- In the Media - Page 40 of 51

Public Service Association response to NSW wage freeze - Mirage News 27 May 2020

As stated by Stewart Little, general secretary of the Public Service Association: “Today’s decision is extraordinarily disappointing for our members. “More than 60 percent of our members are women, many of them are on medium to low incomes and the sole earners for their families, and many live in regional NSW. This will hurt them. “They are prison officers, teachers’ aides, park rangers, social workers…

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Creating new jobs from $3b public servant pay freeze pain - Daily Telegraph 27 May 2020

A $3 billion public sector wage freeze will instead be spent to create up to 20,000 new jobs but the NSW government faces a war over the move which will hold back a 2.5 per cent pay rise for nurses, police and teachers. Unions NSW secretary Mr Morey told The Daily Telegraph there are multiple wage cases and awards hearings for nurses, police and the…

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Labor vows to block NSW public sector pay freeze - Gov News 28 May 2020

Labor says it will do everything it can to stop a NSW government decision to implement a 12 month freeze on public sector pay rises. The move announced by Premier Gladys Berejiklian this week means 400,000 government employees will miss out on their 2.5 per cent pay rise. The freeze, which applies to all government positions including state owned corporations and departmental secretaries and executives,…

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Public sector wage freeze will ‘cost jobs, hurt regions’ - Gov News 1 June 2020

The NSW government’s public sector wage freeze could indirectly cost 1,100 jobs across the state, according to an economic analysis by a public policy think tank. The move is also likely to harm regions, which will suffer from the loss of spending by public servants, the Australia Institute says. https://www.governmentnews.com.au/public-sector-wage-freeze-will-cost-jobs-hurt-regions/

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Ministers' drivers sacked days before jobs promise - SMH 2 June 2020

The Premier's own department sacked five drivers just days before she announced that no government employees would lose their jobs, indicating the commitment does not extend to the nearly one in five public servants on temporary contracts. Gladys Berejiklian guaranteed last week that no public servant would be forced out of a job for the next 12 months, in exchange for a freeze on pay rises.…

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