

#Pes statement series#
On May Day 2022, PSI calls on governments to invest in their people, reject austerity and further cuts to public services, and encourages all affiliates to keep mobilizing for an alternative and sustainable development.I know many people didn't like s2 and s3 as much as s1 but I liked all seasons equally ❤️ and now I'm even thinking about replaying for Ellia because that man really was really tempting throughout the series 😂 Austerity and further public cuts are an outdated narrative that in the end turned out to be a fallacy – while governments claim there are no funds to be invested in public services, to raise salaries, to invest in health, they are literally making money rain to finance a war that brings only death and destruction. We need appropriate public investment to reduce loss of lives and livelihoods, and economic and environmental damage. And it will be PES and other workers who will deal with them to keep us safe. The climate crisis will cause more frequent and intense weather events such as wildfires, floods, droughts, high winds. The Sendai Framework for Disaster Risk Reduction also contains government commitments to allocate funds and personnel to anticipating natural and man-made disasters to reduce risks and losses in lives. We need appropriate public investment to reduce loss of lives and livelihoods, and economic and environmental damage

Health workers need to anticipate 24/7 operations during the most intense and dangerous times. Health and education workers need to anticipate evacuation. But many other professions should be involved in preparedness and response most municipal workers need to anticipate, whether to lock down and protect infrastructure (public transport, water and sewerage, energy, internet, data, communications), to coordinate response teams, to receive refugees and displaced people, and to ensure access to essential services in the recovery phase. But these are non-binding rules that are hardly enforced.Įmergency response is much more than firefighters and EMTs – although these two groups are the most visible, and arguably the best prepared, and perhaps the most at risk. They also point to the risks of relying too heavily on volunteers. The ILO Guidelines (2018) on Decent Work in PES lay out in detail the needs of PES workers. Many that are called on to perform PES work are untrained, ill-equipped, poorly coordinated.

#Pes statement full#
This means that these workers are not allowed to negotiate their terms and conditions of work, although in PES it is crucial that workers participate and are able to exercise their full rights. Many public emergency service (PES) workers are denied fundamental rights, whether because of essential services legislation (which includes emergency medical technicians – EMTs) or being grouped under paramilitary services, sometimes known as uniformed services, which include firefighters and police. However, this is not the only conflict where these workers are at risk Yemen, Syria, Palestine, are just a few of the many examples where our friends and colleagues put their lives at risk. Others show health service workers at their jobs, even as the shells destroy hospitals and clinics.

Photos and videos of devastation show firefighters and emergency medical technicians scrambling through the wreckage to save lives, even at the risk of their own. The world is focusing on the war in Ukraine.
