ChatterBank1 min ago
No Maternity Policy For Councillors
15 Answers
http:// www.bbc .co.uk/ news/uk -englan d-birmi ngham-3 7587188
seems this is a recent phenomenon with female council officers under 40 being a rarity until now. nevertheless seems a bit harsh to end up with the sack for getting pregnant?
seems this is a recent phenomenon with female council officers under 40 being a rarity until now. nevertheless seems a bit harsh to end up with the sack for getting pregnant?
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Hmm. Not sure about this.
Being a Councillor is an elected role and your duty is to represent the people who voted for you. If for some reason you cannot carry out that function, you should resign and let someone who can, stand for election and be elected. It is not a regular job, and the fees that can be claimed are not wages.
Being a Councillor is an elected role and your duty is to represent the people who voted for you. If for some reason you cannot carry out that function, you should resign and let someone who can, stand for election and be elected. It is not a regular job, and the fees that can be claimed are not wages.
Birmingham council has history when it comes to being seen to be fair to women. they need to save £250m on services over the next few years; a proportion of those savings are to meet the fall-out from an equal pay ruling made against them in 2014. they really can't afford to get this latest matter wrong too.
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