Monday, January 30, 2023

Canadian bureaucrats to vote in strike ballots


More than 120,000 members
of the Public Service Alliance of Canada (PASC) are to start to take part in strike votes next month after talks on a new pay and conditions deal dissolved into acrimony.

The Federal Government has accused the PSAC of not negotiating in good faith for a new collective agreement.

The strike votes involve workers in the Program and Administrative Services; Technical Services; Education and Library Science, and Operational Services groups. They will be held between 22 February and 19 April.

The four bargaining units are part of the Treasury Board Secretariat, a Central Government Agency that facilitates a significant amount of work related to the basic functioning of the Federal Government.https://d21y75miwcfqoq.cloudfront.net/70c8fc80

National President of the PSAC, Chris Aylward said Federal Public Servants were there when Canadians needed them the most “seeing us through one crisis after another”.

“Now, the Government needs to be here for workers, because while it stalls on making things right, we all pay the price,” Mr Aylward (pictured) said.

Earlier this month, the Federal Government filed two complaints against the PSAC with the Federal Public Sector Labour Relations and Employment Board, claiming the union was not negotiating in good faith.

“The PSAC has flooded the bargaining tables with costly proposals, refusing to prioritise its requests, refusing to move on its initial proposals, and has not responded to the employer’s comprehensive offers,” the complaints alleged.

The PSAC left the bargaining table on 1 September last year, during the sixth negotiation session, and declared an impasse.

Mr Aylward said the complaint filing was just another stalling tactic to deny workers a fair contract. He alleged the Government had refused to negotiate on remote work and better work-life balance.

He also said the Government wage offer of 2.06 per cent per year was “completely out of touch with record-high inflation over the past two years”.

More Public Service News at World PS News | PS News

Monday, January 23, 2023

UK unions rage at ‘strike ban law’


T
he United Kingdom Government’s dispute with the public sector has escalated after unions reacted furiously to proposed legislation they say could let Ministers ban strikes in some areas.

This follows a statement by Minister for Business, Grant Shapps in Parliament that he would introduce legislation to “ensure the safety of the British public”.

Both unions and the Opposition Labour Party said Mr Shapps’ proposal for statutory minimum service levels in six areas — health, education, ambulance, transport, fire, border security and nuclear decommissioning — would exacerbate disputes that needed to be resolved by “negotiation, not legislation”.

The text of the Bill contained no details about what would constitute a minimum service level in any of the relevant sectors, although Mr Shapps told MPs that Ministers would consult on the matter.

However, he would retain powers to “make regulations providing for levels of service where there are strikes in relevant services”, prompting worries among unions that the Government could, in effect, veto strikes by setting overly high minimum service levels.

In retaliation, some unions have called for a day of action on 1 February, formally titled a ‘protect the right to strike’ day, following discussions between representatives of the National Health Service (NHS), railways, education and the Public Service at the headquarters of the Trades Union Congress (TUC) in London.

While a spokesperson for the TUC said comparisons with a general strike were wide of the mark, existing anger over declining real-terms pay and staff shortages had been fuelled by the proposed anti-strike law.

The spokesperson did not rule out “highly-disruptive, coordinated stoppages across sectors”.

However, some unions are wary of what has been called the ‘nuclear option’ and at this stage the day of action will probably not happen in the widespread form its advocates were suggesting.

Union officials said they feared that any concerted stoppage, involving massive disruption to a range of key public services, could reduce public support for the continuing campaign of individual strikes.

More Public Service World News at World PS News | PS News 

Monday, January 16, 2023

UK Ministers ‘ignoring cost-of-living crisis’


A United Kingdom public sector
union leader has accused the Government of making no effort to resolve the wave of pay-related strikes that are affecting a range of services across the nation.

General Secretary of the FDA union, representing senior bureaucrats, Dave Penman said Prime Minister, Rishi Sunak and his Ministers were wilfully ignoring the gulf between current pay offers and the rate of inflation.

He accused Ministers of using the Royal College of Nursing’s inflation-busting pay demand of 19 per cent as an excuse to avoid engaging in necessary talks to help workers with cost-of-living pressures.

“The nurses have asked for 19 per cent. Okay then, what are you offering?” Mr Penman (pictured) asked.

