13 Apr 07 - 05:06 PM (#2024595) Subject: BS: Polish Workforce in Britain From: GUEST,Bob Even before Poland joined the EU in 2004, there were quite a few Poles living and working in Britain. Getting a work permit in a low employment economy, when you have specific skills, isn't so difficult. In 2001 there were about 59,000 Polish nationals living and working in the UK. In October 2006, the number of registered workers had swollen to 265,000, today it's 786,000. This probably makes them Britain's fastest growing ethnic minority. They typically earn about £20,000 (almost 3 times as much as they could earn back home). Many are builders, but nearly half are working in other types of jobs. The Federation of Master Builders is positive about the influx of workers, noting that the skill levels of the Poles are high, and there is more than enough work to go around. That said, the Polish builder influx may have driven prices down which isn't to everyone's liking. Some other EU nationals grumble that their rich picking grounds are gone. Some British-born builders are sniffy about the newcomers' credentials, experience, and suspect inclination to pay all relevant taxes/adhere to regulations.They are said to work a lot harder than the average British builder. I live in Reading and haven't seen many of them in this area. So where are they ? |
13 Apr 07 - 05:16 PM (#2024616) Subject: RE: BS: Polish Workforce in Britain From: GUEST,mg` large numbers in Ireland..and I believe also in France where many are plumbers and taking over the plumbing trade perhaps. mg |
13 Apr 07 - 05:42 PM (#2024646) Subject: RE: BS: Polish Workforce in Britain From: Peace You can find the information you seem to want by a google of poles, united kingdom, statistics You will notice a Wikipedia article that is both well researched and accurate. Hope that answers you. |
13 Apr 07 - 05:43 PM (#2024647) Subject: RE: BS: Polish Workforce in Britain From: bobad Canada is populated with immigrants who came from England, Ireland, Scotland, France, Poland, Ukraine, Russia and just about every other country in the world. Now it's your turn - so flow the tides of history. |
13 Apr 07 - 05:47 PM (#2024650) Subject: RE: BS: Polish Workforce in Britain From: folk1e There is a "Polish Quarter" now in Manchester! All that I have come into contact with have been pleasant, even when living in relativly poor conditions! |
13 Apr 07 - 06:06 PM (#2024658) Subject: RE: BS: Polish Workforce in Britain From: terrier Just heard on the news today, evidently it is now the white asparragus harvesting season in Germany. The German growers traditionally rely on Polish workers coming in for the harvest but because of new earnings related laws in Germany which would hit the wages of the workers severely, the Poles are boycotting the harvest and unless the asparragus is harvested at the right time, it is worthless to the growers. |
13 Apr 07 - 06:16 PM (#2024662) Subject: RE: BS: Polish Workforce in Britain From: bubblyrat Canada is one of the largest countries on earth, and vast tracts of it are some of the world"s least populated spaces. Britain, on the other hand, is ,by comparison, a tiny island, with barely enough room for the indigenous population, which is rapidly approaching a population overload.Also, the Polish people who come here,generally have no intention of settling here, and are merely here to make as much money as possible, in the shortest possible time : money which mostly goes out of this country---to Poland !! Of course, if the European Union people were to honour their grandiose plans, then Poland, having just joined that ridiculous organisation , would have the same standard of living, and the same wages, as Britain, but there"s no chance of that happening for the forseeable future !! And the guy who hasn"t seen any Poles in Reading ( Guest-Bob)--Well, Bob, I"m from Henley, mate, and I grew up and went to school with Poles ---They"ve been here since the end of WW2 , in Henley--Nettlebed--Bix--Sonning Common --Emmer Green------and so on !! Now, there"s a lot more !! ( even in Tilehurst !! ) |
13 Apr 07 - 06:47 PM (#2024678) Subject: RE: BS: Polish Workforce in Britain From: GUEST,Bob Well none living in Wilderness Road Earling! I once lived on Tilehurst Road. |
13 Apr 07 - 07:34 PM (#2024708) Subject: RE: BS: Polish Workforce in Britain From: GUEST,patty o'dawes Have come into contact with many, many Polish workers on business in London. And the immediate thing that strikes me is their command of the English language could put many born and bred here to shame...now I am only talking really about females in the business world - banking/lawyers offices and accountancy firms. Have no idea if their level of education is far higher in Poland, but they sure as hell turn out some very bright women. |
