Feature Article
Fórsa Insights presents
Exclusive performance of 'Love In The Wild' by Lisa Walsh
by Niall Shanahan
 

The Fórsa Insights series is proud to present a special performance of Lisa Walsh's groundbreaking play Love In The Wild, following its successful run in Dublin theatres last Spring. This exclusive performance will take place at the union's headquarters in Dublin on Thursday 13th September at 6pm.


The Fórsa Insights series is proud to present a special performance of Lisa Walsh's groundbreaking play Love In The Wild, following its successful run in Dublin theatres last Spring. This exclusive performance by Anto Seery will take place at the union's headquarters in Dublin on Thursday 13th September at 6pm.

 

Love In The Wild is a new play written by Lisa Walsh, and made its premiere at the Axis theatre in Ballymun earlier this year. Lisa is a member of Fórsa and is a social worker with Tusla. She is currently working in child protection having previously worked as a medical social worker and an addiction worker.

 

Fórsa Insights is a specially curated series of talks and cultural events open to Fórsa members, ICTU affiliates and NGOs. The aim is to explore a wide range of issues including human rights, climate change, migration, homelessness and the experience of campaigning for workers rights across the globe. 

 

“The play is a one-man show about a man called Ger Duffy. He’s from Ballymun on Dublin’s north side. He’s on a methadone programme and he’s journeying through addiction and through big changes in his life. He has a strong connection to wildlife and nature, which helps explain how he sees the world, a way that’s quite different to how most people see it. The play is about love, it’s about judgment but hopefully it’s also about redemption. He’s not the stereotype of an addict, there are many layers to Ger and many layers to his story.” - playwright Lisa Walsh.

 

This exclusive performance of Lisa Walsh's critically acclaimed play is free to Fórsa members. To book your seat, send an email to Fórsa Insights.

 

Visit loveinthewild.ie 

 

Watch the Love In The Wild trailer here:

The next editions of the Fórsa news bulletins will be published in September
Articles A
Agreement reached on EO liabilities
by Roisin McKane
 

Fórsa has secured an agreement that will see an additional 10% of all executive officer (EO) posts filled through internal or interdepartmental promotion.


Fórsa has secured an agreement that will see an additional 10% of all executive officer (EO) posts filled through internal or interdepartmental promotion.


The union had called for an increase in internal promotions for clerical officers (COs) on foot of a grade merge early last year, which saw the staff officer (SO) grade abolished and all existing SOs regraded to EOs.


Fórsa national secretary Derek Mullen explained how the eradication of the SO grade affected promotions for COs.  “The main promotion outlet for the COs in the civil service is to EO, particularly since the merger of the SO and EO grade last year. As a result of this merger we sought more internal promotion to EO,” he said.


Competitions previously worked on a 50-50 basis between open recruitment and  internal promotions. But Fórsa secured an agreement under the Public Services Stability Agreement (PSSA), which increased internal recruitment to 60%.


“During the PSSA talks we successfully achieved a reduction in the open recruitment percentage to 40%, which brings hundreds of EO posts back into the internal promotion stream for the CO grade. This was in part compensation for the loss of the SO promotional outlet. As part of this discussion we also had to reach agreement on the difficult issue of EO open recruitment liabilities which have been accruing across departments,” said Derek.


A new EO liability agreement has now been secured. This will see the open and interdepartmental liability for EO competitions fall from 1000+ posts, to 400 posts. The process of equalising the sequences is expected to be done over three years to minimise the impact on internal promotions.

 

Cathleen shares reality of low pay
Irish Times case study on Fórsa member in civil service
by Niall Shanahan
 

Cathleen is a clerical officer in the Department of Education and a member of Fórsa’s Youth Committee.


Cathleen is a clerical officer in the Department of Education and a member of Fórsa’s Youth Committee.

 

In a compelling interview with journalist Brian Hutton, Cathleen described the experience of trying to make ends meet, and paying rent in Dublin, on a take home pay of €370 per week.

 

This works out at €9.86 per hour. That’s 31 cent more than the statutory minimum wage, and over €2 less than the living wage.

 

Cathleen left short-term contracts in US tech multinationals for “stability and security” in the civil service. She told the Irish Times: “People think civil servants are all earning this big money, on these great pensions. But that is not true for the vast majority of us.