“What are you doing to try and resolve it? You’re doing nothing. That’s what we’ve said to the Minister for the Civil Service as well: You’re not attempting to resolve this.”

Meanwhile, former Public Servants and Local Government staff who took early retirement during the COVID-19 pandemic are thinking about returning to work as the cost-of-living crisis bites, official statistics have revealed.

Retirees accounted for around half of Government staff aged 50-to-65 who left the workforce during the pandemic and are considering a return, the Office for National Statistics figures showed.

‘Retirement regret’ was higher among ex-Public Servants and Local Government workers than for other occupations.

By contrast, only 37 per cent of healthcare workers who were thinking about returning to work had left through retirement, with 27 per cent saying they had quit because of stress.

Of those ex-Public Servants who were thinking of returning to the workforce, nearly two-thirds said money was a key consideration.

Around one in three said they thought returning to the workplace could improve their mental health, and a similar number said they would be looking for social company or a job they enjoyed.

More Public Service News at World PS News | PS News

Monday, January 9, 2023

Hong Kong bureaucrats a dating target


HONG KONG (December 31): Hong Kong Public Servants have become hot commodities in the dating market as mainland Chinese opt for a partner with access to the Special Administrative Region’s ‘iron rice bowl’.

The trend, which has been flying under the radar for some time, surfaced with the story of a 33-year-old woman from Jiangsu Province in eastern China who was seeking a Public Servant from Hong Kong with the benefits of a good salary and excellent living and education benefits.

The head of the dating agency where the woman first posted, Tiffany Chan said most of her clients came from the mainland and had specific criteria for their partners, including matching education, income and family background.

“Civil Servants are particularly popular due to their perceived stability and benefits. My clients prefer dating agencies to apps due to privacy concerns,” Ms Chan said.

With the re-opening of the border between the mainland and Hong Kong as pandemic restrictions eased, Ms Chan expected to see a further increase in demand for cross-border nuptials.

Many mainland bloggers also portray the Hong Kong Public Service as a promising career choice.

One of the most regular bloggers shared how he had passed the recruitment examination for the Hong Kong Public Service stating “the end of the universe is the civil service exam”.

This expression is widely used to express Chinese young people’s desire to work for the Government and secure a job for life, or what is colloquially known as the ‘iron rice bowl’.

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Sacked UK official’s orthodoxy rewarded

LONDON (January 1): The top United Kingdom Treasury official sacked by former Prime Minister, Liz Truss for “economic orthodoxy” has been given an award in the country’s New Year’s Honours list.

Sir Tom Scholar, who served as Permanent Secretary in the Treasury from 2016 until September 2022, has received Knights Grand Cross of the Order of the Bath, an award given to members of the UK military or Public Service for exemplary service.

Sir Tom’s sacking, just two days after Ms Truss became Prime Minister, was seen as symbolic of her radical approach to economic policy and was criticised in some quarters for depriving the Treasury of institutional memory.

Former Chancellor, Kwasi Kwarteng’s subsequent ‘mini-Budget’, during which he unveiled large tax cuts without explaining how they would be paid for, triggered turmoil in the markets. Ms Truss later resigned, just 44 days after entering Downing Street.

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PS pay row barrier to Yemeni peace

SANAA (January 2): A dispute over Public Service pay is holding up resolution of Yemen’s civil war which has so far caused 377,000 deaths, displaced four million people and forced 15.6 million into extreme poverty.

Iran-backed Houthi rebels say the matter must be resolved with the internationally recognised Government before they can agree to a permanent ceasefire.

The Houthis have been pushing the Yemeni Government to pay salaries according to a 2022 payroll that contains employees working for Houthi-run State institutions.

The Government has so far responded that it would only make payments to those Public Servants that were on the payroll in 2014 — the year the civil war began.

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PM lashes ‘stubborn bribe-takers’

KUALA LUMPUR (January 1): Malaysian Prime Minister, Anwar Ibrahim has lashed out at a small number of Public Servants who he says “stubbornly refuse to stop soliciting for and accepting bribes”.

“Corruption must be stopped in its tracks. I will not hesitate to take action against this small number of Public Servants as their action tarnishes the Government's image,” Datuk Seri Anwar said.

He said he would also not allow any negligent action from Public Servants and Cabinet Ministers “that would lead to the destruction of the nation”.

