Feature Article
Mental health info line launched
by Róisín McKane
 

A dedicated mental health phone line has been launched by the HSE. The ‘your mental health information line’ is a confidential, 24/7 freephone service that offers information on how to access services and provides signposts to support systems. You just dial 1800 111 888 to use the service.


A dedicated mental health phone line has been launched by the HSE. The ‘your mental health information line’ is a confidential, 24/7 freephone service that offers information on how to access services and provides signposts to support systems. You just dial 1800 111 888 to use the service.


This new facility aims to help and support those suffering with mental health difficulties, and their families. Callers are connected with a trained team member who can provide national and local information.


The HSE has committed just over €1 billion to the provision of mental health services in 2020, which is a significant increase in budgetary support in recent years.


Get more information on available mental health supports HERE.

Articles A
Unions warned of post-PSSA pay limbo
by Bernard Harbor
 

The possibility that no public service pay agreement will be in place to follow the current deal when it expires at the end of next year has been raised by Fórsa at a meeting of ICTU’s Public Service Committee, which represents most unions with members in the public sector.


The possibility that no public service pay agreement will be in place to follow the current deal when it expires at the end of next year has been raised by Fórsa at a meeting of ICTU’s Public Service Committee, which represents most unions with members in the public sector.


The union’s general secretary Kevin Callinan said Fórsa and other unions needed to prepare for the possibility, while urging the Government to inject more urgency into addressing problems with the current Public Service Stability Agreement (PSSA).


Talks with the Department of Public Expenditure and Reform (DPER), which have been underway since April, have reached broad agreement on a basic architecture for sectoral bargaining. This would allow unions to deal with grade-specific issues in talks early next year, with a view to implementing outcomes as part of a successor to the PSSA.


But there has, so far, been no agreement on the amount of money that would be available to meet such claims. More worryingly, the sectoral process is yet to be signed off at political level.


This needs to happen soon because a near-certain election in the first half of next year will telescope the time available for talks on a PSSA successor. It was expected that these would take place in the spring or early summer of 2020, but it’s now possible that an election – or post-election coalition talks – will be underway at that time instead.


Although PSSA pay increases are budgeted for 2020, next October’s budget would have to make provision for 2021. The likely electoral timetable means it’s increasingly feasible that negotiations and union ballots may not be concluded by then.


Earlier this year, Fórsa’s Kevin Callinan led unions into talks when he said the PSSA was no longer adequate to maintain living standards and keep up with economy-wide wage settlements. Since then the problem has worsened, with average private sector wage growth now running at three times the rate of public service increases.


Unions therefore fear a nightmare worst-case scenario where public sector pay continues to lag behind in 2020, and no deal is in place to deal with this in 2021 and beyond.


The union-backed Nevin Economic Research Institute has predicted average economy-wide pay increases of 4% in 2020 – a year when PSSA increases will be a maximum of 2.5% in total.


Fórsa has also insisted that a mechanism for dealing with grade-specific issues, including recruitment and retention difficulties, must be put in place.


It says the need for this has deepened since the summer, when the Government wound up the Public Service Pay Commission before it had made determinations for all but a tiny number of grades like nurses and doctors.

Fórsa wins leave standardisation deal
by Bernard Harbor
 

A number of HSE grades, including environmental health officers, biochemists, and pharmacy and clinical measurement grades, are to get enhanced annual leave arrangements thanks to a deal painstakingly negotiated by Fórsa.


A number of HSE grades, including environmental health officers, biochemists, and pharmacy and clinical measurement grades, are to get enhanced annual leave arrangements thanks to a deal painstakingly negotiated by Fórsa. The new arrangement will standardise their leave, bringing it in line with other health professional grades.

 

The agreement also aligns the leave of similar voluntary hospital staff, who missed out on an earlier standardisation deal that aligned leave with the HSE.

 

Under a deal brokered by the Workplace Relations Commission (WRC), the improved leave is to be backdated to 2015 on a “cost neutral” basis in both the HSE and the voluntary hospitals.

