would you accept a tax increase to give the NHS staff a bigger pay rise? If everyone who clapped agreed they could pay them more but I wonder how many would actually agree to paying for it?
// a one-off bonus paid to front line staff only. //
how would the term "front line staff" be defined? where would the "cut-off" point be? would it even be fair to draw a line below which staff were not entitled?
mushroom - the managerial staff, whose job it would be to allocate the bonus, would decree that they had done all the important work, so the bonus would be distributed amongst them.
A one off payment for front line staff only........try to get that past the Unions........
So, what about the Armed Forces, would they get a one off payment when they entered a theatre of war?
No. Nothing to do with tax though. I just think it's a bad idea to give them a pay rise at all when so many others who are just as deserving won't get one. And the strike threats are making me furious.
No and I was a nurse, I would rather the money went to reducing waiting lists, and catching up on the health care that was left behind during the pandemic. A pay rise at the cost to patient care, not why I went into it.
Its really all down to priorities really, and sadly in my view no government, either side ever gets it right, and never will, they live in a different world.
But the government are not on their own, a lot of Joe public have lost any sense of priority.
To conclude, I believe the HS2 project was given the go ahead during the pandemic. A good example of very bad house keeping, or thought process, on the present problems at that time.
When I left I was on just over £26,000 as a staff nurse on top of that there was unsocial hours payments for weekend and night shifts. That was a fair time back people used to say nurses were poorly paid, but per hour the junior doctors were far worse off.