"This is a great slander against Public Servants who have changed their ways. I hope there will be repentance and change or stern action will be taken,” the Prime Minister said.

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Finns back public broadcaster

HELSINKI (January 2); Finns have overwhelmingly supported public broadcaster, YLE with 92 per cent of respondents to a survey saying it had met its obligations very well, well, or relatively well.

This represented an improvement of two percentage points from the 2021 survey.

YLE was lauded particularly for providing domestically-produced content in the mother tongue of the respondents and for making its contents and services readily accessible.

The public broadcaster was also assessed to have succeeded in providing information during crises, servicing special groups and language minorities, and providing reliable information.

The full International PS News service will resume on January 17 

 

 

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Tuesday, January 3, 2023

Ring out the bad, ring in the worse


The bad news is the International Crisis Group (ICG), an independent body that works to prevent wars and hopefully promote peace, has had a difficult and fraught year.

The worse news is that it expects to be even busier in 2023 as it continues to seek solutions to a series of hot spots, any one of which could explode into a global conflagration to complement the continuing war in Ukraine.

After reviewing the fallout from the Russian invasion of its neighbour, which occupied most of the year, ICG Chief Executive, Comfort Ero and Executive Vice President, Richard Atwood believe the impact of that conflict may will influence a return to hostilities between Azerbaijan and Armenia, with the very real possibility that Azerbaijan may overrun its neighbour.

They believe the military balance is now so totally tilted in Azerbaijan’s favour that its forces could take complete control of the disputed enclave of Nagorno-Karabakh, now that Armenia’s Russian backer is distracted in Ukraine.

Iran, rocked by internal protests and ostracized in the West for its military support of Russia, is another potential pressure-point in 2023.

Police and other pro-Government authorities have killed hundreds of demonstrators, many of them young women protesting over the compulsory hijab law, all of which makes the chances of further talks over the revival of the 2015 nuclear deal even less likely.

In this scenario, Israel’s new right-wing Government might decide to take matters into its own hands and strike at Iran’s nuclear facilities.

With so much going on, the world seems to have forgotten about Yemen, and while major fighting between Houthi rebels and the country’s internationally-recognised Government has ceased, hopes of a broader resolution have dimmed as both sides have used the truce to prepare for further war.  

In the Democratic Republic of Congo the M23 rebel group holds several towns in the eastern part of this vast African nation. It appears to be well-armed and quite capable of extending its influence in 2023.

The waters are muddied by the presence of several other rebel groups, including the so-called Allied Democratic Forces, which is linked to Islamic State, while troops from Uganda and Kenya, invited in by President Félix Tshisekedi, are a further complication.

To the north, Burkina Faso, Mali and Niger are having no success in beating back Islamic insurgents in fighting that has killed thousands and driven more than two million people from their homes.

Add Haiti, wracked by political and gang violence since the murder of President Jovenal Moïse in July 2021, and the perennial flashpoint of Taiwan, which could easily boil over into a confrontation between China and the United States, and there is little to cheer about now the New Year celebrations are over.

Despite all this, Ukraine continues to be front of mind. President Vladimir Putin’s once proud boast that his forces would be in Kyiv in three days and conquer the entire country in 17, have been carefully filed away by the Kremlin, and with Western-armed Ukraine on the offensive, there is little chance of the conflict ending any time soon.

In desperation, Putin has tried to re-portray the war as between Russia and the West, with Russia’s very survival at stake. This may pave the way for a full-scale mobilisation in 2023, a risky move that could easily backfire, considering the chaos that followed a partial mobilisation of 300,000 conscripts during the year.

The real danger is the war taking on a momentum of its own, with neither side able to control an escalation towards an all-out conflict, rather like what occurred in the fateful summer of 1914.

I believe Putin is beyond hope, but the West must never cease its attempts to convince other influential figures in the Kremlin that while any threat to Russia itself is a nonsense, attempts to expand its territories beyond current borders is, and always will be, unacceptable.    

 

Monday, January 2, 2023

President powerless to prevent fraud


MOGADISHU (December 26): Two-thirds of the 5,000 Somali Federal Government employees are not reporting for work, despite drawing their salaries paid by the World Bank, President Hassan Sheikh Mohamud has admitted.

