Greek civil servants strike, challenge EU/IMF talks

Tens of thousands of Greek civil servants will strike on Thursday to protest against austerity measures and press the government not to agree to further cuts as it discusses an aid package with the EU and IMF.

Doctors, nurses, teachers, tax officials and others will stop work, paralysing public services, while thousands are expected to march to parliament at midday as European and IMF officials meet for talks that could lead to a financial bailout.

They will protest against European Union-backed measures including public wage cuts, a pensions freeze and tax hikes taken by the government to try to pull Greece out of a severe fiscal crisis that has shaken markets worldwide.

“These blood-thirsty measures won’t help Greece exit the crisis. A tragic period begins,” said Ilias Iliopoulos, secretary general of public sector union ADEDY, which represents half a million workers.

Many in Greece fear strings attached to the 40-45 billion euro aid package, if the cash-strapped nation decides to tap it, will hit living standards in a country where one in five lives below the poverty threshold, according to EU data.

“With the IMF’s involvement the situation will become a lot worse,” Iliopoulos told Reuters. “They will ask for more measures, more cuts, they will raise retirement age limits, they will cut pensions and fire people.”

The socialist government, which has been pressured by markets and EU policymakers for months to tidy up its finances, has vowed to go ahead with the reforms it has announced over the past months but also said there would be no additional austerity measures this year.

Participation in the protest — the fourth nationwide strike organised by the public sector union this year — will be closely watched by investors and policymakers, as concerns grow over whether Greece will honour its plan to slash its double digit budget deficit to under 3 percent of GDP in 2012.

Opposition to the measures has so far been relatively muted, although polls show most Greeks oppose the measures. Violence has been much less frequent than in 2008 riots that paralyzed Athens for weeks after the police killing of a teenager.

Worries about a surge in unemployment highlight the delicate balance Athens needs to strike in meeting international demands for cutbacks and maintaining enough support at home to ensure it can implement the reforms.

On Wednesday, the IMF said unemployment would rise to 13 percent in 2011, and Greece would be the only euro zone country to see its economy contract next year with a 1.1 percent drop.

Hundreds of dockworkers disrupted passenger boat traffic at Greece’s largest port Piraeus on Wednesday, part of another strike called for by communist trade union PAME.

Air traffic controllers have decided not to strike on Thursday, saying they did not want to further burden travellers and aggravate flight disruptions caused by the cloud of volcanic ash that caused havoc this week across Europe.

The market showed its impatience with the uncertainty about how Greece will finance its debt on Wednesday, driving the yield on the 10-year bond to 8.4 percent, the highest since at least 1999, a signal of growing doubt over Greece’s solvency.

(Additional reporting by Harry Papachristou; Editing by Janet Lawrence)

‘Underfunding’ behind prison stand-off

The union representing correctional service workers says a stand-off between prisoners and guards at Canberra’s jail on the weekend was a result of underfunding.

Thirteen prisoners staged a 23-hour protest when they climbed onto the roof of a building at the Alexander Maconochie Centre on Saturday.

It is believed staff shortages last week led to a series of lockdowns at the prison, some of which lasted a full day.

Vince McDevitt from the Community and Public Sector Union (CPSU) says the ACT Government is not funding the facility adequately.

“Look it’s a state-of-the-art facility that provides a myriad of services, they all come at a significant cost,” he said.

“Having said that, from an operational safety point of view we certainly believe there needs to be more money made available for better rosters and overtime.

“In the event of multiple unforseen absences, the jail doesn’t have the funding to backfill those vacancies and so the prisoners are locked down.”

Opposition spokesman Jeremy Hanson says the Government has mismanaged the jail.

“No one is happy with the way this place is being run, this is costing us $500 a day per prisoner,” he said.

“Now Jon Stanhope guaranteed to the public that this would be run at half that amount. It’s costing us twice the amount it should, where is the money going?

“It’s just an inability to run the thing.”

ACT Corrective Services is investigating the stand-off.

Let the lobbying begin

Handing down a $4 billion budget will be one of the first and most difficult tasks for the Bartlett minority government.

With the state’s economy in deficit, it’ll no doubt be looking at ways to save money.