14 Apr 07 - 04:25 AM (#2024925) Subject: RE: BS: Polish Workforce in Britain From: John MacKenzie They're good because they're hungry Patty. In the west we have become complacent and lazy, and many people feel the world owes them a living. Poor education, poor school discipline, irresponsible kids, all these things are contributory factors. Get rich quick, get rich easy programmes on TV, entertainers and sportsmen earning obscene wages, lottery programmes, poker TV, etc etc. Learning and erudition are no longer respected or properly rewarded, and Mammon rules OK. There is also no history of social support in these Mittel European countries, so if you don't work you starve, so they at least still cherish, and believe in the work ethic. We have something approaching 6000 poles in and around Inverness, and they work in building, in agriculture, and in fish processing. Once a month the local paper publishes a Polish language supplement, and lots of the bars in town now sell Polish beers. They are here to stay, and while some will return to Poland when they have made some money, others will come to take their place. They certainly make the locals look to their laurels when it comes to willingness to work! Giok |
14 Apr 07 - 06:10 AM (#2024969) Subject: RE: BS: Polish Workforce in Britain From: GUEST,kenny I was on a flight from London to Aberdeen on Tuesday - the safety announcement was repeated in Polish. Many posters for events in Torry in Aberdeen are now dual-language, the 2nd being Polish. I agree with what "Giok" says above. |
14 Apr 07 - 06:45 AM (#2024980) Subject: RE: BS: Polish Workforce in Britain From: GUEST,Shimrod I've got a bit of a soft spot for the Poles. When I was growing up, in Peterborough, in the 1950s, there were a lot of Polish people around - presumably refugees from the War - which, incidentally, tore Poland apart. When the Polish communist regime was replaced by rampant capitalism in the early 1990s, the company I was working for at the time acquired a couple of Polish companies. I then found myself with lots of new Polish colleagues. I liked them immediately - very intelligent, very hard working and with good senses of humour; and many of them spoke excellent English (whilst I don't have a hope in Hell's chance of learning Polish!). Business trips to Warsaw were always a pleasure - good accommodation, good food and the feeling of being in a civilised country for grown-ups - as opposed to the puerile mess run by and for spoilt teenagers that Britain has become. Who knows, perhaps our new Polish citizens might even succeed in civilising us (although they've got a big job on!). |
14 Apr 07 - 08:07 AM (#2025011) Subject: RE: BS: Polish Workforce in Britain From: Liz the Squeak There's a stand near our local Underground station for a Polish free newspaper. Cheerily printed on the side of it is the legend 'don't even bother if you can't read Polish'. It is frequently empty before the corresponding Metro paper bin is. LTS |
14 Apr 07 - 09:03 AM (#2025058) Subject: RE: BS: Polish Workforce in Britain From: Dave the Gnome There has always been a large Polish commuity here in Manchester - I know, I'm one of them! Well, half anyway. My Dad's Polish. There is a large Polish Club in Cheetham Hill that was established in the 50's and is still going strong. Since the influx after WW2 many people have seen the Poles as being hard working inteligent people who have always integrated well and got on with everyone in general. I think that is being repeated now. To my delight there are even Polish shops opening close to me in Salford. These sell many Polish products at a much lower price that the 'specialist' shops have done before and even undercut a lot of the big chains on basic items like coffee and bread. There seems to be a sybiosis occuring unlike anything I have seen before and long may it continue! Cheers Dave |
14 Apr 07 - 09:30 AM (#2025089) Subject: RE: BS: Polish Workforce in Britain From: gnomad I believe that many of our service industries, and also our agriculture, would be struggling for workers by now, were it not for this inflow of hard-working people from all over eastern Europe. I do wonder about the lands they leave behind though; if we are acquiring a significant proportion of their best-educated and most-motivated workers then who is "minding the shop" back home? The cash they are sending back home will no doubt help, but it can't be good for any country to keep losing the cream of its workers. Not even if they come back later. One of my Father's side of the family married a Pole just after WW2, he had got here as a refugee. He was unfailingly good-humoured, and kind, one of the small band of my relatives of whom I think well. To the end of his days (about 1997) however, his spoken English verged on the incomprehensible. I guess he was too busy making ends meet to be able to spend time learning yet another language. |
