Andy - these UKBA wasters should think themselves lucky to be in employment. I wish I was in as comfortable position as them, maybe they'd like to swap their pension for my shafted Equitable Life one.
Here's a bit about some of the "conditions" they'd rather Joe Public didn't know about :-
Britain’s 500,000 civil servants already receive an array of benefits.
Clothing and property
A leaked dossier on pay and perks earlier this year revealed that civil servants can claim for damaged clothing, handbags and shoes – even if their department was not to blame for the mishap.
The rules mean that a male employee who damaged a £300 woollen suit would be paid £225 if it was 12 months old and £150 if it was two years old.
A female civil servant ripping a £5 pair of tights at work can expect £4.50, even if it was her own fault - tights are replaced minus 10 per cent of their value.
Natural and synthetic clothes can be replaced up to four years and sheepskin, leather and suede clothes and shoes attract compensation up to six years.
Expenses
Some civil servants can even claim expenses from beyond the grave. Up to three relatives of someone awarded an honour such as an MBE can get taxpayers’ money for a cab to Buckingham Palace to receive the insignia if the recipient has died.
Civil servants can also receive ‘goodwill payments’ when ‘neither the department nor you was negligent in causing the loss or damage to personal property’.
Holiday and leave
Civil servants are automatically granted an extra two-and-a-half days off each year on top of a generous allocation of six weeks’ annual leave plus eight bank holidays.
The ‘privilege days’, which mark Christmas, Easter and the Queen’s official birthday, are unknown outside the public sector.
Working hours
Rules on 'compressed hours' mean that civil servants can take as many days off as they like as they do 26 hours a week.
Job-sharers may do 'part -year working or 'flextime' hours.
Those who work from home told they' should not feel under pressure to produce more work or to put in more hours to make up for not being seen in the office.'
Civil servants (when not ‘working from home’, or doing ‘flexi-time’) are automatically being given two and a half extra ‘privilege days’ off each year, in addition to their six weeks’ annual leave and eight bank holidays.
Pay
Pensions 'unmatched in the private sector.'
Anyone over 50 can 'partially retire' to a less demanding job and take some off his or her pension.
Of course, this is on top of the bonuses – worth £2million a month – paid to civil servants who do not have to make a profit, and the sweetheart deals which allow dozens of officials to pay less tax.
Read more:
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/arti...#ixzz216fH2aAa