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Tax men fill their pockets with gold (Read 429 times)
Sun Tzu
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Tax men fill their pockets with gold
Dec 17th, 2015 at 7:44pm
 
ATO voted to go for 3% pay increases. You can bet the top layer will get much more than 3%.

Liberal government's budget plans are in ruins as the deficit widens with each day.

Quote:
More than 200 bosses at the Australian Taxation Office will score a 3 per cent pay rise next month.
The generous wage hike for the agency's senior executives was announced just hours after a wage deal, averaging 2 per cent a year, for tens of thousands of rank-and-file public servants at the ATO was crushed in a staff ballot by a margin of 85 to 15 per cent.
Tax commissioner Chris Jordan used his discretion to approve the pay rise for the executives in the wake of the all-time-high "no" vote, in a move that looks set to be seen as a provocation by many tax officials, whose pay has effectively been frozen since 2013.
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"I have considered the general productivity gains we have made over the last 12 to 18 months, including matters specific to the SES, and am satisfied that a pay increase for SES is affordable within our current budget constraints," Mr Jordan wrote to his executives on Thursday afternoon.
The landslide no vote is a blow for the Turnbull government, which had been inching closer to settling the long-running pay dispute with much of the federal bureaucracy.
Second tax commissioner Geoff Leeper told his staff on Thursday the result would send both sides back to the bargaining table and that a settlement was unlikely for several months.
"In terms of 'what now', there was general consensus at the last bargaining meeting that if this was the outcome, given the Christmas leave period it would be unrealistic to do anything formal until early February," Mr Leeper wrote.
"It is difficult to see how there could be another vote until at least well into March."
But Public Service Commissioner John Lloyd struck an optimistic note, while warning workers that better deals were not going to be on offer.
"Enterprise bargaining is proceeding satisfactorily," Mr Lloyd said.
"The current position is that 28 agreements have now been supported following ballots by employees.
"Employees should recognise that the essence of the rejected offers will not be changed.
"All the rejection means is that pay increases are delayed and the renegotiation of the agreement after this one is pushed further into the future."
But unions were quick to seize on the ATO result, and the earlier wafer-thin no vote at the Agriculture Department, to declare the government's bargaining policy was in deep trouble.
Community and Public Sector Union national secretary Nadine Flood said the policy was a mess while the Australian Services Union said the result would force Mr Jordan back to the bargaining table.
Earlier on Thursday, a new wage deal for more than 4400 public servants at the Agriculture Department was rejected by just 62 votes.
The department's bosses were expected to have got their proposal over the line with an improved wage offer and by cutting a separate deal with the department's most militant group of workers, the meat inspectors.
But Agriculture's staff were told on Thursday morning that the proposal had fallen agonisingly short, with 80 per cent of the department's public servants casting ballots, in a result that will send both sides back to the negotiating table in the new year.
The result follows another close-run vote this week at the Employment Department where workers voted by a 55 to 45 per cent margin to reject the deal on offer.


Read more: http://www.theage.com.au/national/public-service/ato-public-servants-vote-down-w...
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Grappler Truth Teller Feller
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Re: Tax men fill their pockets with gold
Reply #1 - Dec 18th, 2015 at 12:31pm
 
Top layer are contracted employees under the Adolph Howard regime's changes to the PS, which places them squarely outside the independent and balance of powers system, and thus they should only really be considered as advisors and not as dictators to the minions who actually work there......

Just another of the Librat's ways of reducing under despotism the public of this country... this time by wrecking the balance of powers between executive and administrative..... don't get me started on the judicial again....

Funny thing about the Librats is that since the advent of the INTERNAL PS POLICY**** of affirmative action, each and every one of the maddest and most destructive socialist policies have been their doing...... clearly the end game is to ensure that power resides with a self-appointed elite, regardless of political 'ideology' - and that every end justifies every means..................

(**tolls that bell again**)............

**  affirmative action could never be Law since it is blatantly illegal and discriminatory.... you see the result now with a massively de-knackered public service/education system run by women, who as a rule, tend to be much more obedient to their masters.......
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“Facts are stubborn things; and whatever may be our wishes, our inclinations, or the dictates of our passion, they cannot alter the state of facts and evidence.”
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Sun Tzu
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Re: Tax men fill their pockets with gold
Reply #2 - Dec 19th, 2015 at 9:25am
 
CPSU ambit claim is for 9-12 % over 3 years. This is not justified when private sector remuneration is falling.


Quote:
The report by IPA deputy executive director James Paterson and lawyer Aaron Lane said federal public service wages on average outstripped private sector incomes.
A different conclusion was drawn four years ago by Mercer which found those employed at APS level 3 and higher tended to be underpaid compared to private sector workers with similar qualifications and experience.
The IPA report quoted the Community and Public Sector Union's previous pay rise claim of 12.5 per cent compounded over three years and called it an "ambit claim".
But it did not take into account the CPSU's softened stance on pay in recent months in which it has asked for 2.5 per cent to 3 per cent annually, or between 7.5 to 9 per cent over three years. 
"All APS agreements contain generous allowances, which have the effect of increasing salary by potentially up to tens of thousands of dollars per year," the report said.
"These allowances are paid to employees with first aid qualifications, to those working in regional and remote locations, for professional development costs, gym memberships, for financial advice, child care, and home office costs – amongst many others."
The IPA argued against the amount of extra paid leave for bureaucrats and listed leave to donate blood at the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade and up to 10 days ceremonial leave at the Defence Department for Aboriginal or Torres Strait Islander staff as examples.
"Most private sector employees would be expected to utilise personal leave credits to attend the doctors to receive vaccinations – or attend family court hearings," the report said.
"Likewise, 'Defence Day' and paid leave for moving house [at the Agriculture Department and some other agencies] are not commonly found in private sector agreements and effectively increase an APS employee's annual leave entitlement."
The report said all APS agreements had a flex-time scheme, in which employees accrued leave by working more than their normal hours of work, with some departments allowing to staff to cash out of flex time.
"In the private sector, it is standard for full-time employees to work a reasonable amount of overtime as part of their salary package," the report said. 

Read more: http://www.canberratimes.com.au/national/public-service/australian-public-servic...
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