 

Formal ratification of the standardisation arrangements was delayed for over a year after employers’ body Ibec, which represents voluntary hospital management in the talks, sought clarification on how it would be implemented, particularly for recently-promoted staff. However, the HSE wrote to Ibec on 27th November confirming that an agreement had been reached, and approved voluntary hospitals to proceed to implementation stage.

 

Fórsa official Catherine Keogh said this had been frustrating as broad agreement was reached with the HSE as early as July 2018.

 

“This was a complex process involving multiple employers and even more grades. But it’s finally over the line, and the members concerned will now have their leave standardised with other colleagues. It’s a win for them delivered by the collective strength and resources of the union,” she said.

 

The earliest leave standardisation deal was done in 2009, but it emerged that certain grades weren’t covered. Repeated union attempts to redress initially stalled because of the financial crisis and subsequent recruitment moratorium.

 

The union won a commitment to address the problem as part of the 2013 Haddington Road public service deal, and agreement covering most staff was done in December 2014. The deal finalised last month has finally laid the process to rest.

Reactive workforce planning blasted
by Bernard Harbor
 

Measuring hospital waiting lists and the numbers of patients on trolleys is a crude approach that “leads to reactive and pressure-based planning” of our health services, according to Fórsa’s head of health Éamonn Donnelly.


Measuring hospital waiting lists and the numbers of patients on trolleys is a crude approach that “leads to reactive and pressure-based planning” of our health services, according to Fórsa’s head of health Éamonn Donnelly.


In a submission to an Oireachtas committee looking into workforce planning in the sector, Donnelly championed a better balance between well-resourced and adequately staffed community and hospital services, along with strong health promotion, and called for immediate planning for the introduction of the Sláintecare model.


The proposed Sláintecare programme would see a single-tier public health system, free at the point of use, with more emphasis on primary care and community services. It won cross-party report when it was unveiled in 2017.


Donnelly described workforce planning as “planning to place the right number of people with the right skills in the right place at the right time.” But he said it was hard to achieve in a disjointed, 90-year-old health service where political and operational planning was dominated by pressures in the acute hospital sector.


“The Irish health service is resourced with highly competent workers whose diligence is often compromised by a systems failure that prevents them delivering the required levels of improved patient outcomes. Effective workforce planning requires taking a step back and planning to resource the type of health system envisaged in the Sláintecare model,” he said.


Donnelly also called for multi-annual budgeting to underpin effective planning and service delivery, and to get away from “a cap in hand approach that directs resources to whatever area of healthcare is attracting the most noise at a particular point in time.”


He called for a proper mobility policy to ease pressures in staff recruitment and deployment, and criticised recruitment freezes for introducing “layer upon layer of derogation processes, which take months to navigate and leave vital posts either vacant or filled by agency workers at a higher cost to the state.”


Donnelly also highlighted the need to recruit more health and social care professionals (HSCPs), who needed a formal advocate in the health department.


“At over 7%, the rate of churn of HSCPs is second only to hospital consultants. Meanwhile, the Sláintecare model references the need for an additional 1,400 HSCPs, though this figure doesn’t take account of alarming and critical gaps in the current structure,” he said.

Huge underreporting of harassment revealed
by Hazel Gavigan
 

Just one in every five people who experience sexual harassment in their workplace report it, according to a new survey by the Irish Congress of Trade Unions (ICTU).


Just one in every five people who experience sexual harassment in their workplace report it, according to a new survey by the Irish Congress of Trade Unions (ICTU).


The study also found that only a quarter of those who have reported harassment felt their complaint was taken seriously and appropriately dealt with.

The survey uncovers many barriers to reporting. One-in-three respondents said they feared reporting would damage their working relationships, while 25% feared it would have a negative impact on their career. The same number believed they wouldn’t be believed or taken seriously.

 

In a tenth of cases, the perpetrator was part of the reporting process.

ICTU general secretary Patricia King said: “Of all the alarming statistics thrown up by the poll, I’m struck by the unacceptably high levels of under-reporting and dissatisfaction with their employer’s action among those who do report sexual harassment.”