14 Apr 07 - 02:45 PM (#2025330) Subject: RE: BS: Polish Workforce in Britain From: Gulliver There are lots of Poles in Ireland too, I think approaching 200,000 at this stage. There's a Polish-language newspaper supplement and about a dozen Polish shops in Dublin, plus cafés, etc. They are good workers, honest and intelligent. They appear to be more conservative than the locals and fill the Catholic churches, that had been emptying over the past few years, to capacity. Occasionally a few dropped into our Tuesday-night session which is next door to their main church, but I think they got put off by our extremely fast rate of beer consumption! |
15 Apr 07 - 03:10 AM (#2025746) Subject: RE: BS: Polish Workforce in Britain From: Strollin' Johnny Lots of Polish people in Lincolnshire. Many have been here since WWII, presumably because Lincs had many Polish airmen working and flying from the RAF airfields which were sited here. A good few stayed on after the war (married English girls and settled down here, presumably). There are also a lot of newbies, mostly young. They seem to be a polite and happy crowd. Some evenings in our local Tesco it's unusual to hear English being spoken (or maybe it just seems that way!). |
15 Apr 07 - 06:26 AM (#2025830) Subject: RE: BS: Polish Workforce in Britain From: ard mhacha There are thousands of Poles and other ethnic groups in the north of Ireland, the mid-Ulster area has seen large numbers of Poles working in food packing firms. There is no significant numbers attending the local Catholic churches in the north reports from the churches bear this out, like our youth religion is way down the list, they are over here to be exploited by their employers and the the greedy landlords who are housing them in unfit hovels at exorbitant rent. |
15 Apr 07 - 08:26 AM (#2025881) Subject: RE: BS: Polish Workforce in Britain From: GUEST,patty o'dawes Maybe what they have come to is still better than what they have left behind. Many who have emigrated over the years start as you describe - but they progress because they are of the mind set that enables that. They have already uprooted to better themselves, don't think they will stop there. And they unselfishly do it for their future generations. There will always be some ready to exploit them. That has never proved a barrier when people consider emigrating. |
15 Apr 07 - 09:29 AM (#2025899) Subject: RE: BS: Polish Workforce in Britain From: McGrath of Harlow How far it's emigratiion in most cases is open to doubt. It's more a case of moving for work in the expectation of going home to live, in time. Of course that's always the dream of emigrants, and, as always, many will end up staying, which is good for us, though often enough sad for them. Any news of Poles enriching our folk scene so far? "I live in Reading and haven't seen many of them in this area." How do you know? They don't look too different, do they? |
16 Apr 07 - 04:11 AM (#2026511) Subject: RE: BS: Polish Workforce in Britain From: GUEST,Andy I teach English to foreign language speakers at a South Yorkshire college and meet a lot of Polish people who come to the college for lessons (although many have pretty good English already). These hard-working folk come to evening classes because they're grafting all day in factories and service industries. Regarding wages, one of my students, a young lady of about 23 years worked as a primary teacher in Poland after graduating. She tells me that her wage for this was about £150 per month. She gets more than this per week for her current job in KFC and still teaches kids Polish at a local Polish ex-servicemens club on Saturday mornings. The Poles, I find are good mannered, intelligent, value education and hard work and have decent moral and social standards. The are shocked (and amused) by UK levels of illegitimacy amongst young teenagers and some of the behaviours they witness on our streets and via the media. Although not a religious person myself, I can believe that this may be to do with the social influence that religion still has in Poland and the Poles' respect for traditional family values. As Shimrod says, it would be nice to think that these new citizens will bring a hint of civilisation to this country! We can but hope! Regards Andy |
16 Apr 07 - 05:36 AM (#2026554) Subject: RE: BS: Polish Workforce in Britain From: Mr Happy Frequently get groups of young Poles in our weakly session as part of the 'mystery audience'. Though we've invited them to participate in the form of a song etc, they seem bashful & say they just enjoy to listen |
16 Apr 07 - 05:40 AM (#2026556) Subject: RE: BS: Polish Workforce in Britain From: Dave the Gnome Learn a Polish song to kick 'em off Mr H! If your Polish is as bad as mine (and I used to speak it till I was 5!) at least thy will see that they cannot do any worse:-) D. |
16 Apr 07 - 06:29 AM (#2026582) Subject: RE: BS: Polish Workforce in Britain From: Mr Happy well we often get French folks in too & they're not at all retiscent! |
16 Apr 07 - 12:12 PM (#2026931) Subject: RE: BS: Polish Workforce in Britain From: GUEST,Easyliving. I think it's fantastic that so many eastern Europeans are arriving in this country seeking employment. Otherwise there would be a government crackdown on guys like me who want to enjoy life and receive my monthly cheque from Liverpool Social Security Offices! |