 

“For every secretary general there are hundreds on lower ranks, earning considerably less. When I get a pension, it will really be a State pension with a small top-up.”

 

Delegates at Fórsa’s national conference in May passed a number of motions calling for the living wage to be established as the minimum entry point for public service workers.

 

Courage

 

Youth Committee chairperson Osal Kelly praised Cathleen for taking part in the interview. “It takes courage to speak so publicly about your personal experiences but Cathleen has done a great service in doing so and in showing in such relatable terms how difficult it is for public servants appointed on the lower starting points to make ends meet.

 

“It’s good to have articles like this to counter the misconceptions out there about public sector pay and pensions. As Cathleen points out, pensions are another area where there is huge inequality for younger public servants, and those of us who are new entrants will have a pension that is worth 25% less than the standard pension,” he said.

 

You can read Cathleen’s full interview here.

 

Related: Almost 1,000 civil servants paid less than living wage – The Irish Times (Monday 16th July).

PeoplePoint committee established
by Bernard Harbor
 

The national shared services office (NSSO) – formerly known as PeoplePoint – has established a steering committee to oversee work on an official survey of civil servants to elicit their experience of the system.


The national shared services office (NSSO) – formerly known as PeoplePoint – has established a steering committee to oversee work on an official survey of civil servants to elicit their experience of the system. Fórsa national secretary Derek Mullen is to represent the union on the body.


The concession came after Fórsa demanded action to quell systemic problems with PeoplePoint. In April, the union’s civil service conference called for a review of the centralised HR shared services system after a union study showed that 83% of civil servants surveyed had experienced problems with it.


Management now wants to conduct its own survey, but it has included the union in the process.


More than half of the 1,079 civil servants who responded to Fórsa’s survey earlier this year said their pay had been affected by problems encountered with PeoplePoint. Another 18% said their sick pay had been affected, and 6% said pension payments had been hit.


The largest single problem encountered was overpayments, which staff must repay (23%), followed by problems with sick leave reconciliation (21%), annual leave (19%), payment of increments (17%), pay adjustments following promotion (13.5%), underpayments (9%), pensions and parental leave (7% each).


Fórsa official Derek Mullen said systemic problems with the system meant staff working in PeoplePoint were in an impossible situation, a sentiment reflected in many of the ten conference motions on the subject submitted by union branches. “That PeoplePoint works at all is down to the dedication of the civil servants employed there. They’ve had an extraordinarily difficult time in recent years as they try to make a poorly designed system function.


“But the problem of overpayments, which has reached epidemic proportions, is causing great suffering to many civil servants, including many in vulnerable financial circumstances, who have to repay money they do not have,” he said. Civil servants who are overpaid have to return the money within a year or less.

Ryanair spurns talks offer
by Bernard Harbor
 

A third one-day strike by directly-employed Ryanair pilots, members of the Irish Airline Pilots’ Association, is underway today (Tuesday). No meeting has taken place between Fórsa and company management since last Wednesday (18th July), even though the union told management last week that it was available for talks.


A third one-day strike by directly-employed Ryanair pilots, members of the Irish Airline Pilots’ Association, is underway today (Tuesday). No meeting has taken place between Fórsa and company management since last Wednesday (18th July), even though the union told management last week that it was available for talks.


A number of flights between Ireland and the UK have been cancelled because of the strikes, which are placing a huge financial and operational burden on the company as its management tries to minimise the impact on its schedules.


The company cited industrial unrest as one of the factors behind a decision to cut prices this summer, after it reported a 20% drop in profits in the three months to the end of June.


Fórsa criticised airline management’s suggestion that it might also cut back on jobs and expansion plans in Ireland because of industrial action. “This kind of threatening statement is not conducive to building trust and reaching a resolution to the dispute, and Fórsa doesn’t accept that jobs or expansion in the airline need be put at risk by company management,” according to a spokesperson.


The pilots are seeking a fair and transparent method to govern base transfers and related matters. This is common practice in the industry.


At present, company management has total discretion on transfers, which can see pilots moved to bases thousands of miles from their homes and families. Most other airlines have a fair and transparent criteria, based on seniority, to govern pilot relocations.


