T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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693.1 | No more taxes!!!!! | KAOFS::LOCKYER | NO! (Tact Is For Weenies!!) | Mon Apr 26 1993 13:47 | 15 |
| If I have to choose between increased taxes or cutting expenses
(including laying off government workers and cutting programs), then
there is no doubt I would opt for cutting expenses. While I would like
to believe that all expenditures could be reviewed and cut rationally,
or that there could be a combination of selective tax increases and
expense reductions, I think there are too many special interest groups
to allow this to happen. Far better to make the tough decisions
quickly and get on with it...
I'm not an NDPer and think Premier Bob is screwing up big time in
general, I have to hand it to him for (appearing to?) getting serious
about the economy.
Regards, Garry (who's wife is a nurse and could be suject to Premier
Boob's down sizing....)
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693.2 | | KAOFS::M_COTE | I'm a mod, not a rocker | Tue Apr 27 1993 12:42 | 10 |
|
? I'm not an NDPer and think Premier Bob is screwing up big time in
? general, I have to hand it to him for (appearing to?) getting serious
? about the economy.
I had assumed that once you got on the Notre Dame drinking team
you were automatically an NDPer. Guess I was wrong
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693.3 | Gotta happen but their gonna blow it | TROOA::SOLEY | Someone call my lawyers, tell 'em that I'm dead | Tue Apr 27 1993 18:50 | 39 |
| The notion that a job on the OPS is a guarenteed job for life is
complete bunkum, but it is a popular falacy. Interestingly provincial
government employees have neither the right to strike or the right to
sue for wrongful dismissal (which equates to the right to severance
pay). I've worked in the civil service, and frankly on average
government workers are not very different than the people sitting around
me now, but by virtue of the fact that they are "public" servants
people tend to notice the bad apples more and of course the union
attempts to protect them.
By way of example I'll tell you about my brother, his office is moving,
(not one of the moves cancelled) and as part of the move his job is
evaporating, according to the current contract they have to attempt to
find him an opening prior to the move, but if they can't he's out of a
job on moving day, given that there are only about 10 people who do
what he does in the whole government his only hope is if one of the
other 9 dies, retires or quits. Some job for life.
Don't get me wrong, there's oodles of fat in the system, but what's
likely to happen (a 5X5X5 package) isn't going to accomplish much. What
really needs to happen is structural changes to the way the civil
service works, the money that is wasted in the name of
decentralization is horrendous (there are something like 22 agencies of
the government that each have fully staffed administrative complements
doing things like purchasing, communications (PR), MIS, accounting, HR etc.
The opportunities for economies of scale by centralizing even some of these
functions is staggering. There are also opportunites for such econmoies
where the rubber meets the road, for example licensing, MTO licenses
drivers, MNR licenses fisherman and hunters, MOE licenses
exterminators, each one of these fundementally identical processes has
a complete support environment.
There are lots more, sunsetting out of date legislation, reducing use
of consultants....
I guess what I'm saying is that I think the civil service should bleed
like the rest of us and this should happen as the logical fallout of
structural changes to the civil service but that I don't see any hope
of it happening.
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693.4 | will it ever happen? | TROOA::SELMECZI | anyone's seen the corkscrew ? | Wed Apr 28 1993 13:50 | 40 |
| Norm,
Your reply seem a little misleading on that jobs-for-life don't exist.
True, there's no such a thing as job-for-life, however, in the government people
get away with a lot more than in the private sector (in general).
Everybody probably has a slightly different experience of the gov.
workers and their attitude to work. Also, we cannot generalize that every
ministry or every employee is equally eager to work or if they're all slackers,
that wouldn't be true/fair. However, in my brief 2 years + experience I could
break down the "classification" to 2 groups: the ones that care about work and
working together with others like team (buzzzzz words!), and the majority (!) -
and this was my experience in 3 ministries - that waffle about job fairness,
equal pay, no pressure, no abuse (typical union buzz words, they make the
government sound like a concentration camp), but they hardly ever think about
equal share of workload (I wonder why). For instance, there was this guy that
was in a group that's got no real function whatsoever in MIS, about 6-8 people
as 'support specialists & security group' reading newspapers, magazines all day,
and when the manager complained to this one guy, his spending far too much time
on union stuff (that was the only thing the manager really got upset about
otherwise she was doing the same magazine reading,etc..) so he got real (!)
upset - the poor fellow - and started a grievance against his manager on grounds
of unfair treatment, and would you believe (yes, of course) he won the case, and
she had to apologize in writing and in words for 'such a mistreatment' so now he
can go on reading magazines (and you're paying for his salary). This is just
one example, and far from extremes, this happens every now & then (frequently).