16 Apr 07 - 12:24 PM (#2026945) Subject: RE: BS: Polish Workforce in Britain From: GUEST,Andy Can't really believe that last post from Easyliving. Is this a p**s-take, is it genuine, or is it what I've heard referred to as a troll or flamer. Please advise. Possibly naively, Andy |
16 Apr 07 - 02:15 PM (#2027085) Subject: RE: BS: Polish Workforce in Britain From: Gulliver I don't see what's wrong with Easyliving's attitude. If he's prepared to get by on the small amount he gets on the dole then more power to him. There are enough profiteers making far more money at poorer peoples' expense. |
16 Apr 07 - 04:58 PM (#2027231) Subject: RE: BS: Polish Workforce in Britain From: GUEST,Tunesmith A recent news item on BBC TV stated that the Catholic church in the UK is very happy with the influx of Poles as they are boosting church attendance figures! Talking about figures, there's this sensational Polish girl working my local pub - I find it hard to look her straight in the eye! |
16 Apr 07 - 05:57 PM (#2027285) Subject: RE: BS: Polish Workforce in Britain From: Linda Kelly they pay taxes and fuel our successful economy -they have always done so since the war when large Polish communities were established in the cities like Coventry-not unlike to large population of English who now occupy parts of France and Spain -don't understand this thread what do Poles do differently from English people? |
16 Apr 07 - 08:07 PM (#2027371) Subject: RE: BS: Polish Workforce in Britain From: GUEST,petr quite a number of Polish & Czech pilots fought in the Battle of Britain. (and many of them were jailed when they went back to their own countries after the war) |
16 Apr 07 - 08:54 PM (#2027409) Subject: RE: BS: Polish Workforce in Britain From: GUEST,Scoville at Dad's To the end of his days (about 1997) however, his spoken English verged on the incomprehensible. I guess he was too busy making ends meet to be able to spend time learning yet another language. Give the guy a break. Learning a language in adulthood is very hard, and harder yet if you don't have a natural knack for it. We won't even go into my bad gringa accent when I speak Spanish. |
17 Apr 07 - 04:02 AM (#2027575) Subject: RE: BS: Polish Workforce in Britain From: gnomad Sorry Scoville, not intended as running down a man I admired & liked. He had a hell of a time getting here, and a very hard life once here, including being robbed of his last penny by some co-worker on his first day of his first job. I truly think being busy will have been a major part of his difficulty. I should add that he never failed to communicate, his miming combined with the English he did acquire did the job fine, and I'm not sure that in later years he wasn't hamming it up a bit to please his audience. He loved to perform. |
17 Apr 07 - 04:42 AM (#2027591) Subject: RE: BS: Polish Workforce in Britain From: GUEST,bob One died in Coronation Street last night and her death was covered up. |
17 Apr 07 - 04:58 AM (#2027594) Subject: RE: BS: Polish Workforce in Britain From: mandotim I went to school with a lot of kids who had at least one Polish parent who came over during WW2. (This was in Oldham, Lancs). Where I now live there is a large Polish community in the Potteries, and lots of Polish clubs round about. Perhaps the reason why the current movement of Poles to Britain is because there is work, but also because there are some cultural reference points as a legacy of those who came earlier? Personal (but not extensive) experience of the new Polish arrivals is that they tend to be enthusiastic, skilled and very pleasant people. tim |
17 Apr 07 - 06:30 AM (#2027619) Subject: RE: BS: Polish Workforce in Britain From: Big Phil There is nothing wrong with any person of any country coming to work in the UK. There are only two problems, those that come to the UK who do NOT want to work, and indeed the number of people allowed in to work, it MUST be regulated, we can no longer have open Borders. |
17 Apr 07 - 02:33 PM (#2028004) Subject: RE: BS: Polish Workforce in Britain From: Linda Kelly citizens of the acession countries are not able to claim benefits for a lenghty period when they arrive (2 years from my memory at the DWP) -they also have to pay to register and obtain their documentation to allow them to work and be registered with their employer to do this-they then have to apply for a NI number. Its not an easy road to a free ride at all. it is considerably easier for English to take the ferry to Holland nd join the benefits queue there-as a good many do. |
17 Apr 07 - 03:27 PM (#2028049) Subject: RE: BS: Polish Workforce in Britain From: selby We had loads of Poles round Selby who stayed after the War and I grew up with their kids. There is now a huge influx of Poles of all ages, the banks doctors and the local cathlic church all advertise their services in Polish. The supermarkeys at night like Strollin Johnnys observation are full of them. The majority are hard working and polite. It seems a pity to me that those who fought in the war did not get as much help as the new ones do but i suppose thats progress |
