Tuesday 23 October 2012

Pensions Policy Institute confirms ConDem coalitions attack on public sector pensions reduced them by a third


The implications of the Coalition Government’s reforms for members of the public service pension schemes have been recently investigated by the Pensions Policy Institute.


The Pensions Policy Institute (PPI) is an independent, apolitical, educational research charity with a charitable objective to inform the policy debate on pensions and other provision for retirement. 


The Coalition Government’s proposed reforms include linking the pension benefits for public service workers to average salary rather than to final salary, linking the Normal Pension Age (NPA) to the State Pension Age (SPA) for the four largest schemes: NHS, Teachers, Local Government and the Civil Service and increasing the average contributions to be made by scheme members.

In June 2010, the Coalition Government changed the inflation measure used to uprate public service pension benefits. From April 2011, public service pensions in payment and pensions accrued are uprated in line with changes in the Consumer Prices Index (CPI), instead of the Retail Prices Index (RPI) as had been the previous policy. The CPI typically rises more slowly than the RPI because different formulae are used to calculate each index and because the CPI excludes housing costs.


The PPI’s analysis suggests that the Coalition Government’s imposed reforms to the NHS, Teachers, Local Government and Civil Service pension schemes will reduce the average value of the benefit offered across all scheme members by more than a third, compared to the value of the schemes before the Coalition Government’s proposed reforms. 

Is it any wonder the civil servants feel they are being made scape goats for the incompetence of bankers who created the deficit by a government that is driving forward a political agenda to destroy the public services.

In the Ministry of Defence we are campaigning for a Fair Deal in Defence that values the civilian component of defence capability. 

However; the attacks continue with the recent announcement to take our contractual terms and conditions of service and rip them apart for no other reason than political ideology.

It is time to stand together and protect our jobs, our families livelihoods and our terms and conditions of service.

Join the Public and Commercial Service Union: https://www.join.pcs.org.uk/en/join-pcs/index.cfm



  


Monday 22 October 2012

10,000+ march against austerity in Glasgow

At the same time as the marches in Belfast and London, more than 10,000 trade union activists and anti-cuts campaigners took to the streets of Glasgow on Saturday 20th October to protest against cuts and austerity. Organised by the STUC the mood on the demonstration was serious and determined but with a clear understanding that another demo was not going to be enough to halt the austerity juggernaut.

PCS mobilised an estimated 1,500 members to the demo and there were also big delegations from Unison, RMT, Unite and the FBU among others. Among the PCS members attending were over 100 from the MoD in Scotland including a sizeable contingent from the UKNCB whose jobs are threatened with relocation to Bristol despite the VFM study showing it would be approximately £500,000 cheaper for the jobs to remain in Scotland.

The PCS MoD members who attended are now taking up the fight via the Fair Deal in Defence campaign and will be campaigning for -

  • Meaningful negations on pay, removal of 1% pay cap and a full utilisation of the 2.7% bonus pot this year and in all future years.
  • A halt to VERS and a joint TU/management review of the impact on capability and an increase in civilian numbers if necessary.
  • Civilianisation of military posts and eradicating long hours and working out of grade, or doing more than one job or working unpaid overtime.
  • Halting privatisation, reviewing all contracts for their success or otherwise and seeking to bring work back “in house”.
  • No enforced redundancies or relocations and meaningful consultation on proposals like those affecting MGS members.
  • Introduction of the UK and London living wage for all employees with the Department and those companies providing services directly to the MoD.


 






Sunday 21 October 2012

The poor get poorer and rich get richer


Millions of low-income families face council tax rises - despite David Cameron's pledge to freeze it.
Even those who now pay nothing will get annual bills averaging nearly £300. Some poorer people will be hit for double that.
Up to 3.7million under-65s - 1.1million of them single mums - will lose council tax benefit from April 6 in what Labour is dubbing the Pickles Poll Tax.
Communities Secretary Eric Pickles is bringing in the changes the SAME day the top rate of tax drops and 8,000 millionaires get tax cuts of at least £40,000 each.

Saturday 20 October 2012

Marching for a Future that Works

Thousands took to the streets of London today to protest against the austerity cuts that are destroying lives and livelihoods.

The PCS Defence Sector group was there in the thick of it with a great turn out of members from across  the country.

We marched together in solidarity demanding a Fair Deal in Defence and an end to austerity.





















