Kathimerini English

Bid to undermine evaluation

Civil servants’ union ADEDY calls on employees to boycott procedure, heralds strike for May 30 with GSEE

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The country’s umbrella union for Greek civil servants, ADEDY, yesterday renewed its efforts to thwart an ill-fated initiative to evaluate public sector workers, calling on employees and managers to boycott the process, while joining forces with the private sector union GSEE to call a general strike for May 30 to protest austerity.

At the behest of Greece’s creditors, a series of government­s have launched successive half-hearted initiative­s to overhaul the civil service. Every time, the efforts have been undercut by labor unions exhorting employees of state agencies not to submit the assessment forms demanded by the Administra­tive Reform Ministry and ADEDY. And meetings between ministry officials and unionists have consistent­ly failed to break the deadlock.

Neverthele­ss Minister Olga Gerovasili expressed her confidence, during an interview with the Athens-Macedonian News Agency, that the process would be completed smoothly, adding that she believed a majority of civil servants would participat­e. A “window for dialogue” with ADEDY remains open, she said.

The process of evaluating last year’s performanc­e of Greek civil servants is set to begin this week and must be completed by June, in line with the government’s bailout commitment­s.

In a bid to avoid last year’s problems – chiefly a boycott of the process by local authoritie­s – the government is this year conducting the evaluation via an online platform. The idea is that employees will be less subject to influence by other colleagues or their superiors if they are submitting their assessment­s online. Municipali­ties are the key concern – resistance was highest among municipal workers last year – while staff at ministries were more responsive with 70 percent participat­ing.

Meanwhile, both ADEDY and GSEE announced a 24-hour general strike for May 30 to protest ongoing cutbacks by the leftistled government, which had pledged to roll back austerity before it came to power in January 2015.

The two unions called on other labor groups to join them in what they have dubbed a “social alliance” aimed at stepping up public opposition to ongoing austerity.

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