P DS: Salary Cofficitiator and Education to be radically changed

Today's Social Democratic Party conference, at the heart of the discussion, had the Reformation in Public Administration, with particular emphasis on the Law on Salaries in the Public Sector. In the presentation, PSD said it welcomes drafting the laws of the package of reforming public administration, though these steps are delayed and do not guarantee reform [...]
In the presentation, the PSD said it welcomes drafting the laws of the package of reforming public administration, although these steps are delayed and do not guarantee the real reform of the Public Administration, Periscope broadcasts.
According to the MP, Shqipe Pantina, the most problematic law in the package of bills is the one for wages that sparked responses to public sector workers.
With this law the state has taken care of strengthening sectors that are in its own service, rather than sectors that are in the service of citizens, such as Health and Education. We appreciate that such an approach affects the state always to be dependent on your policy to be built on professional pillars. The law creates a huge proportion between the lowest salary in proportion to the highest salary. Nor does he respect the principle of equal work, equal wages. For example, at the same level of courts, the prosecutor is paid more than the judge, although the responsibility may be the same”, Pantina said.
It has, on behalf of the PSD, had a series of criticisms even for additions, where their number and large kind only legitimise existing chaos in the wage system and do not guarantee transparency.
If we support the package of laws, but we consider that especially the surplus of the wage bill, that is, the cofficient table should be radically changed and give priority to the health and education system. Because without strengthening these two pillars, which further the development of society, we can't talk about economic development or rule of law.
While MP Besa Baftiu, chairman of the Parliamentary Health Commission, proposed that the Government be cautious during the drafting and to take on the demands of health workers.
“The PSD fully agrees with all requests from medical experts, family medicine doctors, dentists, nurses, dentists and others. We consider that the difference in cofficients between medical professionals and family doctors who are also professionals should have no difference. Because, if the government and the ministry are thinking about having a health priority, then they should have a priority to create equality among professional doctors of all profiles. A great reason to support the family medicine sector is that we in Kosovo don't have enough doctors of this” profile, Baftiu has said./Periscopi/