17 Apr 07 - 05:48 PM (#2028223) Subject: RE: BS: Polish Workforce in Britain From: McGrath of Harlow and indeed the number of people allowed in to work, it MUST be regulated, we can no longer have open Borders. Why should countries need to regulate immigration when counties don't? |
06 Feb 09 - 10:11 AM (#2558997) Subject: RE: BS: Polish Workforce in Britain From: GUEST,Daily Mail reader This has to be the last straw, "Polish newspapers are running features explaining exactly how to claim benefits in the UK". Britain's taxpayers are forking out more than £21million a year in child benefit for youngsters living in Poland, official figures reveal. A loophole in EU regulations means migrants from other EU countries who are seeking work in the UK can claim state handouts for children they have left behind in their home countries. The total benefits bill for the Treasury is likely to be closer to £50million a year when other Eastern European countries are included. Britain's child benefit payments of £941 per year for a first child or £629 per year for younger siblings are far higher than the equivalent paymentsin Eastern European states that are new EU members. The Polish benefits system, for example, pays a maximum of around £160 per year in child benefit. Investigations have found that many workers moving to Britain are fraudulently claiming family benefits in both countries, exploiting lax checks and poor information sharing between member states. Figures released by the Treasury in answer to Parliamentary written questions from the Conservatives show that at the end of September 26,000 Polish children from 16,286 families were being paid child benefits by UK taxpayers. That means 16,286 first-born children were receiving the full £18.10 per week with the remaining 10,000 getting the lower payment of £12.10 per week. The figures show that the number of claimants is soaring. The Treasury said 14,000 families from eight Eastern European states were claiming the benefits - around 10,000 were estimated to be Polish. At this rate of increase the benefits bill could more than double in a year, with thousands more Eastern European families joining in the benefits bonanza. Although all the payments are legal under EU law, critics claim they provide an added incentive for immigrants to come to the UK. Britain was one of the only EU states to give workers from eight Eastern European states full access to its jobs market when they joined the EU in 2004. Once EU nationals have been working and paying tax in Britain for 12 months, they are entitled to the same level of state support as any British citizen, including child benefit for their children living in another EU country. A spokesman for HM Revenue and Customs said claimants had to provide evidence to support claims for children abroad, such as a birth certificate. It is thought that even larger sums are being paid out to Eastern European workers in tax credits - financial support provided through the tax system for those with children or on lower incomes. Ministers say, however, that total figures are "not available". |
06 Feb 09 - 10:22 AM (#2559013) Subject: RE: BS: Polish Workforce in Britain From: Wesley S Interesting - to me - is that the folks who start this thread, refresh it and seem the most upset about this situation are "Guests". Hmmmm...... |
06 Feb 09 - 10:33 AM (#2559030) Subject: RE: BS: Polish Workforce in Britain From: goatfell I have cousins in Poland and there is nothing wrong with them so not all people from Poland are bad or over here to steal our jobs. |
06 Feb 09 - 11:34 AM (#2559092) Subject: RE: BS: Polish Workforce in Britain From: SINSULL I believe (from comments in past threads) that the Daily mail is about as reliable as the US Enquirer. Ignore the troll. |
06 Feb 09 - 11:35 AM (#2559094) Subject: RE: BS: Polish Workforce in Britain From: Ruth Archer Right back atcha, Daily Mail Reader: Daily Mail's smear campaign against Poles Have the courage of your convictions, Guest. If you want to express xenophobic attitudes, go right ahead - but at least be prepared to defend them without snivelling behind the cloak of anonymity. |
06 Feb 09 - 11:41 AM (#2559097) Subject: RE: BS: Polish Workforce in Britain From: John MacKenzie Does he mean THE Daily Mail reader? Surely there aren't 2 people in the UK stupid enough to read that tripe? |
06 Feb 09 - 11:57 AM (#2559102) Subject: RE: BS: Polish Workforce in Britain From: GUEST,Daily Mail reader The Daily Mail is a great paper! The best one by far. And it has Richard Littlejohn. |
06 Feb 09 - 11:58 AM (#2559103) Subject: RE: BS: Polish Workforce in Britain From: Zen Who was it that famously said... I had that story in front of me briefly, now it is behind me..."? Zen |
