![]() |
I agree its not financial incompetence, its astute financial manoeuvering at the expense of our Pension scheme |
Vote No, should the worst happen and HMG end up back in charge, what makes you think that NATS would not be subject to a no-strike clause as part of the rescue package? The armed forces, the prison service, the police are all tied in to one, why not NATS, being 'vital to the country's infrastructure.
|
HMG were in charge before 2001 and strike action did take place before.
I have not heard of any new legislation to prevent strike action, however our powder is so dry it has almost evaporated! However if the majority want to roll over and die, so be it. I think the French have the right idea:ok: |
The French DO have the right idea. None of this poncing around "working together" cr*p....no negotiation...you don't wanna play ball? Fine, we're on strike then.
Either that or we join ASLEF. As a former member of said Union, those guys strike at the drop of a hat. They don't get f***ed about by management and they don't take "no" for an answer. Barron wouldn't stand a chance if he was in the railway industry up against these guys. Wishful thinking.... |
:)
Vote No, should the worst happen and HMG end up back in charge, what makes you think that NATS would not be subject to a no-strike clause as part of the rescue package? The armed forces, the prison service, the police are all tied in to one, why not NATS, being 'vital to the country's infrastructure. By that time most ATC staff will have gone elsewhere leaving CTC HQ to separate traffic :{ And dont rule out NATS failing in the next 2 years due the recession/depression:uhoh: |
By that time most ATC staff will have gone elsewhere leaving CTC HQ to separate traffic |
PeltonLevel
Not sure what proportion CAA are still on, however a cap (though I still maintain this is a side issue) will quickly take our scheme below a 2/3rds of 1/59th scheme. It won't take many pay rises just above RPI+0.5% for the difference to be reversed, especially as while our pensionable pay would be getting capped, the CAAs' would be growing |
Route direct Starbucks....report visual with photo of the day |
Rumourmill
Having just spent over an hour reading through these posts, I've come to the conclusion that sadly a lot of you either haven't been to the briefings or went with your fingers in your ears and your eyes shut.
For a start, if HMG have to get involved, that will mean that NATS have gone into administration and our pension scheme will have been frozen. HMG will have no intention of keeping NSL going, and will hand the contracts over to the highest bidder.. anyone working at these units will have no "trust of a promise" or anything else to protect their Ts&Cs because NATS is in administration so all bets are off. Whoever's left will get an extremely reduced package and they'll have to accept it because the union won't have the negotiators they once did as they'll have resigned after your no vote. Just remember that these people are the same negotiators that achieved our great Ts & Cs in the first place. They don't like the deal either, but they're running with it. I say vote yes, swallow the bitter pill, and get angry about something else. |
Fenella
NATS will not go into administration. Like the Government is doing at this very moment, if we need to, we can borrow our way out of any temporary situation (after all, as we keep getting told by management, our credit rating gets better and better every year and we are in great shape), and this 'credit crunch' is temporary. In fact this credit crunch has nothing to do with our situation - they even stress that at the beginning of the briefing (then put a slide up halfway through saying how the downturn is hutring our portfolio :ugh::ugh:) NATS are scaremongering in order to get what they want, which is a cheaper to run pension scheme. Having a cheaper to run scheme is in the interests of any 'for profit' company (even though at PPP we were told NATS would be 'not for profit'). It makes great business sense for NATS to close the scheme and reduce the benefits to existing members, however that does not mean it is necessarily required to keep the company afloat, it is just a way to cut costs. NATS could have done as the CAA are doing i.e. continued to pay the underlying rate into the pension scheme even when it was in surplus, but it chose not to because it suited them, even though in doing so it would harm the pension. (This should be taken into context considering Phillip James, in answer to someone on the intranet wrote '85% of pension schemes have closed sdue to lack of money over the past 10 years'... If thats the case why did NATS think it was acceptable to effectively take money from the scheme?) You should not believe every thing that management tell you, there is a bigger picture. Do you honestly think NSL will not be sold off if this deal goes through? What about the Ts & Cs then? This is a company that has added layers of management when it could have stripped them out; this is a company that could have saved itself and employees some money by using SMART pensions years ago, but chose not to. This is a company that now claims it can forsee the future and the future is not good, therefore we need to close the scheme - yet the company was unable to see this future (conveniently), when it wanted to take money from the scheme. This is a company relying on actuaries who only now seem to have realised that year on year since records began, people have lived longer into retirement, thus increasing burden on pension schemes. |
ProM
Band4All has a salient point though - just over an hour to read and digest this thread???!!! Fenella Just remember that these people are the same negotiators that achieved our great Ts & Cs in the first place. They don't like the deal either, but they're running with it. I say vote yes, swallow the bitter pill, and get angry about something else The Union has done a very poor job of keeping people informed during the middle of negotiations. In fact the Union started off with 'OneNATSOnePension' emblazoned on a website, and told us to visit it frequently for updates. Those updates failed to arrive and the 'OneNATSonePension' logo was quietly (without fanfare or notice) removed. The union has done well in the past, but in this instance it has not covered itself in glory. That does not mean we have to bin them, but it might mean that they have to go back to management and admit they misread members feelings over this issue, and renegotiate. You can bet your bottom dollar that Management have 2 or 3 fall back positions... do you honestly think this is as much as they can offer us?? |
Thanks anotherthing .
I get fed up preaching to those that think they know better ;) |
I made no comment one way or another on saliency, merely that in my view a newcomer should be afforded a little leeway and welcome, especially in a case such as this where she(?) is a colleague of yours.