Addressing Government officials at the Presidential Mosque, Mr Mohamud (pictured) said these ‘ghost’ Public Servants were resulting in the loss of millions of US dollars provided by international partners — including funds from the United States and United Kingdom – to support Somalia State-building.

“There are more than 5,000 Public Servants registered in our biometric system, but only 1,500 of them report for work every day. Where are the rest? They do not exist or they do not live in the country,” Mr Mohamud said.

“However, they are still paid. They are thieves and their superiors who accepted this scheme are also thieves. They are simply stealing public money.”

In 2014, the World Bank reengaged in Somalia for the first time in 23 years to provide public financial management, capacity building and Budget support.

Using biometric identification, the Bank created a new project called Recurrent Cost and Reform Financing, which pays thousands of Public Servants.

However, several reports have warned that lack of transparency and limited supervision could lead to donor funding ending up in private individuals’ pockets. 

Mr Mohamud surprisingly admitted that some senior Government officials had been travelling to perform Hajj — the annual Islamic pilgrimage to Mecca, in Saudi Arabia, the holiest city for Muslims — with stolen public money.  

“These officials bought plane tickets with the money they stole from the Government and travelled to perform Umrah or Hajj,” he said.

Somalia, along with Syria, is ranked next-to-last in Transparency International’s 2021 Corruption Perceptions Index, which measures the perception of public sector corruption in 180 countries around the world.

According to the Anti-Corruption Resource Centre, corruption in Somalia is further exacerbated by the absence of a functional Central Government, a lack of resources and administrative capacity, weak leadership structures as well as a limited ability to pay public officials.

Mr Mohamud said his Government was trying to do something about stopping the problem of corruption in the country but it remained very weak.

“We are not happy with it,” he said.

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 No let-up in Britain’s industrial unrest

LONDON (December 30): The General Secretary of the Public and Commercial Services Union has warned the United Kingdom Government that “coordinated and synchronised” strike action across the country would significantly escalate throughout January.

Mark Serwotka was speaking as his members employed in passport control for the Border Force set up picket lines at Britain’s largest airports.

Mr Serwotka pointed to a series of possible fresh strikes with half a million teachers balloting for strike action, as are firefighters, while junior doctors could also vote for a strike in protest of pay offers that do not match cost-of-living pressures.

“I think it is only a matter of time before all the unions recognise the Government is the cause of these disputes, so we will work closer together, and I think we will see action that is coordinated and synchronised, and escalating,” Mr Serwotka said.

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Canadian Province fights to preserve wage cap

TORONTO (December 30): The Government of the Canadian Province of Ontario is appealing a court decision that struck down a law limiting wages for public sector workers.

In the notice of appeal, the Government argued Justice Markus Koehnen erred in ruling that its legislation infringed the applicants' rights to freedom of association and collective bargaining and was thus unconstitutional.

Groups representing several hundred thousand public sector employees had challenged the constitutionality of the law, passed in 2019, which capped wage increases at one per cent per year for three years.

The Government had argued the law did not infringe constitutional rights, saying the Constitution only protected the process of bargaining, not the outcome, and the legislation was a time-limited approach to help eliminate a Budget deficit.

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Nigerians urged to join corruption fight

ABUJA (December 26): Nigeria’s top corruption fighter has called on the general public to help weed out fraud in the Federal Public Service.

Chair of the Anti-Corruption and Transparency Unit at the Ministry of Science, Technology and Innovation, Stella Igwilo said corrupt practices her Agency had uncovered included falsification of age, bribery, nepotism, embezzlement, influence-peddling and abuse of public office.

“The unit will interface with the members of the public to reduce the effect of corruption, ensuring good governance for effective service delivery,” Ms Igwilo said.

“This initiative shows we are committed to the total elimination of corrupt practices, and will work with all parties to achieve this.”

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Bureaucracy ‘serves people — not parties’

SUVA (December 30): Fiji’s new Prime Minister, Sitiveni Rabuka says the nation’s  Public Servants must help him as they have helped the last elected Government for the past eight years.

Mr Rabuka said Public Servants committed themselves to work for the people when they entered the bureaucracy.

He also had a word for MPs, saying they stopped being politicians when they were declared Members of Parliament — “they become servants of the people just as Public Servants have always been”.

“Once you get into Parliament, you stop being a member of a party, you become the voice of the people,” Mr Rabuka said.

The full International PS News service will resume on January 17