Sunday, December 4, 2011

Christine Blower NUT

said the ministers can not wait for stormy weather, without reconsidering the changes in retirement

public sector workers will not "go quietly" if ministers progress on pension reform, after the mass strike next week, the leader of one of the largest unions in the country , he warned.

Christine Blower, general secretary of the National Union of Teachers, said the union believes that the regional strike and what to do if the negotiations were stalled after the strike on Wednesday by two, 6 million workers.

In an interview with The Guardian, Blower - whose union is the sixth largest in the UK, with nearly 300,000 members - said ministers would be a mistake if they thought they could "the storm next Wednesday and take the unions are silent."

"We would be willing to consider other types of collective action, depending on the outcome of the negotiations," he said. "We could consider a regional action."

mid-December

the Trades Union Congress (TUC) will report on how the negotiations with the government on public sector pensions are under way. At this point, Fan said, the union "with a vision of what will be needed in the new year and see what the screen would be better."

The head of a teachers' unions more moderate, warned ministers not to strike this week would be his swan song of the members.

Boustead

Maria, secretary general of the Association of Teachers and Lecturers (ATL), said he hoped that the government sees a "massive level of dissatisfaction" and that this would make the ministers to reconsider their plans pensions.

If ministers do not reconsider, he said, the coalition government to see a turn against him at the next general election. "People who have been screwed not forget to vote," he said.

It may be clear to the ministers of the coalition force with enough teachers feel about their plans. Members of teacher unions who have never participated in a national strike before, like ATL and the National Association of Head Teachers will be in the marches and picket lines instead of in front of the class on Wednesday.

total of at least 668,000 teachers and teachers from at least six unions across England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland have been a vote on whether to strike Wednesday. The audience was varied - from 23% to 53.6% - but the proportion of those who voted for the strike was decisive. In the case of the National Union of Teachers, 92% voted in favor.

As a result, the vast majority of primary and secondary schools in England and Wales will be closed, forcing parents to work from home, arrange child care or take their children to the office.

. monthly contributions from teachers of their pensions would increase by 50% from 6.4% to 9.6% for 2014.

. Those who earn more than £ 40 000 would see an increase of 64%.

. What is now a system of final salary could be related to a pattern of career average earnings.



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