Tasmania’s Chamber of Commerce and Industry’s CEO Robert Wallace says minority government is bad news for big business.

“At the moment we’re in a budget deficit and the last thing we need is for that to continue. That would undermine all the resilience the state’s built up over the last 10 or 15 years,” he said.

“With this government, what we’d be hoping to do is to act as an advocate and to work with the new government to assist them in identifying areas there may be savings that will allow us to return to a sustainable budget over the next three to five years.”

The chamber once again has the public sector in its sights.

Robert Wallace says new technology should be used to reduce the need to employ more public servants.

“It could be in communication efficiencies, through telecomuting (sic) for meetings and those sorts of things.”

“It would mean the number of people employed in the public sector could plateau off.”

The TCCI’s position has riled the Public Sector Union’s Mat Johnston who says a strong public sector is crucial to buffering the instability a minority government can create.

“They’re going to rely heavily on the public service to provide them with advice,” he said.

“The Tasmanian Chamber of Commerce seems to be going back to their common reprise of cutting jobs in the public sector to fund their pet projects,” he said.

The union is about to launch an advertising campaign reminding all three political parties of their promise of job security.

Political analyst Dr Richard Eccelston says both groups will need to tone down their budget wish-lists under a minority government.

“What it requires is a degree of compromise, not only from political parties but from all stakeholders, from business, from unions and everyone that’s got an interest in a sound economic strategy,” he said.

Dr Eccelston is suggesting the government expand the current system of Lower House committees to include non-MP members from interest groups.

“It would help in working out where the Tasmanian community stands on these issues such as the economy before they go to parliament,” he said.

New Govt on notice over spending

Business groups and unions have already started lobbying on how to cushion the impact of minority government.

Big business believes minority government is bad news for industry.

Tasmania’s Chamber of Commerce and Industry is urging the new government to reduce public spending.

Chief executive Robert Wallace says the public service is an obvious target.

“At the moment we’re in a budget deficit and the last thing we want is for that to continue,” he said.

“That would undermine all the resilience this state’s built up over the last 10 or 15 years.”

But the union movement is nervous about any push for jobs cuts.

Mat Johnston from the public sector union says the political parties will be reminded about their promises of job security in a new advertising campaign.

“Those promises need to be honoured,” he said.

Mr Johnston says the new government should take its time and consult widely before making any changes to the public sector.

He says public servants want a bigger say in any changes.

“[They should] take their time and make some correct decisions and consult with stakeholders before taking any knee-jerk reactions to unwind or put in place new reforms.”

Political analyst Richard Eccleston suggests the new State Government include unionists and industry leaders in Lower House committees.

“So that we can try to work out compromise where the Tasmanian community stands on these issues before they get to Parliament,” he said.

Governor David Paterson asks unions to forgo pay rise during crisis

(Reuters) – New York state’s Governor on Thursday asked public sector unions to forgo pay raises to help the state close a $9 billion budget deficit but the unions rejected the request.

U.S.

The scheduled 4 percent pay rise was set to go into effect on Thursday and is on top of a 9 percent raise in the last three years, Governor David Paterson said.

He reminded unions that in the past two years, more than 300,000 New Yorkers have lost jobs and nearly 9 percent of workers are unemployed.

“I do not believe that, at a time when more than 300,000 of the hard-working New Yorkers who pay our salaries are out of a job, it is fair to continue the status quo with one segment of the workforce,” Paterson said in a statement. “We are in the midst of an extraordinary fiscal and economic crisis.”

The Civil Service Employees Association, representing about 300,000 public sector employees across the state, said Paterson had no credibility to make the request on pay.

“The governor was on radio this morning talking about how Wall Street bonuses have brought in less money than anticipated because banks used a tax loophole of paying in stock options instead of cash,” said CSEA spokesman Stephen Madarasz.

“In the next breath, he calls on state employee unions for concessions .. it’s insulting,” he added.

New York’s other main public sector union, the Public Employees Federation, said it would not reopen pay talks.

“Paterson put it out to the public but we have not been in discussions, he hasn’t approached us and we will not reopen our contract,” said Darcy Wells, a spokeswoman for the union.

New York is one of many states struggling to balance its budget, as required by law in all states except Vermont.

