The absenteeism rate for illness across the State’s 34 local authorities was 5.19 per cent in 2011, in the HSE it was 4.9 per cent and in the civil service 4.21 per cent. However, in the private sector, the rate was 2.58 per cent, or fewer than six days missed per worker, according to employers’ body Ibec.
However, the civil service has bucked the trend, experiencing a 13.2% increase in the cost of sick leave, from €52m to €58.9m, in the space of just three years. Certified leave accounts for the bulk of the increase, rising from €46m to €53.5m.
Trigger Happy wrote: » Only 1% of Civil servants not are actually performing
UCDVet wrote: » I've only had a few experiences with Civil servants, but I found them all to be as good, if not better, than my experiences with private employees.
Trigger Happy wrote: » So you think this assessment of their job performance is accurate? Hold off on answering while I grab the popcorn.
joe swanson wrote: » Or maybe just maybe we have a hard working public sector who,even after all the cuts and abuse are good workers.
Capt'n Midnight wrote: » Civil servants have an absenteeism rate of 4.21% compared to 2.58% in the private sector. Though in the bad old days you'd hear stories about people taking off their untaken sick leave at the end of the year.http://www.irishtimes.com/news/health/local-authority-sick-leave-twice-that-in-the-private-sector-1.1616147http://www.irishexaminer.com/ireland/cost-of-public-sector-sick-leave-falls-10-244146.html
Trigger Happy wrote: » Amazingly good news from an internal review of the performance levels of our 30,000 civil servants shows that only 1% of them have a performance level of 'needs improvement' or 'not acceptable'. In my company, a profitable IT company with a few thousand employees we normally see about 20% fall in to these categories in our annual reviews.http://www.irishtimes.com/news/ireland/irish-news/civil-service-performance-review-deemed-failure-as-majority-pass-1.1621423
Trigger Happy wrote: » A junior manager in the civil service contacted Newstalk this morning. He said that one of his reportees was a definite non-performer and he gave him the appropriate rating. But he was then contacted by the HR department telling him to change his rating as the employee would not get increments if he was badly rated.
BMJD wrote: » The problem is that if you do the absolute bare minimum you will get a 3 and thus appear to be performing well. If you are genuinely good and go the extra mile time and time again you will probably just get a 4 as managers don't like giving a 5 as it tend to raise eyebrows at a more senior level. The whole process is bollox anyway, most managers are too spineless to call out people who aren't doing their jobs right.
Spring Onion wrote: » I know in Galway they are too busy being sick!!http://www.connachttribune.ie/galway-news/item/1902-staff-illness-costing-councils-3m-a-year "Maybe there’s something in the water . . . staff at Galway’s local authorities are among the sickest employees in the country. High absenteeism rates at Galway City Council and Galway County Council have put a huge strain on finances at the two organisations that are already hard-up, according to Government figures. The direct cost of paid sickness absence at the two local authorities was nearly €3 million in a year – that’s €1.157 million at the City Council and €1.848 million at the County Council. The report showed that every member of staff at the College Road institution takes on average 13 days sick leave per annum." In 23 years of work, I haven't taken 13 days off sick...
awec wrote: » Internal review = worthless.
woodoo wrote: » How many times have you went into work and smit other people in that 23 years? If someone has the flu then stay the hell out of the workplace for a while.
UCDVet wrote: » I went from ~1 sick day per year to ~5 sick days per year. But in both cases I was just 'normal' compared to my peers.
CJC999 wrote: » So a fifth of those in IT are wasters, surprised that it's such a low figure, I would have thought closer to 80% would have been more accurate...