Echoing this statement, Fórsa’s equality officer Geraldine O’Brien said clear reporting structures were needed in every organisation so that people can feel comfortable coming forward.

“Under the Employment Equality Act, employers are obliged to adopt, implement and monitor a comprehensive, effective and accessible policy on sexual harassment. The results of this survey clearly indicate that this isn’t happening in nearly enough workplaces.

 

“Everyone has the right to feel safe and be respected at work, and employers who fall short on these obligations should face greater repercussions,” she said.

ICTU’s social policy officer Laura Bambrick said that one in five incidents of sexual harassment took place at work social events, while one in seven occurred via phone, by email or online.

"The Christmas party has long been identified as the most common off-site location of workplace sexual harassment, and this is borne out in our survey. However, the extent of unwanted sexual behaviour from colleagues taking place online also points to a growing problem in the modern workplace,” she said.

The national opinion poll of 1,347 union members with experience of sexual harassment at work was conducted online between 1st and 14th November. Over 70% of respondents were women.

For more information see HERE.

Fórsa defends admin staff and managers
by Bernard Harbor
 

Fórsa has again criticised the “lazy narrative in media and political circles,” which constantly criticises health service admin and managerial staff.


Fórsa has again criticised the “lazy narrative in media and political circles,” which constantly criticises health service admin and managerial staff. In evidence to an Oireachtas committee looking into workforce planning in the sector, the union’s head of health Éamonn Donnelly rejected the false notion that the health service is awash with bureaucrats.


“In fact, the number of administrative staff in the Irish health sector is lower than many international comparators. Clerical staff are charged with important tasks, including paying the wages of doctors and nurses, and they are often the first point of contact for the public.


“The casual acceptance of this false narrative is demoralising for this group of workers, many of whom bore the biggest brunt of the cull on staff numbers during the financial crisis,” he said.


Donnelly said he supported the introduction of a performance system for senior managers. “At the very least it would protect them from generic and inaccurate allegations of incompetence, which are frequently made without any basis in fact,” he said.


He criticised HSE chief Paul Reid for taking to the national media to say the numbers of managers should be reduced, including through a redundancy scheme. “This assertion was made without any meaningful analysis. When this approach was tried before it created a massive deficit of corporate knowledge which saw the HSE hiring managers again.”


Earlier this month, the HSE agreed to meet Fórsa over Reid’s statement on the need for voluntary redundancies sometime next year. This came after the union wrote demanding that the agency conform to public service agreements.


In a response to Fórsa’s head of health, Éamonn Donnelly, the HSE’s national director of human resources conceded that management would abide by its obligations to consult and engage with the union.

Private pay rises three times faster than public
by Bernard Harbor
 

Average private sector wage growth was three times higher than in the public service in the year to September 2019. New figures, published by the Central Statistics Office (CSO) last week, showed that average weekly earnings rose by 3.9% in the private sector and 1.3% in the civil and public service.


Average private sector wage growth was three times higher than in the public service in the year to September 2019. New figures, published by the Central Statistics Office (CSO) last week, showed that average weekly earnings rose by 3.9% in the private sector and 1.3% in the civil and public service.


The largest private sector increases came in the administrative and support sector (7.2%) and information and communications (6.8%).


The quarterly figures suggest that the gap between earnings in the public and private sectors is continuing to narrow. A recent detailed CSO study showed that the public-private pay differential closed between 2015 and 2018, despite the fact that significant restoration of crisis-era pay cuts took place in that period.


It found that the pay differential in those years ranged from -3.8% to +7.1%, depending on how it’s measured. In other words, by some measures, average public service pay is now lower than in the private sector.


Fórsa general secretary Kevin Callinan welcomed the fact that incomes were rising, but said pay was now increasing faster in virtually every part of the private sector, when compared to the public service. “The fact that the largest increase was in administrative and support services adds further weight to the union’s call for a review of public service pay," he said.


Recent pay rise projections from the union-backed Nevin Economic Research Institute (NERI) suggest that the gap may narrow again. It predicts average economy-wide pay increases of 3.6% this year. This is significantly ahead of increases under the Public Service Stability Agreement, which come in at just over 1.75% in 2019. NERI predicts average economy-wide pay increases of almost 4% next year.