Declining revenue during the recession has caused shortfalls to open up in the fiscal 2010 budgets of 41 states totaling $38 billion or 7 percent of budgets, according to the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, a Washington think-tank.

For most states, the fiscal year runs from July 1 to June 30.

After enacting spending cuts and other more drastic measures to balance last year’s budget, states are running out of options and are increasingly looking to public sector unions for concessions.

The City of Toledo, Ohio, for example, balanced its budget earlier this week by imposing benefits cuts on municipal unions that had opposed them during contract talks.

New York’s fiscal year runs from April 1 to March 31 and it kicked off fiscal 2011 without a budget. Lawmakers left the state Capital Albany on Monday without agreeing on spending cuts proposed by Paterson.

(Reporting by Ciara Linnane; Editing by Andrew Hay)

PS pay offer ‘an April Fools’ joke’

Unions representing ACT public servants have rejected the Government’s latest pay offer.

The Government has offered a 4.75 per cent rise over two years and has written to the unions saying it has to restrain pay in the tough economic climate.

But unions say the deal is unacceptable.

Vince McDevitt from the Community Public Sector Union (CPSU) says the deal removes some existing employment conditions.

He says the offer is so miserly it does not even keep pace with inflation and he does not think union members will accept it.

“I was half hoping it was a joke – tomorrow’s April Fools’ Day,” he said.

Mr McDevitt says it is a bit rich for the Government to worry about job losses when it is already cutting jobs through its recruitment freeze.

Unions ACT secretary Kim Sattler says the offer is not good enough.

“This offer is out of step with average pay increases being offered both in the public sector and the private sectors,” she said.

“[It] does not even allow ACT Government employees to keep up with CPI increases.”

But Treasurer Katy Gallagher says the Government cannot boost its pay offer without slashing jobs.

Ms Gallagher says the unions need to understand the Government’s bottom line is under pressure.

“We can’t go much further than that,” she said.

“So really if this is going to be rejected, invariably if they’re going to say no to an offer which is at the upper limit of what we can afford, then the conversation has to move to well how many jobs are we going to have to cut to pay for the additional wage increase.”

The current pay agreement expires today.

The Government’s offer will be put to meetings of public servants over the next fortnight.

Funding, staff changes to ‘unify’ public service

A report into the future of the public service has recommended broad changes to funding and staff arrangements.

The report by Department of Prime Minister and Cabinet chief Terry Moran includes 28 recommendations across nine areas.

The recommendations include a review of the Federal Government’s efficiency dividend as well as the number of senior executive staff.

Nadine Flood from the Community and Public Sector Union (CPSU) says it also calls for more streamlined bargaining arrangements across different agencies.

“What Moran has done is recognise some of those problems in the public service at the moment and how it makes it more difficult to deliver on the big policy challenges facing Australia,” she said.

“If these reforms actually play out you could see a more unified public service that can actually deliver on those big challenges.”

Cautious approval for whistleblower laws

A whistleblowers support group says new federal laws covering the disclosure of information are a move in the right direction.

Special Minister of State Joe Ludwig says people who release information about a range of issues will be protected under the laws.

They include threats to public health and safety, corruption, maladministration, wastage of public funds and official misconduct.

Whistleblowers Australia president Peter Bennett has welcomed the legislation but says it needs to go further.

“It hasn’t strengthened the protection for whistleblowers,” he said.

“We would like to see the whole package put together where the increase and protection of whistleblowers is dramatically changed and that the onus of proof is on agencies that if any harm befalls a whistleblower they will have to prove it isn’t a result of making a disclosure.”

Community and Public Sector Union (CPSU) spokeswoman Nadine Flood says the legislation provides stronger protection than the union expected.

“I think this legislation could lead to a real shift in culture in the public service,” she said.

“We’ve certainly represented CPSU members who have acted in good faith, with a reasonable and honest belief in what they’re doing and have had a pretty tough time with their employers, so it would be great to see that change.”

Strikes paralyse transport, services across Greece

Athens, April 2 (DPA) Flights to and from Greece were to be grounded for several hours and vessels were to remain anchored Thursday during a nationwide 24-hour strike to protest against the government’s economic polices.