Friday 19 October 2012

Less than 24 hours to go - final preparations 20th October 2012


The mass anti-cuts TUC march tomorrow will see tens of thousands of people uniting against the government and its vicious cost-cutting agenda
Every working day for the past four weeks we have been suggesting an Activity of the Day for reps and activists to ensure the demonstration on 20 October is one of the most successful ever.
Activity No.20: It's time for a final check on materials and make sure you have details of members attending and all transport arrangements are finalised.
Then take a look at our comprehensive guide to the big day to ensure you haven't forgotten anything.

MPs' expenses threatens public trust again

Given how damaging the expenses crisis was in 2009, many will be shocked to learn that MPs are attempting to block the publication of information that appears to be a cover up of a loophole which allows MPs to pocket extra expenses cash by renting out their homes to one another.

Before the last crisis hit the headlines the Speaker at the time blocked publication of addresses of MPs who were involved in claims. This made it impossible to identify those who were 'flipping' their second homes. However, someone leaked the details to the Telegraph.


Taxpayers will wonder why MPs are taking advantage of the loophole not to cover legitimate expenses but to profit at their expense. Though technically within parliamentary rules, MPs have to know what a dim view their constituents will take of what is effectively profiteering.


Would you trust our politicians?



Thursday 18 October 2012

Minister Francis Maude Left Red-Faced After Civil Servants Protest Against His Visit


Cabinet minister Francis Maude was left red-faced on Thursday after scores of civil servants walked out in protest over his visit to their offices.
The Public and Commercial Service (PCS) union said around 200 of its members at HM Revenue and Customs offices in Coventry took part in the 15-minute walkout to protest against ideologically driven attacks on the civil service by this government.

Wednesday 17 October 2012

Marching against Austerity - Join us of the 20th October


It was Edmund Burke, the Irish political philosopher who said, “All that is necessary for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing.” This government is not evil – there is more than enough of that in the world – however, they are deliberately malicious, provocative and spiteful.

George Osborne again says that we are all in this together, but then why isn’t he tackling the huge tax avoidance of major US companies, such as Amazon, Google, Facebook and Starbucks, that have paid just £30M tax on sales of £3.1B over the last four years?

Let’s look at the facts –

Jobs

The SDSR proposed to take out 25,000 civilian jobs by 2015, with that total rising to 32,000 by 2020. When the defence secretary said earlier this year that the department had balanced its books, it was on the premise that the 32,000 job cull would in fact be done by 2015.

It is now almost exactly two years since the SDSR announcement but such is the haste to deliver these arbitrary job targets, that more than 20,000 civilian staff have left the MoD. Our union knows that this has had a devastating impact on our ability to support the front line, but ministers and senior departmental officials seem to be in denial about this.

Here is just one example of how the cuts are hurting. Francis Maude announced at the recent Conservative party conference a short, sharp ‘review’ of all civil service terms and conditions (code for making further wholesale cuts). Across Whitehall, HR teams from every civil service department are now examining their own department’s terms and conditions.  But in the MoD, we do not have the HR personnel left in the department to undertake this type of work.

According to the department’s own VERS 2 analysis, there were 1,950 people working in Human Resources at 1 April 2012. This number is already substantially down after VERS 1. The MoD made VERS 2 offers to 292 of their HR personnel – approx 15%.

In the business case to support a bid for external assistance for Deloittes to undertake the review of our terms and conditions, it stated, “Resourcing Ts and Cs work within HRD could only be achieved with a corresponding detrimental impact on one of those equally high priorities, which is self-defeating.”

In other words, we no longer have the resources, i.e. the staffing levels to carry out this work. The business case estimated the costs to be –

  • Phase 1 - £46,499.00 (ex VAT), representing 47 days support at an average cost of £989.34 per day.
  • Phase 2 - £256,610.00 (ex VAT), representing 260 days support at an average cost of £986.96 per day.

Across the Ministry of Defence, external spending rose by 24.46% between financial year 2010-11 to financial year 2011-12. As MoD jobs are lost, there is little doubt that, as evidenced by the figures above, the private sector are profiting.

This week, The Guardian (http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk/2012/oct/15/mod-military-arms-firms) has looked further into the role played by ex military and ex senior MoD officials.

On Saturday, we ask that you march to save your job, the jobs of your colleagues and the jobs of all public sector workers. The jobs that disappear are jobs that could go towards helping the growing army of unemployed youth. Young people are being put on the scrap heap before their working lives have even begun. This is economic madness.

Pay

In the last week, we have yet again seen the deregulated energy companies hike their prices up by several times the rate of inflation. The government response – almost deafening silence; although they have now ‘promised’ to formulate a policy for dealing with the UK's future energy demands.