The union and management have met twice in the last fortnight, for a total of about nine hours. These discussions found some common ground on the possibility of establishing a joint working group to thrash out the issues in dispute. But the parties couldn’t agree on terms of reference for such a group.


Fórsa has also repeatedly suggested that independent third-party facilitation could help the parties to reach consensus, but Ryanair management has so far rejected the suggestion.


Meanwhile, the disputes committee of the union’s Services and Enterprises Division is to meet again tomorrow (Wednesday) to consider further industrial action.

Age 70 retirement law delayed
by Bernard Harbor
 

Legislation that will allow civil and public servants who are currently obliged to retire at age 65 to opt to stay in work for longer has been passed in the Seanad, but was not discussed in the Dáil before the summer recess got underway.

 

 


Legislation that will allow civil and public servants who are currently obliged to retire at age 65 to opt to stay in work for longer has been passed in the Seanad, but was not discussed in the Dáil before the summer recess got underway.

 

Fórsa expressed its disappointment at the delay after it had called on all the main political parties to enact the law quickly, to give public servants recruited before 1st April 2004 the option to retire up to age 70.

 

The new arrangement would benefit public servants who must currently retire at 65, but who depend on the state old age pension for part of their retirement income.

 

Significantly, the legislation would allow staff who stay in work beyond age 65 to continue to accrue pension benefits, subject to a ceiling of 40 years’ benefits.

 

The union wants quick enactment to resolve the plight of civil and public servants who are forced to retire at 65, but can’t get the state pension until they are 66.

 

The Public Service Stability Agreement, backed by members of the unions that created Fórsa earlier this year, enabled the union to address the problem in discussions with the Department of Public Expenditure and Reform (DPER).

 

The union has also spoken to Fianna Fáil, Sinn Féin and Labour about the need to pass the legislation as quickly as possible.

 

Pending the enactment of legislation, there are limited interim arrangements in place that allow public servants who want to stay in work until they are eligible for the state pension to be re-hired. However, they are placed on the first point of the non-pensionable pay scale, and can’t make further pension contributions.

 

Public servants recruited after 1st April 2004 are not covered by the new legislation because they already have either have no compulsory retirement age or the ability to retire up to age 70.

 

Contrary to some media reports at the end of last year, the law doesn’t introduce a compulsory retirement age of 70.

Gender pay reporting leaves ‘nowhere to hide’
by Hazel Gavigan
 

Fewer than one in seven UK companies paid woman more than men on average last year, and there was no economic sector that paid women more.


Fewer than one in seven UK companies paid woman more than men on average last year, and there was no economic sector that paid women more. The figures were revealed at a seminar on tackling the gender pay gap, which took place at Leinster House earlier this month.

 

The results of the British data also found a large gap in bonus pay. One employer – the University of Liverpool – gave men 90% more in bonuses than its female staff received.

 

Emer Bucukolgu, manager and reward consultant at Innecto Reward Consulting, said new UK regulations on gender pay gap reporting, which apply to employers with more than 250 staff, leave “nowhere for companies to hide.”

 

She said media coverage had brought the issue to the forefront of public consciousness by naming and shaming organisations. This had forced management boards to tackle the issue.

 

Last month, Fórsa criticised the Government for stalling the introduction of similar legislation in Ireland.

 

The Leinster House briefing, which was organised by the new cross-party group on workplace equality in partnership with Dress for Success Dublin, attracted a large crowd including Fórsa reps.

 

Gender pay gap reporting in the UK is based on a single snapshot date, where organisations of 250 employees or more report the difference in the average hourly rate of men and women’s pay, including bonuses.

 

Hayley Barnard of MIX Diversity Developers spoke about how to close talent gaps within organisations, and said flexible working was a key driver in female recruitment.

 

She also debunked the perception that equality is a HR issue. “Equality begins in each person’s state of mind,” she said. “Therefore, it’s up to communications to emphasise the importance of women in the organisation.”

Fórsa audio bulletin episode 12
by Hazel Gavigan (audio editor)

Fórsa/IALPA Ryanair pilot strike update, withdrawal of cooperation from community healthcare organisations and more. Presented by Hazel Gavigan and Róisín McKane.