And the union is always 'standing by' its loyal members. Well, when once I
asked for union help - just out of curiosity - they flatly refused saying that
I'm only a contractor and should just accept life as it is, even though I HAD TO
PAY the union dues!
To summarize this: there's a lot of dead wood in the government on all levels
and they all (dead wood only!) hide under the wings of the only ruling authority
in the government the Union, they run the government. And the ones that are
decent workers are without help, since the union mostly supports loudmouth
members that support their way of life at the work place.
Does this picture seem familiar (there are exceptions I know...) ???
/Tamas.
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693.5 | | KAOFS::B_VANVALKENB | | Thu Apr 29 1993 16:16 | 12 |
| I'm all for downsizing the goverment and our "civil servants" where
ever possible ... however I'm not sure how Bob can really do this...
He already has contracts with these unions, and now he plans to
break them.
Is there a precident for this anywhere ?
Brian V
PS last I heard it was 6x6x6 when did it become 5x5x5 ?
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693.6 | Bath water only, no Babies! | TROOA::BROOKS | | Mon May 03 1993 13:32 | 14 |
| The challenge in downsizing the bureaucracy is to not throw the baby
out with the bath-water. That is, the challenge is, just like we in
DEC are currently experiencing, is to not loose valuable employees, but
the 'dead wood' ( a cruel term, really). You want to get rid of the
magazine-reading lay-abouts, not the ones plugging away like you and I.
And another thing, last summer I was renewing my drivers licence, and
in chatting to the clerk taking my money and picture, asked if they
could make their hours more flexible (8-4 or 10-6 instead of 9-5) in
order to better serve us, the customer. She responded that even though
they were not public servants themselves, they had to follow 'union
rules' and work 9-5 only. Go figure!
Doug
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693.7 | | TROOA::SOLEY | Someone call my lawyers, tell 'em that I'm dead | Mon May 03 1993 17:44 | 25 |
| re: -.1
Yup, that's what I mean about the structural problems inherent in the
system and the Union's tendancy to protect those undeserving of
protection. Frankly there is plenty of capability in the system right
now to get rid of the magazine reading layabouts but management, as a
rule doesn't have the necessary gumption to do it.
I have a little experience with VRS, the computer system that supports
the drivers license offices. These offices are all outsourced, and the
contract specifies that if the system goes down the government has to
pay a penalty to the contractor. The costs to provide out of hours
support to keep the whole mess up would be prohibitive so hours are
restricted. Now the union may be a contributing factor to this but it's
not as simple as the clerk put it.
re: -.2
The government is asking the unions to re-open their contracts, the
stick they have to encourage them to do this is the fact that the
government is in a basically untouchable position legally if they do
arbitrary lay offs.
5x5x5 is what OPSEU is telling there members they're expecting to be
asked for.
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693.8 | darn unions | TROOA::SELMECZI | < it MUST be a H/W problem... > | Tue May 04 1993 19:20 | 44 |
|
They have far too much power but they do not have the intelligence to
support it. I - for one - am totally against this whole union business
as it's set up now.
My personal experience with them was always only negative. Their rules
are not governed by sensible business decisions, common sense, or not
even humanitarian reasons (like people should have jobs) but only to
oppose the ruling body, they believe ANARCHY rules and they really don't
care about "You" as a worker, to them you are just another 'supporting
person' so they can 'represent' you.
On a recent union meeting at ... I asked one of the OPS Union hot-shots,
if they could do (or even try) something about how unfairly they treat
there contract staff (not the consultants, on payroll! + paying the
b....y union dues) and once again (just like before) I received some real
b.s. reply :
"Yeah, sure you've got a point there, I'll look into this and
will definitely give you a call back..."
the goof didn't even know me or cared to find out what my number was,
typical!
I think they should ban unions as they are now, and if people do need
some kind of challenging organization to keep the government operating in
such a fair manner, they should set up something that actually works, and
not something that cost loads-o-money but has no positive impact on
working conditions and fairness. Besides all that, this anarchistic
'socialist view' the unions practice is exactly like what I wanted to
leave behind when I left the Communist Block and went to England. It
didn't work in any of the Red-countries, doesn't work in Britain
(probably the worst). It's so sad to see that they can exist here too,
Canada (already better (maybe the best) then most part of the world!!!)
would be such a nice place without such a 'Mafia' built into the
Government - I think Unions could be partially blamed for recession by
keeping unneeded workforce employed at taxpayers cost (besides Bob &
Brian).
They should spend more on health care & education professionals rather
than "Health Office & Education Office """""PROFESSIONALS""""" (it's a
laugh!).
/Tamas.
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