However a spokesman for the Department of Energy and Climate Change said: "Households facing rising energy bills this winter aren't going to be helped by more inquiries or investigations that could take years to complete and implement.”

We couldn’t have put it better ourselves. We have already had two years of pay freezes in the MoD and now face what looks like an indefinite period of pay restraint. You can find out how this is impacting you by using our updated calculator at: www.pcs.org.uk/austeritycalculator. Members have already told us at meetings how their living standards have declined by between 19% and 30% and are worried that this gap will undoubtedly rise as the Government’s austerity cuts accelerate.

On Saturday, we ask that you are on the streets of London, Glasgow and Belfast to let this coalition government see what their pay restraint and austerity programme are doing to your standard of living.

Pensions

Every MoD civil servant is now paying more for a pension that will be worth substantially less when they are eventually able to retire. However, the pain and unfairness does not stop there.

The increase in April this year of around 3.2% was but the first instalment.

Similar increases in contributions will take place in April 2013 and April 2014, although their impact is unlikely to be cushioned again by further reductions in National Insurance contributions. Couple this with the rise in the old age pension of a measly £2.69 a week next year and it is not hard to work out that public sector workers not only face declining living standards now, but will also face more of the same in their retirement.

Ros Altmann, director-general of Saga said this week, “In the past, pensioners have had to choose between heating or eating. It looks like, in the coming months, they will struggle to afford either.”

On Saturday, demonstrate that not only should public sector workers retain decent and proper pensions, but all retired workers must be given a fair and equitable old age pension that allows them a quality standard of living and dignity in retirement; not one where stark choices have to be made.

Terms and Conditions

As mentioned above, not content with slashing public sector jobs, pay and pensions, this government is now attacking our terms and conditions of service that have been negotiated by our predecessor unions.

Included in the attack are:
  • Hours
  • Leave
  • Flexitime
  • Childcare
  • Volunteering
  • Vacancy filling
  • Attendance management

Changes to part-time working and attacks on flexitime are likely to hit women and those with caring responsibilities the hardest. They are already bearing the brunt of the cuts and these changes will make it even harder for them to stay in work and to earn a living wage.

On Saturday, stand up and be counted and demonstrate that it is impossible to separate this assault from the government's wider political project to unpick the welfare state.

Conclusion

The following was written by a member of the national Union of Journalists and sums up perfectly why we should all be marching on Saturday, 20 October –

“I believe that we as a society need to fundamentally re-think our principles and priorities. The crash of 2008 was an accident waiting to happen, a damning indictment of an economic model that is based on selfishness and greed, and not solidarity, companionship, co-operation and mutual help.”

“I want to live in a society where the highest aims of the most successful isn’t to be as wealthy as possible, but to be judged on how we use our talents for the good of all: a society where paying tax isn’t to be avoided but to be celebrated as a way of making the world a nicer place; a society where all war is seen as civil war, all fighting fratricide; a society where the young are given the tools to fulfill their potential, and older people are treated with respect and their contribution through their lives is both celebrated and honored by allowing them dignity and security.”

“I want to live in a society where we respect our environment and stop poisoning our world for profit. I want to live in society where those who are ill are helped, and no one makes a profit out of others misfortune. That is why I am marching on October 20th.”

You will undoubtedly have your own reasons to be concerned about the government’s austerity programme and their attacks on our pay, terms and conditions. Together we can make a difference and can demonstrate not only that there is an alternative but that alternative must start now.

It’s not too late to join us on the streets of London, Glasgow or Belfast on October 20 to march for a better society and say No to Austerity. Find out about transport arrangements from where you live at: http://falseeconomy.org.uk/oct20 and join us on the day.

We can guarantee that it will be fun and that you will meet a lot of people just like you marching for their own reasons. If you do make it, take pictures of your day and tell us why you were marching. Tweet us @defencecutscost, or email mod@pcs.org.uk to tell us your story.

Tuesday 16 October 2012

I know why I'm marching on the 20th October 2012


In addition to raiding your pension and freezing your pay, the government is now mounting unprecedented attacks on your terms and conditions.
 
The Cabinet Office has asked every civil service department to review all terms, conditions, policies and practices - essentially all the things you rely on to manage your working lives.
 
Watch and share the video opposing the assault on your terms and conditions.
 
Included in the attack are:
 
• Hours
• Leave
• Flexitime
• Childcare
• Volunteering
• Vacancy filling
• Attendance management.
 
Changes to part-time working and attacks on flexitime are likely to hit women and those with caring responsibilities the hardest. They are already bearing the brunt of the cuts and these changes will make it even harder for them to work and earn a living wage.
 
