So, just how DO you compare chalk with cheese?
The
equal pay for equal work row currently embroiling the BBC is very, very
intriguing as it raises an interesting, and very important, issue – how DO you
compare chalk with cheese?
I don’t
mean to be flippant as people doing the same job deserve the same rewards. And
this is relatively straightforward with straightforward jobs.
For
example, when I started out in journalism as a junior reporter, we all earned
the same weekly wage.
After
two or three years training, upon reaching the heady heights of senior
reporter, you all went onto the same pay - whatever your gender.
Thereafter
the playing field was not quite so level as jobs basically the same paid
different salaries depending on location, size of publication, what you could
negotiate etc. etc.
But, in
general, pay in the same organisation was equal when it was easily measurable.
The
equal pay for equal work row has been simmering at the BBC for some time but
only really hit the headlines when China editor Carrie Gracie resigned after
discovering she received considerably less than male BBC editors in other
countries.
But how
do you compare the role of editor in China with editor in the USA? What
measurements are being used? And which is chalk and which is cheese?
Is the
male counterpart being paid too much or the female not enough?
My view
is that the top salaries paid at the BBC are way too high and there should be a
cap.
Discuss.
Flew
with Jet2 for the first time this month on a quick visit to see some friends
who now live in Cyprus.
What a
pleasurable experience compared with another airline I may have mentioned in
previous rants. In particular the customer service.
On
arrival to check in both in the UK and Cyprus there were excellent Jet2 customer
service reps on hand.
When we
last flew Ryanair, to Berlin in September, check-in for the return journey was
chaos.
Just one
desk open, with no indication of which flight was being checked in, several
hundred passengers for three or four flights queuing, passengers being sent to
the back of the queue when reaching the desk as their flight was NOT being
checked in.
It comes
to something when a passenger (yes, it was me) has to act as Ryanair customer
services by finding out which flight the one desk WAS checking in and then
relaying this to the massed crowd to avoid people having to go to the back of
the queue.
You
couldn’t make it up.