They also receive "above and beyond" pensions to go along with it..

But that is beside the point i was making

A lot of workers in the private sector in various industries with no access to work remotely are likely to be layed off/ short time working, even if temporarily, which means reduced pay or even redundancy.

Just wondered what the comparison was between public sector jobs (non-emergency) and private sector.

Remote teaching is great but as we are already starting to see, especially within our company, networks are starting to slow. Assuming parents will be working from home, is this country's infrastructure really capable of handling remote teaching?

To finish up back to the original question. Not trying to hate on the public sector here but if public funded services are closed down without suitable temporary measures (non-emergency) then i'd rather my have my taxes go towards more essential services (emergency).

Posted By: KetteringRyu, Mar 18, 15:12:15

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