Amid an imposed pay freeze, and cuts to pensions and redundancy terms, the Cabinet Office now wants to undermine some very basic working conditions that any decent employer should offer.
 
It is impossible to separate this assault from the Tory-led government's wider political project to unpick the welfare state and drive down pay, conditions and employment rights across the economy, and we are determined to oppose it at every step.
 
Even the International Monetary Fund now admits that austerity is becoming counter-productive, instead of falling the UK budget deficit has risen by 22% this year.
 
PCS will resist changes to terms and conditions and the government’s wide-ranging cuts. On Saturday in LondonBelfast and Glasgow tens of thousands of our members are marching against austerity, alongside hundreds of thousands of colleagues from other unions and community groups.
 
The union's leaders are meeting this week to consider our response which is bound to include talking to the other unions, raising the attacks on terms and conditions with the Cabinet Office and government ministers, in parliament through our parliamentary group, and with every civil service department.
 
If you are angry about these changes you should:

• March against austerity on 20 October – pcs.org.uk/20oct
• Recruit a colleague to the union – pcs.org.uk/join
• Use the austerity pay calculator – pcs.org.uk/austeritypay
• Read and share the PCS Guardian Comment is Free terms and conditions article.
 
Together we can defend the civil service and defeat the cuts.

Friday 12 October 2012

PCS Defence Sector group consultative ballot extended after the announcement to attack current terms and conditions of service


Consultative ballot extended to 25th October
Following publication of the attack on our terms and conditions by the Cabinet Office, the group has decided to extend our consultative ballot to allow all members to express a view on this disturbing new development.

The ballot will therefore now close at noon on 25th October.

Bonfire of our terms and conditions
This week the Guardian newspaper published details of a leaked letter to HR directors instructing them to ‘review’ all our terms and conditions, to compare them against what is described as benchmark information from ‘good, modern employers’.

The letter identifies those terms and conditions immediately under threat as:

·       Annual leave
·       Relocation
·       Privilege leave
·       Subsistence
·       Occupational sick pay
·       Advances of pay
·       Hours of work
·       Probation
·       Flexitime
·       Mobility
·       Part-time working and job sharing
·       Allowances
·       Compressed hours working
·       Season ticket advance
·       Homeworking
·       Volunteering
·       Term-time working
·       Adult further education
·       Childcare
·       Eye Tests
·       Parental leave
·       Reward Vouchers
·       Excess hours, weekends and travelling time
·       Legal representation at public expense

There has been no consultation or engagement with the trade unions at either national or departmental level on these proposals.

However we know that the department has engaged Deloitte consultants, at massive expense, to tabulate MoD terms and conditions as part of the ‘review’.

No details of what makes a ‘good, modern employer’ have been provided; nor has the benchmark information been supplied to inform any debate.

As well as attacking terms and conditions, the following policies are to be ‘reviewed’:

·       Travel and expenses
·       Gifts and Hospitality
·       Conduct and discipline
·       Major Disruption to Travel
·       Grievance and dispute
·       Redeployment
·       Performance management
·       Special Leave
·       Managing poor performance
·       Vacancy Filling
·       Attendance Management
·       Whistleblowing
·       Apprenticeships
·       Work Experience

When is a ‘review’ not a review?
It is clear that this attack on terms and conditions is part of the wider vendetta against civil servants launched by Frances Maude. No one expects the ‘review’ to recommend improvements to terms and conditions, even though it can be argued that our overall working conditions have diminished substantially since 2010.

Instead, like the cuts to our pension provision and the pay freeze, it is the start of another race to the bottom where civil servants will be vilified and demonised for expecting fair treatment, fair recompense and respect at work.

Polices that have successfully diversified our workforce and allowed many to remain in work despite personal difficulties will be torn up and replaced by a harsher, crueller regime where everyone will be expected to subsidise their employers business and be grateful for the occasional crumbs from the top table.

It’s time to fight back
Our union’s Fair Deal campaign offers an opportunity to start the fight back. Senior management know that both service and civilian morale is at rock bottom, which is having a growing impact on support to the front line. If we stand firm against attacks on our terms and conditions and take action to defend them, then they will have to respond positively to our agenda and push back against the Cabinet Office cuts.

Make your voice heard
Please make sure that you vote in the consultative ballot, which now closes on 25th October and have ‘Your Say’ in the attitude survey, which closes on 31st October.  Make it clear that our working conditions matter and will not be lost without a fight.