogant. You're not sorry at all. You're just trying to put your point across, so please don't be falsely apologetic. If I had waited waited a couple of years....give me a break. Many people, including myself felt that if we did not get a house when we did, we probably never would have. At the time, we were living in a small 1 bed bungalow on my inlaws land. Our son slept in the main house and our daughter stayed with us, in our bedroom. Rental costs were beyond a joke and we were cracking up. I busted my ass in a job I hated, just so we could get the figures right, so we could finally buy a house, to call a home. I'm clearly not the only one who was in this type of situation, as so many took out massive mortgages, just so they could house their family.
goz83 wrote: » Did I say extra daily hours? Every school works it differently and whatever way my wifes timetable is done, every 2nd week, for a day, her working hours are stretched and the staff are called to a scheduled meeting at around 5pm. Tough cheese if your classroom hours are finished as early as 2pm. You have to be there at 5pm to 8, or 9pm, depending on the way they schedule things.
ncdadam wrote: » The paranoia is beginning to show now.
Monty Burnz wrote: » The legal profession needs to be looked at - I believe the ridiculously high cost of legal fees is something the Troika has issues with (and of course these costs affect us all through our taxes and our own interactions with the legal industry). Hopefully the Troika will force something through against the will of the immensely powerful legal lobby.
woodoo wrote: » Look at the indo today, wall to wall croke park agreement. Barely a word on anything else. Why? to sell papers that's why.
woodoo wrote: » If they had a cut then we could have cheaper electricity.
byhookorbycrook wrote: » So raise taxes then. Private sector had not been hammered, many have not been hit in any way, all public sector workers have been cut.
ahnowbrowncow wrote: » Nope, they've also got rid of that for new teachers, no more allowance for having a masters or a first class honours degree, so someone teaching with a pass degree is getting paid 33% more than someone with a masters, yeah that's fair. Struggling to put food on the table with a teachers salary, surely that's just bad financial management on their part and why should every other tax payer pay for that?
ahnowbrowncow wrote: » Renting is just as costly these days as it was in 2008 but new teachers have to put up with that, they can't just go get a mortgage for a house. And even if they wanted to it's unlikely they'd be granted one so they can't avail of the lower priced houses. And I wasn't being arrogant I don't want to see people struggle but just because you have a mortgage should not mean you are immune to pay cuts.
ahnowbrowncow wrote: » They have scheduled meetings from 5pm-8pm regularly? That's not part of the CPA and tbh it's the first I've heard of it. Unless it's paid supervision for evening study classes?
ncdadam wrote: » Because the time has come for the PS to be brought into line with the reality the country is facing. The government is supposed to be running this country, not the PS unions. The sooner PS workers realise this, the better. This is not aimed at the lower paid in that sector, rather the ones on over the €50k mark who's sense of entitlement is plain for all to see.
Japer wrote: » Its not just in these recessionary times that public servants are paid and pensioned astronomically. A long time ago David McWilliams pointed out:[]Ireland's average public sector pay in 2004 of €45,643 is the highest in the range of six advanced EU countries and compares with Britain at €35,189 and Germany €33,905. Irish public sector pay is 30% higher than Britain's. []Ireland is unique in the group of six in paying its public sector more than private sector pay,a whopping 28% more. And that's before valuing jobs for life security and gold plated final salary pensions.This is a form of state orchestrated looting of the private sector. []In the other countries, private sector pay is higher than the public sector's: in Britain by 8%,Germany 5%,Denmark 8%,Finland 12% and Netherlands 0.4%.http://www.davidmcwilliams.ie/2008/1...onomic-history
Colmustard wrote: » It would be stupid to scrap the croke park agreement "now", this government has managed to push through austerity with little to no public opposition.
maryk123 wrote: » So the people who take in your car tax and the people who book you into hospitals and the people who type up the reports who cleaned the hospital while you were in there directed you where to go. the people who take your dole application and take abuse the people who investigate false claims. serioussly there are more than teachers and gardai in the ps. there are typists/porters/librarians/receptionist/kitchen staff/laundry/that keep the ps running and they are on nothing like the salary of the teachers and gardai and they are the ones the cuts will hit the most. will people get real this bull**** of the ps not taking hits is absolutely stupid. i agree with the above poster when the croke park is finished and they starting cutting wages from the bottom up which is where they will start because remember the politicians are on the ps wages so the cuts wont start at the top-then the public will be delighted that these people are struggling-some people have no idea how others live. dont think that ps workers are loaded and living comfortably because its the opposite everyone is struggling and finding it hard. cut the dole for the young people and get them doing courses instead of sitting on their arse at home being handed 100-186 euro a week. start with that before cutting the people who are keeping your children in school, helping the sick in hospital, helping you pay your car tax, keeping libriaries, fire stations open. there are other ways of saving money. get real.
Japer wrote: » Its not just in these recessionary times that public servants are paid and pensioned astronomically. A long time ago David McWilliams pointed out:[]Ireland's average public sector pay in 2004 of €45,643 is the highest in the range of six advanced EU countries and compares with Britain at €35,189 and Germany €33,905. Irish public sector pay is 30% higher than Britain's. []Ireland is unique in the group of six in paying its public sector more than private sector pay,a whopping 28% more. And that's before valuing jobs for life security and gold plated final salary pensions.This is a form of state orchestrated looting of the private sector.[]In the other countries, private sector pay is higher than the public sector's: in Britain by 8%,Germany 5%,Denmark 8%,Finland 12% and Netherlands 0.4%.http://www.davidmcwilliams.ie/2008/1...onomic-history
Einhard wrote: » Are you for real? You seem to making all this up as you go along. A few pages back you were claiming that the average public sector pay in the UK was £21500, now you're stating it's far higher. You seem to just google a few terms, and select the first links that seem to confirm your POV. There's literally no consistency to your argument at all. Does it not even bother you that your stats and evidence are all over the place? You claim that Irish PS wages are 30% higher than Britain's. Even were to accept that as true (which is difficult since you're so patently unreliable), it ignores the fact that the cost of living is significantly higher in Ireland. According to the Irish Times, it's 20% higher. I'll post a link in a bit, I have it saved on another computer. Again, I'm not saying that Croke Park should not be re-opened, but I do think it's important that some type of objective debate take place, and you're clearly not interested in that.
Japer wrote: » austerity me """", the public sector wage bill in Ireland is still double what it was ten years ago. You'll see austerity yet;)
Galwayguy35 wrote: » You're statement about young people who are unemployed through no fault of their own shows how clueless some people are about the current situation we are in. I'd also love to know who these people are that "help me pay my car tax".
maryk123 wrote: » Clueless that an 18 year old can drop out of school and be handed 100 euro for sitting on their arse. its you who is clueless. they should be FORCED to train. what example are we setting the young people - here take 100 for doing nothing and get used to a life of sitting at home-is that what we are teaching the young of today. They should only get that 100 if they train and if they stop it should be stopped thats how you get the young people off their ass. Also the people who are helping you pay your car tax are the ps who are sitting behind the desk taking forms answering queries. honestly if it needs explaining.
ilovesleep wrote: » Clap trap, Instead what do we have. A jobsbridge schemed where it is being abused, no end. Taking real jobs and paying jobs out from the economy. Incompetency from our leaders and those in power.