Glasgow Times

New reform plans lead to voluntary redundancy deals

- BY DREW SANDELANDS

VOLUNTARY redundancy can be offered to council staff under new workforce reform plans despite opposition councillor­s describing the move as “premature”.

Glasgow City Council is no longer planning to ask workers to come forward for redundancy this month but has agreed voluntary severance can be offered to staff whose exit can be justified by a business case.

It is part of a service reform plan to deal with tightening budgets, which are expected to be significan­tly affected by the coronaviru­s pandemic, over a three-year period.

Labour leader Frank McAveety said he had “very strong concerns” about agreeing to the proposal while workers are responding to the pandemic.

He said: “Given the effort and energy by staff in the present situation to step up to the plate, my concerns about the perception of the paper will be that staff will be considered expendable in the longer term.”

Councillor Michelle Ferns, city convener for workforce, said: “The current crisis has given us a chance to focus on what potentiall­y will be new ways of working.

“It’s just a tool, among many, that HR will need to realign and redesign.”

A “trawl for registrati­ons of interest” in voluntary redundanci­es had been scheduled for June 30 but had to be put on hold due to the pandemic. This will no longer take place.

The council has agreed no additional pension years would be paid to anyone taking voluntary severance. Council policy had previously allowed up to four added years of pensionabl­e service in case of redundancy.

Robert Anderson, the council’s Head of HR, said people tend to think of added years as a “one-off payment” but “it is an annual liability”.

He described it as an “obstacle” to service reform and said: “We’d be operating with an expensive tool in the toolbox and I’d doubt our ability to use it, other than in very limited cases.”

On redundancy, early retirement and redeployme­nt, he said: “Just because you have a tool in the toolbox doesn’t mean you take it out and use it but I think it’s useful when you start a job to make sure you have the tools available.”

Labour councillor Bill Butler said: “Fundamenta­lly the Labour Group feel this is not the time to pass such a paper. We feel it gives out all the wrong signals.”

And Mr McAveety added he felt the proposals were “premature” until a “greater picture on what the recovery and renewal strategy will be”.

Council leader Susan Aitken said, at this stage, the council was just agreeing to having the tool available. “If we do not have it, then it makes the recovery and renewal process actually tougher.

“I think giving people the option – and it absolutely is an option

– to see there might be a way to ease themselves out of work which doesn’t suddenly cut off their income, but gives them early access to their pension, will be an enormous relief to quite a few of our employees.”

The proposals were passed by 15 votes to six, with Labour councillor­s voting against.

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 ??  ?? Council leader Susan Aitken said the move will be a relief to employees, while Frank McAveety expressed strong concerns
Council leader Susan Aitken said the move will be a relief to employees, while Frank McAveety expressed strong concerns
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