06 Feb 09 - 12:00 PM (#2559104) Subject: RE: BS: Polish Workforce in Britain From: GUEST,Daily Mail reader John, Circulation. Daily Mail. 2,338,592. Mail on Sunday. 2,316,638. We can't all be wrong, so what about your paper, Daily Sport isn't it ? |
06 Feb 09 - 12:02 PM (#2559107) Subject: RE: BS: Polish Workforce in Britain From: McGrath of Harlow "Daily Mail reader" - says it all. "GUEST" in this case adds the cherry to the cake. Anyone going to any foreign country is well advised to find out all about how stuff like its benefits system and health service works, just in case. I've seen plenty of articles in British papers with this kind of advice. The benefits system in the UK is not particularly helpful to people from overseas. If anyone is planning to travel abroad with a view to getting benefits there are other destinations which would make much more sense from that point of view. The problem isn't that Poles are coming to the UK to draw benefits, but that they are coming here to work, and they have a well earned reputation for being very good workers. And because of the way the way that many regulations on employers have been slashed in the name of "flexibility", and at the same time the unions have been crippled by all kinds of additional regulations and restrictions, employers can find ways of undercutting wages where foreign workers are involved. |
06 Feb 09 - 12:49 PM (#2559149) Subject: RE: BS: Polish Workforce in Britain From: GUEST,Daily Mail reader Get your facts straight McGrath, Unemployment benefit in UK £78.00 Poland £13.00. Child benefit in Poland £3.00 a week. "The benefits system in the UK is not particularly helpful to people from overseas". Do you play Dark side of the moon or live on it. They are creaming it man. |
06 Feb 09 - 12:54 PM (#2559156) Subject: RE: BS: Polish Workforce in Britain From: Will Fly I treasure the memory of my late father-in-law - a Pole who at the age of 20, fought his way out of wartime Poland and adjacent countries, with just a few coins and his father's old Mauser pistol to get to North Africa. From there he was flown to Scotland where he joined the Polish section of the RAF and became first a rear-gunner and then a bomb aimer, flying sorties over North Africa and Germany. He married an English girl - my wife's mother, contracted TB from his war work, was 2 years in a sanatarium, got work as an engineer, bought a house, raised a family, sent money back to his relations in Poland, and was a hard-working, principled man all his life. When we want to Poland as a young married couple to visit relations, we were treated with wonderful courtesy, kindness, love and generosity from people who - by our standards in the West - had virtually nothing. All the Poles I've met recently - young workers - have been of similar mould. Some memories or knowledge may be short - mine is most definitely not. |
06 Feb 09 - 01:42 PM (#2559207) Subject: RE: BS: Polish Workforce in Britain From: Zen Unemployment benefit in UK £78.00 Poland £13.00. Child benefit in Poland £3.00 a week But most Poles who come here come to work hard... often doing jobs that locals won't or can't, not to go on the dole. |
06 Feb 09 - 01:53 PM (#2559221) Subject: RE: BS: Polish Workforce in Britain From: McGrath of Harlow To be entitled to draw benefit in the UK you have to be here some time and jump through various hoops. All countries have rules about stuff like that, and the UK's aren't by a long way the soft ones. |
06 Feb 09 - 03:04 PM (#2559325) Subject: RE: BS: Polish Workforce in Britain From: GUEST,Jonny Sunshine Guest Bob, who hasn't seen any Poles in Reading- there's been a Polish community in Reading for a long time- the Polish Club, which shut down last July had been there 42 years. And there's been a Polish catholic church on Watlington St since the late 70s. Also, Guest Dailymail Reader; UK unemployment benefits are considerably higher than in Poland. So is the cost of living. And so are wages, which is why most of the recently-arrived Poles have come here- unemployment is roughly half the national average amongst Poles. |
06 Feb 09 - 03:26 PM (#2559344) Subject: RE: BS: Polish Workforce in Britain From: John MacKenzie They also remember what work is. They come from a culture where they can be sacked at the drop of a hat, so they work to keep their jobs. They will eventually learn the wicked ways of the EEC where you cannot sack someone because they are useless. you must tell them they are useless, then you must write it down so they can read it for themselves. Then you must write it down again, and only after you have done that can you sack them. Then they can go get legal aid and fight you through an employment tribunal, in an effort to prove they aren't useless. If you as their employer are really lucky you will be able to prove they were useless, and all you will have to pay is a couple of thousand pounds to your lawyer for the privilege. No need to wonder why as an employer one would prefer to take on staff who still remember the work ethic. |
