CCOO and UGT
Canary lament breakdown of negotiations between trade unions present at the general board of public employees and the government of the Canary Islands to the sustainability of public services and stability in public employment in the Canary Islands and call to make a last effort in the recovery of social dialogue, before there is a widespread conflict in the area of \u200b\u200bpublic service in the Canary Islands.
Last week it was consummated the closing of the negotiation process on the sustainability of public services and employment stability in open public in the field of public employees general board of the Canary Islands on 23 December 2010.
Consequently, the government of the Canary Islands will proceed to implement all provisions of the Finance Act 2011 in regard to labor rights and trade union measures, consistent with the discussion in our request for "conflict of competence" to the central government, will be appealed by both unions.
Unfortunately, we arrived at the worst possible scenario for addressing the main objective of implementing the necessary reforms of the government of the Canary Islands, whose deficiencies are evident and that the current crisis has worsened, reaching a point where sustainability is questioned global.
believe that the end result of these necessary reforms should not be a reduction in public services, which are essential, along with employment, to ensure equitable distribution of wealth and equality between all citizens and citizens, serving also for boosting economic activity needed to overcome the crisis. CCOO and UGT
Canary considered necessary to address this reform in a climate of understanding and that an alternative scenario of confrontation may contribute to an irreversible deterioration of the public that only serve to reinforce the thesis advocated weakening and the subsequent contingency actions from the private sector even come to replace government benefits.
Therefore, we advocate the urgent recovery of social dialogue that would put the basis for a global agreement between administrations, institutions, parties, unions and employers, held after the regional and municipal elections. In this regard, we propose a deal in the first instance between the government of the Canary Islands and most representative trade unions as a first step in that process back to reform government of the Canary Islands and the pattern of relationships between them.
This is the main object of action that we take the two organizations, following the breakdown of last week and in that context we must frame our response to the loss of public employees who serve as permanent union in different federations operating in the field of function public. This loss, though it weakens us, it will not prevent the two unions continue betting the defense of public services from the agreement or from the confrontation.
believe that the government of the Canary Islands is committing a serious error, if you expect that this new stage of confrontation secure potential 'electoral gains "focusing the debate on the number of released from the trade unions or public employee performance. At present, any attempt to promote the prestige of the trade unions or public employee is easily extended to political activity itself may generate a challenge to democratic institutions we do not want and can only be prevented from finding consensus solutions to serious problems we must address in the Canary Islands as a result of the crisis.
hope that ultimately good sense and imposes a new effort be made "in extremis" to give a new chance to "dialogue" and "consensus."
Consequently, the government of the Canary Islands will proceed to implement all provisions of the Finance Act 2011 in regard to labor rights and trade union measures, consistent with the discussion in our request for "conflict of competence" to the central government, will be appealed by both unions.
Unfortunately, we arrived at the worst possible scenario for addressing the main objective of implementing the necessary reforms of the government of the Canary Islands, whose deficiencies are evident and that the current crisis has worsened, reaching a point where sustainability is questioned global.
believe that the end result of these necessary reforms should not be a reduction in public services, which are essential, along with employment, to ensure equitable distribution of wealth and equality between all citizens and citizens, serving also for boosting economic activity needed to overcome the crisis. CCOO and UGT
Canary considered necessary to address this reform in a climate of understanding and that an alternative scenario of confrontation may contribute to an irreversible deterioration of the public that only serve to reinforce the thesis advocated weakening and the subsequent contingency actions from the private sector even come to replace government benefits.
Therefore, we advocate the urgent recovery of social dialogue that would put the basis for a global agreement between administrations, institutions, parties, unions and employers, held after the regional and municipal elections. In this regard, we propose a deal in the first instance between the government of the Canary Islands and most representative trade unions as a first step in that process back to reform government of the Canary Islands and the pattern of relationships between them.
This is the main object of action that we take the two organizations, following the breakdown of last week and in that context we must frame our response to the loss of public employees who serve as permanent union in different federations operating in the field of function public. This loss, though it weakens us, it will not prevent the two unions continue betting the defense of public services from the agreement or from the confrontation.
believe that the government of the Canary Islands is committing a serious error, if you expect that this new stage of confrontation secure potential 'electoral gains "focusing the debate on the number of released from the trade unions or public employee performance. At present, any attempt to promote the prestige of the trade unions or public employee is easily extended to political activity itself may generate a challenge to democratic institutions we do not want and can only be prevented from finding consensus solutions to serious problems we must address in the Canary Islands as a result of the crisis.
hope that ultimately good sense and imposes a new effort be made "in extremis" to give a new chance to "dialogue" and "consensus."
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