UNISON will be sending ballot papers out to all members on Tuesday 11 October.
The ballot will close on the 3 November and the day of action has been planned for the 30 November 2011.
Take action now
We need everyone to take action in the campaign to protect our pensions – whatever time you have, whether it’s five minutes, ten minutes, half an hour or more. It all helps.
Encourage your colleagues to join UNISON if they are not yet a member so they can protect their pension.
Vote ‘yes’
UNISON is asking its members to vote YES in the ballot for industrial action to protect public sector pensions.
Current proposals mean that most people will pay more and work longer to get
a pension that will be worth less.
UNISON has tried to negotiate in good faith for secure and affordable
pensions – but ministers won’t listen.
We are balloting for strike action initially to start on 30 November. We are
also working with other trade unions and community groups to organise local and
national protests in support of public sector pensions.
We need a big YES vote and a high turnout to send a clear and united message to ministers that “enough is enough”, that will help persuade them to withdraw their current unfair and unjustified attacks on pensions.
Pensions: busting the myths
MYTH – People are living longer which means they’re claiming their
pensions for longer – this needs to be addressed.
The schemes were revised to take account of this three years ago – so scheme benefits and
costs are now 25% lower.
In addition, life expectancy has increased, but less so for manual workers and the low paid.
MYTH – There’s a big public sector pensions deficit that has to be repaid.
There is no funding gap – the public sector schemes were assessed for long term risk and adjusted accordingly three years ago and are now very secure.
Both the local government pension scheme and NHS pension scheme are currently cash rich with income far exceeding outgoings –
some £2 billion in the case of the NHS pension scheme.
MYTH – The proposals mean that those earning over £15,000 pay around
3% more each month – that’s not very much is it?
3% of your pay is a significant chunk of income. Pension scheme members currently pay around 6% of their salary into their pensions – adding another 3% to this means increasing
the payments by around half again.
The Local Government Association is even worried that this would lead public sector workers to opt out of pension schemes and threaten their affordability.
MYTH – Public services and public service pensions are causing the financial crisis.
It was the banking sector’s reckless risk taking and excessive greed that caused this global recession.
MYTH – We’re all in it together. Everyone has to make sacrifices right now – why not public sector workers?
We are all facing cuts to our public services – on top of this public service workers are facing unprecedented job cuts and a pay freeze. Is it fair to ask them to pay an average 3% more from their salaries on top of all that in return for a pension with worse benefits?
We will all end up paying more tax if people drop out of the scheme to end up relying on the state in their old age.
MYTH – It’s not fair, why should the public sector get good pensions when the private sector doesn’t?
The average director of a FTSE 100 company has a final salary pension worth £3.6m or £174,963 a year, while the average occupational pension generally is £9,500 a year and the average public service pension is £7,800 a year. That’s the real unfairness.
UNISON thinks everyone deserves an adequate pension, including workers in the private
sector. We should improve bad schemes rather than make good ones bad.
Providing adequate pensions means that fewer people will be receiving welfare handouts after retirement, which would cost the taxpayer more money in the long run.
MYTH – Public sector workers have it too good with huge pensions.
The average public service pension is around £7,800 a year, for women working in local government the average is £2,800 a year, while the median for women working in the NHS is £3,500 a year: hardly huge pensions.
Saving towards an occupational pension in many cases means a person is receiving fewer welfare benefits during retirement, saving the taxpayer money.
MYTH – Taxpayers are paying for public service workers’ pensions.
That’s not fair.
Everyone’s taxes are used to pay for all public services – stethoscopes in hospitals, the salaries of primary school teachers, people to change the light bulbs in street lamps, and part of these people’s pay is their pension.
A pension is part of someone’s salary package and is no different than an annual salary, a car, or the London weighting allowance. It’s not fair to change something in a job contract after someone accepted the job.
One in five people working in the UK works in public services. They are taxpayers too.
MYTH – Public service workers retire at 60.
The normal retirement age in many of the public service pension schemes is already 65.
Raising the retirement age hurts some people more than others. In general we’re living longer, but that doesn’t mean everyone will have the same quality of life.
Many public service workers have jobs that are physically demanding or stressful, making it difficult or even impossible to continue working into old age. Similarly many low paid workers simply don’t have the option of retiring early because they can’t afford it.