06 Feb 09 - 03:48 PM (#2559367) Subject: RE: BS: Polish Workforce in Britain From: Spleen Cringe Not even rising to the bait of xenophobic trolls like Daily Mail Reader, can I just somewhat irreverently add that any country that invents bread this good wins a cracking dziesięć punktów from me... |
06 Feb 09 - 03:59 PM (#2559381) Subject: RE: BS: Polish Workforce in Britain From: The Barden of England Well - GUEST,Daily Mail reader certainly ain't unemployed at the moment otherwise they would know their quoted figure for benefit is wrong! I wonder where their figure came from? Oh now let me think - - - - may that be the Daily Mail? The voice of the BNP comes to the fore in my mind, but then again any TROLL who hides behind a GUEST sign in deserves to be called a fascist - so here you go. GUEST,Daily Mail reader you are nothing more than a fascist and deserve all that's coming your way. I'll carve my name with pride you coward. John Barden |
06 Feb 09 - 04:04 PM (#2559385) Subject: RE: BS: Polish Workforce in Britain From: GUEST,Daily Mail reader Circulation. Daily Mail. 2,338,592. Mail on Sunday. 2,316,638. Trevor Brathwaite |
06 Feb 09 - 04:18 PM (#2559399) Subject: RE: BS: Polish Workforce in Britain From: The Barden of England At last Trevor Brathwaite, you have a name. So what has the circulation of a paper to do with the truth? Back up your assertion that unemployment benefit is £78.00. Please show me where I can claim that! I'm not Polish by the way but a true bred Englishman, just one that doesn't follow a paper that has been a supporter and exponent of extreme right wing views since the depression of the early 1930's. John Barden |
06 Feb 09 - 05:07 PM (#2559436) Subject: RE: BS: Polish Workforce in Britain From: Jack Campin The Daily Mail was promoting racism long before the 1930s. This article quotes their attacks on Jewish refugess from the Tsarist progroms in 1900: Lionel Morrison for Mediawise |
06 Feb 09 - 05:19 PM (#2559448) Subject: RE: BS: Polish Workforce in Britain From: The Barden of England Thanks for correcting me Jack Campin. I was unaware it went back that far. John Barden |
06 Feb 09 - 05:21 PM (#2559450) Subject: RE: BS: Polish Workforce in Britain From: Folkiedave I wonder about a thread half of which says Poles come to live off benefits and the other half says they are here to take jobs. |
06 Feb 09 - 05:33 PM (#2559457) Subject: RE: BS: Polish Workforce in Britain From: Spleen Cringe And one per cent of drools over the bread! |
06 Feb 09 - 06:06 PM (#2559504) Subject: RE: BS: Polish Workforce in Britain From: Ruth Archer And sausages. And saurkraut. |
06 Feb 09 - 06:13 PM (#2559515) Subject: RE: BS: Polish Workforce in Britain From: John MacKenzie And bosoms, and robins |
06 Feb 09 - 07:09 PM (#2559565) Subject: RE: BS: Polish Workforce in Britain From: GUEST,Chris Moyles Look I vote Tory, I buy the Daily Mail and I am not afraid to speak the truth. No one is making these stories up, there is a major rip-off going on and you can't fail to notice it. More than a million pounds a month in child benefit is going to youngsters who live in Eastern Europe. The money is being paid out to 14,000 Eastern European nationals who claim for offspring living in their home countries. The Government has acknowledged that the payments - funded by British taxpayers - are going abroad.Even larger sums in tax credits for children are thought to be paid to recent migrants from Eastern Europe but ministers insist that total figures are 'not available'. More than a million pounds a month in child benefits is going to youngsters who live in Eastern Europe. So why is Gordon Brown sending thousands of pounds of benefits every week to children who do not live here and who may never have even visited the UK? According to figures, nearly 70,000 from the eight Eastern European countries new to the EU are claiming child benefit, a universal payment made to anyone with offspring. This is worth £18.10 a week for the first child in a family and £12.10 a week for other children. If all the 14,000 claimants in question had just one child, the total they received would be £253,400 a week - or more than a million pounds a month.But these payments may be dwarfed by the amount paid out in tax credits, which could produce £100 a week to a migrant worker with a child or children in another EU country. Knowledge of the benefits system is now widespread among Eastern European workers.The biggest Polish newspaper in Britain, the Polish Express, last week ran a story headlined Benefit Hunters which claimed:"The longer we are in Britain, the more rights to social security we are given and the better we are taking advantage of them." It gave advice on how to claim and described the case of one Polish migrant who was given a two-bedroom house shortly after applying to a housing association, without any need to join a waiting list. The paper said: "The formalities concerning an application for social security are extremely simple. Do not delay in submitting an application." Wake up and smell the roses gentlemen. |