Also in this issue
Home ownership hopes fade
by Diarmaid Mac a Bhaird
 

Some 28% of people in Ireland believe they will never be able to own their own home, according to Aviva’s 2018 family finances report. The annual survey, which addresses a range of family finance issues, found that 40% of non-homeowners don’t expect to be able to buy a house for at least a decade.

 

The findings mirror a recent ICTU survey, which found that 74% of young workers believed they would not be able to buy a house in the future. The survey established that 68% of young Fórsa members were sceptical about their ability to buy a home in the future.

 

Difficulties raising a deposit and uncertainty about being able to afford a mortgage emerged as reasons for the lack of optimism about buying a home. Both issues are compounded by high rental costs and shortages in the housing market.

 

Ann O’Keeffe, head of personal pensions and investments with Aviva, said the report shows a change in long term home ownership patterns. “Home ownership has become a dearly held but distant aspiration rather than a plan,” she said.

 

A release accompanying the survey highlights a gender gap in personal finances apparent throughout the survey, with the number of women aged 25-44 living in rented accommodation 10% higher than men.

 

The survey also found 29% of respondents are struggling financially despite the upturn in the economy and growth in the labour market. The release said respondents were generally optimistic about job opportunities, but noted the numbers expecting a pay increase this year is down.

 

The report is available here, and you can find more information here and here.

Roscommon branch secures flexi victory
by Diarmaid Mac a Bhaird
 

Flexi-time and flexi-leave is to be available to workers at Roscommon county council following a Fórsa campaign that culminated in four one-day strikes.

 

Management is now implementing a two-month flexi-leave trial following an agreement reached at the Workplace Relations Commission (WRC).

 

The agreement makes flexi-time and flexi-leave available to all workers up to grade VII, senior executive engineers and all analogous grades in the authority.

 

Fórsa official Padriag Mulligan, who led the campaign, said it was a significant victory for all local authority workers. “I salute the leadership by the elected officers of the Roscommon branch and the commitment that members gave when asked to take industrial action. This has resulted in a breakthrough in Roscommon, which will avert the danger of other councils seeking to undermine family-friendly practices,” he said.

 

The pilot scheme allows staff to access flexi-leave for the first time in almost a year. The dispute went to strike action after management had effectively banned flexi-leave and refused to reinstate it.

 

The long-running dispute saw seven WRC hearings, two binding Labour Court recommendations, two clarifications of the Labour Courts position and a clarification of its clarifications. All this before the final settlement in the WRC.

 

Strike action in Roscommon began on 21st June, and three other strike days took place. The Fórsa campaign also included a rally, which drew local members and Fórsa branches from across the country.

 

A statement from the National Oversight Body on the 2nd July proved a key intervention in the final week of strike action. The union suspended a planned fifth day of action when “a clear route to the full availability of flexi-leave” emerged.

 

The WRC agreement, which was finalised on 6th July, compels both sides to work together to formulate a new document to follow on from the pilot after its expiry in early September.

Pay inequality narrowed by tax and benefits
by Diarmaid Mac a Bhaird
 

Income inequality has been stable in Ireland over the past 30 years, but we have moved closer to the international average because inequality has worsened elsewhere, according to a new report.

 

The Economic and Social Research Institute (ESRI) says Ireland is now close to the OECD average after being at the top end of the inequality spectrum 30 years ago.

 

Professor Tim Callan, one of the report’s authors, said redistribution through tax and welfare payments had been crucial to income growth for lower earners, offsetting continuing wage in equality in Ireland.

 

This analysis was echoed by Tom Healy of the union-backed Nevin Economic Research Institute (NERI), who said the report highlighted the disproportionate ‘heavy lifting’ done by the tax and welfare system.

 

“There is a need to acknowledge that inequality in gross market income is too wide and that a more socially sustainable approach is to boost wages and narrow income inequalities before taxes and benefits are applied,” he said.

 

Fórsa’s senior general secretary Shay Cody said public service trade union emphasis on lower paid workers had played a role in addressing income inequality. “Unions pursued a strategy to include flat-rate pay adjustments, which give most benefit to the lowest paid workers, with two such adjustments in the Lansdowne Road Agreement,” he said.