Under the slogan ‘employees should not pay for the crisis’, the walkout was the second nationwide protest against the conservative government since riots broke out in December, triggered by the country’s bleak economy and police shooting of a teenager.

Air traffic controllers were to walk off the job for four hours from 0900 GMT until 1300 GMT, forcing the cancellation of dozens of international and domestic flights.

The strike has been called by the country’s private sector federation GSEE and public sector union ADEDY, which together represent more than half of the country’s workforce of 5 million.

Newly privatised Olympic Airlines said it cancelled a total of 140 domestic and international flights, and rescheduled 11 flights to and from London, Frankfurt, Milan, Istanbul, Alexandria and Bucharest.

The private airline Aegean said it cancelled 24 flights and rescheduled another 30.

The air traffic controllers are demanding the hiring of extra staff and an improvement in their health care benefits.

The strike was also affecting all state-run schools as teachers stayed away, and all state services, including banks, ministries, tax offices, municipal buildings and state-owned power utilities as they shut their client services departments for the day.

Hospitals were functioning with emergency staff only, and a 24-hour news blackout was due to be imposed as print and broadcast journalists refused to show up for work.

All ferry services to and from the Greek islands were suspended as vessels remain anchored at harbours across the country while train, bus, tram and trolley services are also expected to stop operations for several hours.

Greece’s unions are protesting against the government’s recent pension and labour reforms, which raise the retirement age and cut back benefits as well as privatisations and tax-raising measures.

The unpopular reforms have ignited an almost daily spate of bomb and arson attacks on government buildings and businesses.

The government recently announced a public sector wage freeze and one-off taxes to those earning over 60,000 euros a year in an effort to fill badly needed coffers.

The strike follows weeks of riots across Greece in December by youths whose economic future is bleak in a country with a high unemployment rate and low wages.

Unemployment is over 7 percent, and nearly 20 percent of Greeks live below the poverty line, earning less than 600 euros ($775) a month. Labour unions said approximately 4,000 people lost their jobs in March.

Strikes paralyse transport, services across Greece

Athens, April 2 (DPA) Flights to and from Greece were to be grounded for several hours and vessels were to remain anchored Thursday during a nationwide 24-hour strike to protest against the government’s economic polices.

Under the slogan ‘employees should not pay for the crisis’, the walkout was the second nationwide protest against the conservative government since riots broke out in December, triggered by the country’s bleak economy and police shooting of a teenager.

Air traffic controllers were to walk off the job for four hours from 0900 GMT until 1300 GMT, forcing the cancellation of dozens of international and domestic flights.

The strike has been called by the country’s private sector federation GSEE and public sector union ADEDY, which together represent more than half of the country’s workforce of 5 million.

Newly privatised Olympic Airlines said it cancelled a total of 140 domestic and international flights, and rescheduled 11 flights to and from London, Frankfurt, Milan, Istanbul, Alexandria and Bucharest.

The private airline Aegean said it cancelled 24 flights and rescheduled another 30.

The air traffic controllers are demanding the hiring of extra staff and an improvement in their health care benefits.

The strike was also affecting all state-run schools as teachers stayed away, and all state services, including banks, ministries, tax offices, municipal buildings and state-owned power utilities as they shut their client services departments for the day.

Hospitals were functioning with emergency staff only, and a 24-hour news blackout was due to be imposed as print and broadcast journalists refused to show up for work.

All ferry services to and from the Greek islands were suspended as vessels remain anchored at harbours across the country while train, bus, tram and trolley services are also expected to stop operations for several hours.

Greece’s unions are protesting against the government’s recent pension and labour reforms, which raise the retirement age and cut back benefits as well as privatisations and tax-raising measures.

The unpopular reforms have ignited an almost daily spate of bomb and arson attacks on government buildings and businesses.

The government recently announced a public sector wage freeze and one-off taxes to those earning over 60,000 euros a year in an effort to fill badly needed coffers.

The strike follows weeks of riots across Greece in December by youths whose economic future is bleak in a country with a high unemployment rate and low wages.

Unemployment is over 7 percent, and nearly 20 percent of Greeks live below the poverty line, earning less than 600 euros ($775) a month. Labour unions said approximately 4,000 people lost their jobs in March.