Hospital workers claim they are "presence not picket line" (From Kingston Guardian)
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Hospital workers claim they are "presence not picket line"
10:15am Wednesday 30th November 2011 in News By Martin George
Kingston Hospital workers on strike
Striking Kingston Hospital workers claim they are a presence not a picket line as they protest over changes to public sector pensions.
Ros Sainsbury, 51, from New Malden, works at the pathology laboratory at Kingston Hospital and has never been involved in a strike before.
She said: "People have been here since 7am and we hope to stay until 6pm.
“We are a presence rather than a picket line - we are not stopping anybody from going in.
“People are going round the wards and handing out stickers to support hospital workers."
Philippa Sawtell, steward representative of Chartered Society of Physiotherapy at Kingston Hospital, said her employers had been quite supportive and the protestors had received “a lot of beeps” from passing motorists.
She said: “The last thing we want to do is cause inconvenience to patients. As physios we work so hard every day for our patients to make them better.
"We are very careful to make sure patients who are elderly or vulnerable are being looked after. The only services not being covered are non emergency.
"A major, major concern of ours is working to the age of 68.
“Many physiotherapists and nurses can't physically work to that age because of the physical nature of the job. That's what we are concerned they have not negotiated on yet."
Meanwhile outside Kingston University, protestors are also gathering.
Kingston council social worker Lois Barlow said: “A good pension is one of the things that attract people to work in the public sector.
"Nurses and social workers like myself provide people essential services that treat people at their most vulnerable.
"It is not an easy job to do and anyone who works in the private sector can have our pensions and our jobs.
"We chose these professions and they are taking advantage of that.”
Kingston Unison worker Sampson Low said the Government was deliberately trying to cause friction between public and private sector workers.
He said: "Many of our families work in the private sector and it’s their pensions as well that need to be sorted out.”
If you are taking part in industrial action, tell us what you are doing and send your photos to jkennard@london.newsquest.co.uk, tweet us @SurreyComet using #KingstonStrikes or comment on our website.
Likewise, please contact us if you are affected by any disruption.
Comments(11)
mikenm
says...
11:25pm Wed 30 Nov 11
This disinformation strategy is no different to it's actions and comments on the disabled, where both ministers and the DWP deliberately release disinformation and also feed the more lurid stories in such tabloids as the Mail, Sun and Express.
I've worked in both the private and public sectors, and I know which pension is better. And it isn't the public sector one. The truth is the private sector allowed their pensions to be taken away from them. Or never paid into them. And the salaries for nearly all staff are also lower in the public sector for comparable jobs, where they exist.
NewKingstonian
says...
9:15am Thu 1 Dec 11
The idea of capping public sector pay rises at 1% is also a joke, why have pay rises at all? It's a culture in the public sector that needs to be broken. I don't want to pay these people more and more while they sit back and laugh waiting to draw their gold plated pensions and yes, I mean people like social workers, nurses and all. Their lives are easy in relative terms and their pay is good. Let's stop listening to the sympathy vote for them and get real.
NewKingstonian
says...
9:15am Thu 1 Dec 11
The idea of capping public sector pay rises at 1% is also a joke, why have pay rises at all? It's a culture in the public sector that needs to be broken. I don't want to pay these people more and more while they sit back and laugh waiting to draw their gold plated pensions and yes, I mean people like social workers, nurses and all. Their lives are easy in relative terms and their pay is good. Let's stop listening to the sympathy vote for them and get real.
fedup58
says...
10:37am Thu 1 Dec 11
sjw157
says...
6:58pm Thu 1 Dec 11
The Hutton report a couple of years ago already declared public sector pensions perfectly sensible, the ConDems are just out to demonise hard-working nurses, teachers etc. because they'd rather that than tackle the REAL criminals who are the chief execs and companies who squirrel their money away offshore so they don't have to pay tax! Wouldn't want to go taxing the people who donate so much money to their party.
mikenm
says...
10:54pm Thu 1 Dec 11
i suppose that next the Government and Cameron wil be telling us that the Rose Theatre is profitable and not subsidised, and that it's a perfectly good and sensible use of public money (i.e. some of mine). Yes, that is obviously a contradiction in terms.
fedup58
says...
10:23am Fri 2 Dec 11
sjw157
says...
6:56pm Fri 2 Dec 11
Blaming Labour is certainly convenient only works for so long.
fedup58
says...
12:37pm Sat 3 Dec 11
Surreydon
says...
7:13pm Sat 3 Dec 11
For over 10 years I subcontracted to a large communications company which was contracted to supply DWP offices, Jobcentre Plus, and other public sector departments, nationwide. To see these people in action, or rather 'inaction' was a real eye opener. Amazingly, most of them seemed to actually believe they were putting in a full days work!
I saw firsthand their 'breakfast mornings', their frequent, 'unofficial', 4 day weeks, their time spent on ebay and Google. The list goes on. These privileged and cossetted people are a drain on the national purse.
When I got my first state pension payment I thought it was a joke. Sadly, the jokes on me! I'm 66 in 4 weeks and still having to work a 6 day week. I'll swap my state pension with a public sector pension any day!!
fedup58 says...
12:53pm Wed 30 Nov 11