 

Shay added the negotiation of average adjustments of over 7% under the current Public Service Stability Agreement built on those flat-rate adjustments and ensured lower-paid workers incomes rose in line with broader income growth.

Irish Water privatisation fears fuelled
by Bernard Harbor
 

Fórsa has said it’s surprised at last week’s announcement that the Government wants to establish Irish Water as a commercial state body. The union says the move is likely to fuel fears that the utility will be privatised in future.

 

The move was confirmed in a letter to unions earlier this week. The letter also confirmed the intention to establish Irish Water as a stand-alone company by separating it from its parent company Ervia.

 

The union has sought a meeting with senior departmental officials to ascertain the rationale behind the proposals, and any implications for local authority staff.

 

Fórsa official Peter Nolan said the proposal undermined discussions on the organisation of water services, including the relationship between Irish Water and local authorities, which are currently underway in the Workplace Relations Commission (WRC).

 

“I am surprised and disturbed by this announcement, not least because we entered discussions on the basis that there was no predetermined outcome on the future structure of water services. We want water services under public control and operated by public service workers.

 

“The Government has provided no rationale as to why the board should be commercial, which means this move is bound to be viewed with suspicion by those who use and deliver water services,” he said.

 

Although the Government has supported Ervia’s proposal to create a single water utility by 2021 - four years before existing ‘service level agreements’ (SLAs) are due to expire – it has repeatedly assured unions that local authorities will maintain their major role in water provision until an alternative is agreed. SLAs govern the supply of services to Irish Water by local authorities.

 

Last month, Fórsa told the Joint Oireachtas Committee on Housing, Planning and Local Government that SLAs should continue, and that local authority staff should not be forced to transfer to a new entity.

Unions also called for a referendum on the ownership of the public water system to take place this year. This followed a commitment from housing minister Eoghan Murphy that he would facilitate a referendum.

Minimum wage increase too modest
by Roisin McKane
 

The national minimum wage looks set to increase by 25 cent following a submission by the Low Pay Commission to the Minister for Employment Affairs and Social Protection Regina Doherty, last week. This would be less than the widely-criticised 30 cent rise recommended last year.


If accepted by Government, as expected, the minimum rate of hourly pay rise would rise from €9.55 to €9.80. But unions have said the minimum wage should be aligned with the higher non-statutory living wage instead.


Earlier this month the Living Wage Technical Group said the living wage should rise by 20 cent to €11.90 an hour. The living wage is a measure of the income needed to support a socially acceptable standard of living.


While the proposed increase in the national minimum wage is welcome, it still stands at €2.10 an hour less than the revised living wage.


The Irish Congress of Trade Unions (ICTU) has called on the Government to align the national minimum wage with the living wage as soon as possible. Its industrial officer Liam Berney commended the Commission for its work.


“Its proposed increase would narrow the gap between the living wage and the national minimum wage, albeit marginally. But the economy is roaring. We have the lowest annual inflation rate in the Euro area. Government should not shirk from this opportunity to make a positive impact on the living standards of our lowest paid workers. Decent wages are of fundamental importance to building a fair and inclusive society,” he said.


For more information on the living wage click here.


For more information on the national minimum wage click here.

 

Fórsa backs trans pride
by Hazel Gavigan
 

Transgender people in Ireland suffer more hate crimes than anywhere else in Europe. If you are a trans person, or consider yourself an ally, you can join Fórsa this Saturday (28th July) at Ireland’s first ever Trans Pride march.


Trans Pride describes itself as “both a parade and a protest.” It aims to celebrate the lives and identity of trans people, while simultaneously fighting for trans rights, healthcare, bodily autonomy, and an end to transphobia in Ireland.


The march begins at 2pm on the 28th of July outside Liberty Hall in Dublin. The route will then proceed along Amiens Street and conclude in Fairview Park, where a rally will take place.


Trans Pride is demanding free trans healthcare based on informed consent, an end to intersex genital mutilation and legislation and recognition for non-binary people. As well as social housing funding and an end to direct provision. Click here for the full list.


If you wish to attend or are interested in the event, please contact gobrien@forsa.ie for more information.