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Lost your job or feeling the threat of redundancy?
But Ms. Didion's project presents no threat of redundancy.
Thousands of workers, some of whom are here in the Chamber today, are under threat of redundancy.
Putting large numbers of teachers under annual threat of redundancy was not an authentic way of recruiting, retaining or motivating them.
Standing close behind me is old Frank who is deaf and keeps shouting 'Amen' for no reason (except maybe the threat of redundancy).
Demoralising as the threat of redundancy may be, therefore, all is not necessarily lost even when you are told that you are among those who will have to leave.
It is the more ordinary libraries--the 9,000 public and branch libraries in American towns and cities--that face a real threat of redundancy.
- Redundant Public Servant contributed a series of guest posts to cutsblog describing life under the threat of redundancy and what it feels like to lose your job.
It's especially problematic in times of high unemployment where ill workers are easier/cheaper to replace and the threat of redundancy (and the assoicated increased stress which that causes) is greater.
With his brother-in-law Willie, who is already estranged from his wife and under threat of redundancy from his shipyard job, the two men forge a friendship to help each other through.
But to be faced with the short-term threat of redundancy at the hands of private contractors brought in by the health authority would mean that they might feel subject to a considerable degree of provocation.
Strange really, because in the "good times" before the credit crunch, I struggled with the constant threat of redundancy, three day weeks, and my pay rises over six years combined to a total of 20p per hour.
Thirdly, if 'context' satisfactions are low (for example, there is poor pay or threats of redundancy) then performing a job which is well designed will not be enough to generate high motivation or intrinsic job satisfaction.
As a government, we understand fully that with a two year pay freeze, rising fuel costs, inflation at 5%, and the threat of redundancy - public sector workers right across Wales are facing an extremely tough time at the moment.
While academics are terrified by the threat of redundancies and pay cuts, commentators are rightly worried that cuts and fee-rises will threaten the project of opening up university education to a wider section of the public.
HUNDREDS of teachers in State and independent schools face the threat of redundancy as a consequence of funding changes in schools and the impact of the recession, a classroom union leader said yesterday.
Public sector direct employee cuts are only part of the story: many private sector contractor folk are now under threat of redundancy, whether working for Local Authorities or on DWP contracts for welfare to work.
These splendid promises mean only one thing: a huge rise in insecure jobs, casual work and low wages, with the constant threat of redundancy and, on top of that, a scheme for an inegalitarian overhaul of the social protection system.
So before all the "everythings too expensive, customer service is terrible" comments come in lets just take a moment to think of all the people (not just at HMV) who will be trying to enjoy this Christmas with the threat of redundancy and unemployment hanging over them in the new year.
He visits and interviews residents living on a drug-infested housing estate in Leeds, interviews a Govan shipyard worker faced with the constant threat of redundancy and travels through the idyllic landscapes of Cornwall and Wales interviewing independent dairy farmers who claim they are being ruined by competing supermarket chains.