In fact since her post only applied to comments made since the briefings, then I believe that if I had dedicated time I could skim read most of those in a little over an hour. Were they printed off I think i could comfortably skim the whole thread. Since so much is repeated I would certainly elicit enough information to draw a conclusion such as Fenella posted. This is not to say that i agree with Fenella, I am not in a position to agree or not. |
ProM
Nowhere in Fenellas post does she say she only read the posts written since the briefings started! She mentions the briefings in passing inferring that anyone who is contemplating voting no I've come to the conclusion that sadly a lot of you either haven't been to the briefings or went with your fingers in your ears and your eyes shut. Has Fenella been to every briefing to ne able to make such a bold statement? I'm all for the right for people to vote as they believe is in their or the schemes best interest, however at least I have not resorted to inferring people who have a differing opinion to me have so because they have failed to attend a brief or just did not listen... If we are going to be overly sensitiveabout this (as we seem to be about everything in tis day and age), although her welcome from Band4all may not have been overly welcoming, I think conversely it was not exactly the best 'first post' in history either and not the way to endear oneself to the masses!! Personally, I couldn't care either way, as long as when people quote or write with regard from others' posts, they do it with a modicum of accuracy!! |
Having just spent over an hour reading through these posts, I've come to the conclusion that sadly a lot of you either haven't been to the briefings or went with your fingers in your ears and your eyes shut. For a start, if HMG have to get involved, that will mean that NATS have gone into administration and our pension scheme will have been frozen. HMG will have no intention of keeping NSL going, and will hand the contracts over to the highest bidder.. anyone working at these units will have no "trust of a promise" or anything else to protect their Ts&Cs because NATS is in administration so all bets are off. Whoever's left will get an extremely reduced package and they'll have to accept it because the union won't have the negotiators they once did as they'll have resigned after your no vote. Just remember that these people are the same negotiators that achieved our great Ts & Cs in the first place. They don't like the deal either, but they're running with it. I say vote yes, swallow the bitter pill, and get angry about something else. I do agree that falling back on HMG would be a bad thing. Hundreds of people would lose their jobs, costs would be slashed, working conditions would suffer etc etc. Not happy times. Yes, they are the same negotiators who got the great T&Cs we are all on.. but those were negotiated with a management of civil service mentality who had pots of money they needed to dispose of. It was hardly a difficult task for many years. Got a bit more tricky since PPP, but their negotiating strength was founded on an implied threat of their ability to call us all out in the event of an attack on any key issue. Whether this vote is yes or no, they have lost that strength. They have shown the "dry powder" has grown mouldy in storage and there's no spark can light it. I attended a briefing, I asked a number of questions. Only some of those were answered. The failure to address a couple of the key points I challenged on is why I will happily vote no. You may believe many of us paid no attention and didnt get it... We all may similarly suggest you to be a tad gullible. each to their own. To the interesting point of the legality of industrial action in the event of a No vote... We have - through our unions - a mandate for industrial action, should NATS seek to force a closure of the pension scheme. Whether the TU executive agree or not is irrelevant to the legal case. It weakens the campaigh, but it doesn't prevent it. I would fully expect some, if not all, of them to resign their posts if this happened. |
To the interesting point of the legality of industrial action in the event of a No vote... We have - through our unions - a mandate for industrial action, should NATS seek to force a closure of the pension scheme. |
Nothing betrays ignorance quite like forming an opinion and then expressing dismay that everyone else didn't follow suit! |
Fenella Having just spent over an hour reading through these posts, I've come to the conclusion that sadly a lot of you either haven't been to the briefings or went with your fingers in your ears and your eyes shut. Nice start. Unfortunately the 'briefing' you went to was in fact a 'sales pitch' designed solely to produce the voting result desired by Unions/Management. I don't doubt that the pitch has been very effective in scaring and confusing attendees. For a start, if HMG have to get involved, that will mean that NATS have gone into administration and our pension scheme will have been frozen. When Railtrack were subject of a 'Railway Administration Order' under the Railways Act and the employees continued to accrue their pension benefits after coming back under the control of HMG. This 'end of the world' scenario from the management is at best disingenuous scaremongering and isn't supported by precedent imo. HMG will have no intention of keeping NSL going, and will hand the contracts over to the highest bidder.. anyone working at these units will have no "trust of a promise" or anything else to protect their Ts&Cs because NATS is in administration so all bets are off. Whoever's left will get an extremely reduced package and they'll have to accept it because the union won't have the negotiators they once did as they'll have resigned after your no vote. Evidence please, thanks. Just remember that these people are the same negotiators that achieved our great Ts & Cs in the first place. They don't like the deal either, but they're running with it. I say vote yes, swallow the bitter pill, and get angry about something else. Union negotiators have done an excellent job over pay negotiations. However, at the age I am I do not wish to end up with a 1/2 final salary scheme or indeed much worse. The company is trying to take 6 figures of deferred pay off me without proving the case. |
However, at the age I am I do not wish to end up with a 1/2 final salary scheme or indeed much worse. The company is trying to take 6 figures of deferred pay off me without proving the case. |
When Railtrack were subject of a 'Railway Administration Order' under the Railways Act and the employees continued to accrue their pension benefits after coming back under the control of HMG. I would recommend a look at the Railway Pensions Commission site for anybody who still thinks this is a NATS conspiracy. Railway Companies and the Unions working together to solve the pensions problem. |
| All times are GMT. The time now is 08:49. |
Copyright © 2026 MH Sub I, LLC dba Internet Brands. All rights reserved. Use of this site indicates your consent to the Terms of Use.