Private sector increases are being driven by labour shortages in an ever-broader range of occupations. Last week’s CSO figures showed that the job vacancy rate had fallen to just 0.8% in the year to September 2019, down from 1% the previous year.


The monthly unemployment rate stood at 4.8% in October.

Red weather protocol published
by Mehak Dugal
 

The HSE recently published its new ‘red weather event policy,’ which outlines protocols for emergency weather conditions. The policy covers leave and payment arrangements for HSE and Section 38 staff during ‘red weather events’.


The HSE recently published its new ‘red weather event policy,’ which outlines protocols for emergency weather conditions. The policy covers leave and payment arrangements for HSE and Section 38 staff during ‘red weather events’.


Fórsa called for the introduction of a protocol after last March’s Storm Emma, which left many HSE employees unable to get to work.


No protocol was in place at the time, and Fórsa had to take action to ensure payment for staff who worked during the storm, as well as those who couldn’t get to work and were initially told that annual leave would be docked.


The new policy seeks to deliver a consistent approach by placing responsibility for invoking and applying the policy in the hands of very senior managers.


In cases where senior management decides the local weather in their area reflects the nationally advised red weather warning, paid emergency leave of up to one day can be granted to staff who were rostered to work on the day. But there is no provision to extend paid leave, even if the severe weather conditions persist.


The remaining leave would still have to be taken out of their annual leave, or availed of as unpaid leave or adjusted against their accrual. An early leave during red weather conditions will also not be adjusted against annual leave.


The document also outlines a new remuneration system called ‘recognition awards’ for staff who arrive before their rostered time to provide health services during red weather events. Employees who are requested to stay beyond their scheduled time will also be compensated.


Eamonn Donnelly, Head of Fórsa’s Health & Welfare Division, said “At least the development of a policy ensures a level of consistency and planning which clearly didn’t exist in previous events.”


The policy is set to be reviewed on November 2020.


Read the payment scale and full guidelines here.

Also in this issue
Union subs ceiling raised
by Eoin Ronayne
 

The ceiling for Fórsa subscriptions has been raised from €380 to €387.60 with effect from 1st January 2020. This applies to those members paying the general membership rate of 0.8% of gross pay, which has an annual ceiling of €48,450. This ceiling ensures a limit to the amount that members are asked to pay in annual subscription to the union.


In accordance with the union’s rules, Fórsa’s elected National Executive Committee (NEC) decided to make the change to take account of the pay adjustment under the Public Service Stability Agreement (PSSA) of 2% due to civil and public servants in 2020.
The union’s two other subscription rates are unaffected by the change. These are the legacy rate paid by those who were members of the former PSEU on 31st December 2017 and the 1% rate for new and existing CO related grades in the Civil Service who have access to the former CPSU Benefit Scheme which was carried over into Fórsa.

 

Benefits
On top of negotiated pay increases and protection when things go wrong at work, union members can benefit from an improved range of membership entitlements introduced when Fórsa was formed in 2018.


These include €5,000 in personal accident cover or €5,000 critical illness cover or death benefit, which also is also available to spouses of Fórsa members.


Alternatively, €5,000 in illness benefit is available to members who are out of work for more than 12 months. And Fórsa also covers evacuation or repatriation expenses up to the value of €250,000 for members who become seriously ill or injured, or who die, while abroad.


That’s on top of a range of financial benefits, negotiated with external providers, which can mean big savings on financial products like car, home and travel insurance, pension benefits, salary protection and life cover.


Fórsa members can also avail of free counselling, legal advice and support helplines, 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, 365 days a year. And they can opt into our group scheme, which gives them access to huge savings on a wide range of everyday items and services including restaurants, retailers, hairdressers and coffee shops.


Get full details about membership benefits here

Passport opens doors at work
ICTU/IBEC launch workplace passport scheme for workers with disability
by Niall Shanahan
 

Congress General Secretary Patricia King and Danny McCoy, CEO of IBEC, have launched a Workplace Accommodation Passport scheme to enable workers with a disability to carry out their work on an equal footing with others.

