I have sympathy for the doctors with regard to salary, but as a pilot, I get zero bank holidays and weekends are non existent and I work random night and day shifts, of course this is obvious with the job of being a pilot, but in this modern world people need a 24/7 service and if you are able to negotiate extra pay for anti social hours or working on weekends great for you, but you shouldn't take it as a given or a right. If I got paid extra for working nights and weekends and it got removed would I be angry, definitely, maybe I'd take industrial action, would it be successful, who knows....
I don't know who to believe anymore![]()
I'd guess they're talking about post-training contract, when people are solicitors, but I don't know how complete their data is/if they're focussing on London where it is big money (as opposed to regional firms where's it's good but not the figures people imagine). Basically I don't know if it's a true average or not. Obviously I can't imagine many, if any, law firms get away with paying min wage, but I think people have an idea of everyone walking out of uni and getting £50k a year as a big swinging **** lawyers, when it's not really like that.
When I say it might be when solicitors, to flesh that out... you do your degree + LPC + two years on the job training - which is the training contract period all solicitors have to do... barristers do a one year pupilage - and are then a solicitor (and obviously by then are earning more than at the start of that TC). Or degree + GDL + LPC + two year TC, for the ~50% of people who go down that route. So the equivalent with medics would be after there first two years, when they go into specialised training (I think that's right... I should know for sure because my brother's girlfriend is a doc, but obviously I'm a bad person!)
Just out of interest what is the pay like?
So much for democracy.... all part of Cameron/Osbornes plan to privatise NHS...
The government was elected by the electorate with a manifesto pledge for a true 7 day NHS...
The government was elected by the electorate with a manifesto pledge for a true 7 day NHS...
The government was elected by the electorate with a manifesto pledge for a true 7 day NHS...
They're not trying to get a 7 day NHS with this new contract though, they're after an NHS wide paycut.
They turned down the BMAs offer that allowed the increased weekend staffing in a neutral pay envelope because it didn't recognise Saturdays as plain time. That is what they're really after.
B) LOL @ junior doctors who threaten to move abroad and work in private/insurance based healthcare systems which they hate so much, not about money eh?
The government was elected by the electorate with a manifesto pledge for a true 7 day NHS...
no, it's about having the right to a personal life, you know, like doctors are, believe it or not, humans too
The government was elected by the electorate with a manifesto pledge for a true 7 day NHS...