 

The joint launch took place on Tuesday (3rd December), the International Day of People with Disabilities.

 

Fórsa’s head of education Andy Pike said the newly launched scheme provides for reasonable accommodation ‘passports’ whereby workers needing an adjustment to assist them in staying in their job, or accessing training, can set out the accommodation required due to their disability and agree an action plan with management.

 

“This is then portable to their next job, so they can demonstrate to their new employer what is needed to assist them in carrying out their work. It’s a very useful initiative and marks another step to improved equality in the workplace. It’s particularly welcome to see unions and employers launching this initiative together,” he said.

 

Read more HERE.

 

Unions mobilise against politics of hate
by Bernard Harbor
 

Fórsa and other leading trade unions are urging members to support a rally for peace, and against the politics of hatred, which will take place outside the Dáil from 1pm on Saturday 14th December.


The event, which is also being backed by faith and community groups, will bring people and families together “to sing and eat mince-pies in the spirit of the festive season, and to stand up for an Ireland where everyone feels safe and welcome,” according to the organisers.


The initiative is, in part, a response to small gatherings of anti-immigrant agitators, which have been taking place in recent weeks.


Along with Fórsa, the peace event is supported by Siptu, the Irish Nurses and Midwives Organisation, Unite and Mandate, as well as the Dublin City Interfaith Forum, the National Women’s Council of Ireland, the Stop Climate Chaos Coalition, and the Irish Network Against Racism.


The rally takes place at 1pm on Saturday 14th December outside the Dáil in Kildare Street, Dublin 2

New ‘green deal’ demand
by Róisín McKane
 

Ireland needs a total rework of its ideas about economic development if we are to achieve a ‘green new deal,’ according to Maynooth academic Dr Lorna Gold.

 

Speaking at a recent event hosted by the union-backed Nevin Economic Research Institute, she called for a “war on emissions,” expanded public transport, and major programmes to retrofit public housing and the homes of those on low incomes.

 

First proposed by US Democrats, and inspired by US President Roosevelt’s 1930’s depression-busting New Deal, the green new deal describes a package of social and economic measures that would simultaneously address climate change and economic inequality.

 

It complements the concept of a ‘just transition,’ which is championed by unions here and abroad. This would protect workers and communities currently dependent on environmentally-damaging jobs and industries as we move to a low-carbon world.

 

Giving NERI’s annual Dónal Nevin lecture in Dublin, Gold urged policymakers to focus on communities on the margins and to manage the migration to low-carbon by creating generous supports for those affected by the necessary economic and industrial shifts.

 

While there are no jobs on a dead planet, we must share the unavoidable cost to workers directly affected by green measures, particularly through the creation of meaningful employment replacement opportunities.

 

And she argued that we need to radically revise our social policy to develop a progressive welfare state, social insurance and quality social services: a “social floor to be strengthened and reformed to address the challenges of an equally unpredictable world.”

 

Gold said Ireland could be well placed to participate in a global response to the climate crisis. But she warned that changed mind-sets were needed.


The Climate Change Performance Index ranked Ireland the worst EU country on climate action as recently as 2017. A year later, two more studies had us just above Poland at second from the bottom.

Employers join four-day week debate
by Hazel Gavigan
 

Local employers and members of the public were among those who attended regional information evenings on the Fórsa-led four-day week campaign in the union’s Limerick and Galway offices last week.


Representatives from the various pillars of the coalition spoke at the event, including Fórsa campaigns director, Joe O’Connor, Margaret Cox, director of Galway recruitment company ICE, Orla O’Connor and Sandra McCullagh of the National Women’s Council of Ireland, and Oisín Coghlan of Friends of the Earth.


Attendees had the opportunity to ask the panel questions about the concept of a four-day week and the benefits it would bring to their lives and workplaces. There was a diverse presence of people from all across society, employees and business owners alike, all keen to learn about what the campaign has to offer.


Joe O’Connor welcomed the interest in the meetings. “As part of the campaign’s promotion of the four-day week, it offers support and resources to businesses considering trialling shorter working time. So it was great to have employers present as well as members of the public,” he said.


The initiative is the Irish leg of an international campaign to establish a four-day week without reductions in pay or productivity. It aims to achieve a gradual, steady, managed transition to a shorter working week for all workers in the private and public sectors.


Meanwhile, the international campaign is gathering momentum as Microsoft Japan announced that productivity rose by 40% when it tested a four-day week in the summer. Its ‘work-life choice challenge 2019’ saw the tech giant grant its 2,300-strong workforce five Fridays off in a row, without decreasing their pay.


The Irish four day week roadshow will continue in 2020 with another series of meetings across the country.

Palestinian youth tells of incarceration
by Mehak Dugal
 

Palestinian youth Ahmed Alsoos was recently released from an Israeli military jail after a six-month prison sentence for throwing a stone at a soldier – a charge he denies.

 

Speaking in Dublin last week Ahmed, now 17, recalled the horrors of his time in prison and the drawn-out military court proceedings – during which he had no contact with his family – that led to his conviction solely on the testimony of an Israeli soldier.

 

He recounted his confinement in a small, stuffy dark room with no windows, and tearfully relived the constant humiliation, degradation and abuse he suffered at the hands of the guards.

 

Since Israel lowered the age of criminal responsibility, the military can – and do – arrest and confine children as young as 12 years old.

 

Alsoos was in Dublin to address a conference on the rights of Palestinian children organised by Trade Union Friends of Palestine (TUFP), which called on the Irish Government to halt trade links with Israel in protest at the systematic maltreatment of Palestinian children by the Israeli military.

 

Speaking on behalf of TUFP, Fórsa official Denis Keane said an Israeli strategy of mass arrests and maltreatment of Palestinian children was being implemented on an “industrial scale,” and appeared to be part of a deliberate policy to traumatise large numbers of children.

 

According to UNICEF, the United Nations agency for children, 59 Palestinian children were killed by Israeli forces in 2018. Another 3,472 were injured, while over 200 children – some as young as 12 – were detained and prosecuted in the Israeli military court system every month.

 

“Israel is the only country in the world that prosecutes children through military tribunals instead of civilian courts, and even strong allies of Israel have expressed alarm at its treatment of Palestinian children.

 

“We are calling on the Irish Government to take a stronger stand on Israel’s deliberate policy of killing, injuring, imprisoning and traumatising thousands of children. It should end all economic and trade links with Israel until the physical and psychological maiming of Palestinian children stops,” said Denis.

 

Other speakers included psychiatrist Samah Jabr, who spoke about the physical and mental impact of living in a war-torn environment, and the suppressed trauma experienced by children who experienced violent and life-threatening confrontations with Israeli soldiers.

 

Speakers were united in their calls for greater EU solidarity with the Palestinian people. While they welcomed a recent European Court of Justice decision on the labelling of goods originating from illegal Israeli settlements, advocates argued for stronger action to restrict commercial activities with Israel while children continue to be mistreated.

 

There was dismay at the weak EU response to the USA’s recent announcement that it no longer considered Israeli settlements to be illegal.

 

Trade Union Friends of Palestine is supported by almost all ICTU-affiliated trade unions on the island of Ireland. For many years the Irish trade union movement has had a strong position of solidarity with the Palestinian people.

 

Twelve years ago, ICTU adopted a policy of boycott, divestment and sanctions (BDS) to end international support for Israel's oppression of Palestinians and put pressure on Israel to comply with international law.

One Galway quiz night
by Mehak Dugal
 

ONE GALWAY is hosting a Christmas quiz night in aid of Pieta House on 5th December (Thursday). It takes place in Crowes Bar, Galway city.

 

The quiz, which runs from 8-10pm, will promote playful rivalry between teams from trade unions, student unions and community groups in the spirit of raising money for charity.

 

In addition to bragging rights, a number of spot prizes will up for grabs.

 

Interested parties can register themselves in teams of four and it costs €40 per team. Registrations at galway@onemovement.work or get further information about the quiz here.

 

So if you have a free evening, pop down to the quiz to help support a good cause