06 Feb 09 - 07:11 PM (#2559568) Subject: RE: BS: Polish Workforce in Britain From: McGrath of Harlow Let's have some music. Hej Sokoly A stirring Polish (and Ukrainian) song, sung here by Maryla Rodowixcz, with a good slide show. (And if you want the words, they're on this page along with a lot of others.) |
06 Feb 09 - 07:21 PM (#2559577) Subject: RE: BS: Polish Workforce in Britain From: McGrath of Harlow And here's another version, with dancing... |
06 Feb 09 - 07:25 PM (#2559581) Subject: RE: BS: Polish Workforce in Britain From: GUEST,Chris Moyles What a sad man. Try some of these McGrath. "Money Money Money" by Abba ? or maybe "I come from the land of plenty" by Men at work ? Or what about "Giving it all away " by Roger Daltry. |
06 Feb 09 - 08:04 PM (#2559612) Subject: RE: BS: Polish Workforce in Britain From: MartinRyan Oh! THAT Chris Moyles.... Had me worried for a moment. Regards |
07 Feb 09 - 03:12 AM (#2559783) Subject: RE: BS: Polish Workforce in Britain From: Backwoodsman "Oh! THAT Chris Moyles" Enlighten me please, Martin. WTF is Chris Moyles? From your comment, I'm assuming we're all supposed to know who he is, but I've never heard of him. |
07 Feb 09 - 04:13 AM (#2559796) Subject: RE: BS: Polish Workforce in Britain From: MartinRyan Try Googling chris moyles polish - I'm assuming our Guest is either the same person or someone who feels it appropriate to pretend to be such. My "worry" was that the name might have a particular musical connection! Regards p.s. Speaking of Google; GoogleAds is having a fine time with this thread! As of now, it's offering me "Sexy Polish Girls" or "Dental Implants"! |
07 Feb 09 - 04:30 AM (#2559809) Subject: RE: BS: Polish Workforce in Britain From: GUEST,Jack Campin A million quid a month is dirt cheap if it's the price of importing a workforce that good and doing foreign aid to a less developed economy that effectively. Compare the bonuses a catastrophically incompetent bank executive can expect to get from the state. |
08 Feb 09 - 03:55 AM (#2560622) Subject: RE: BS: Polish Workforce in Britain From: Backwoodsman Aha! Thanks Martin. Radio One eh? No wonder I'd never heard of the fucker. |
08 Feb 09 - 04:53 AM (#2560646) Subject: RE: BS: Polish Workforce in Britain From: GUEST,Andy Kim And what is wrong with Radio One Backwardman ? At least they play music what isn't a thousand years old and the artists wash more than once a season. |
08 Feb 09 - 01:10 PM (#2560960) Subject: RE: BS: Polish Workforce in Britain From: goatfell Aye the germans thought that Hitler was great for their country along with Mosley |
06 Apr 09 - 05:47 PM (#2605978) Subject: RE: BS: Polish Workforce in Britain From: GUEST,Zach I see in today's Daily Mail the government is to introduce limits on the number of Europeans entering Britain. I am not sure if this is actually legal. Freedom of movement throughtout Europe was agreed some time back if memory serves me right. |
06 Apr 09 - 06:23 PM (#2606003) Subject: RE: BS: Polish Workforce in Britain From: s&r Didn't realise anyone read the Daily Mail Stu |
06 Apr 09 - 07:22 PM (#2606053) Subject: RE: BS: Polish Workforce in Britain From: Rasener Well if thats the real Chris Moyles, I have a complaint. When I take my daughters to school each morning between 8:30 and 8:50, all I get is you pratting about instead of playing some songs. Do you think you could save the pissing around, until I get home at 8:50. And now for the compliment. Oh and well done with red nose day climb. Top marks to you, the money you got from the listeners was absolutely unbelievable. 10 out of ten to you there. Having sat with a Polish war veteran who was an RAF bomber pilot and flew from Faldingworth in Lincolnshire to fight the germans, I would like to make some comment. This man made me feel so humble. I was asked if I could find somebody to write a song to commemorate all the good work the Polish did for us in the war. Mark Addison wrote the lyrics and our own mudcatter Backwoodsman developed the tune and sang it. I was privelaged to take the first cut of that song to this war veteran and his wife, to get his approval. They both broke down in tears and thought the song was wonderful, and gave approval for the song to be sung in the commemoration at the old RAF Faldingworth Airport, I think a year or 2 years ago. It was about the polish people who fought for our country and left their families to work and remain in England. They gave their lives for us. Now talk to me about the Polish |
06 Apr 09 - 07:31 PM (#2606063) Subject: RE: BS: Polish Workforce in Britain From: GUEST,Soprano Oh God how do you all seem to meet Polish war veterans ? I never heard of one, let alone met one ! So the French must be just dying to meet those British guys who saved the day 60 years ago. Maybe the Italians want to honour us Americans ? Any Greek songs out there recalling the guys who took Crete ? |
06 Apr 09 - 07:33 PM (#2606065) Subject: RE: BS: Polish Workforce in Britain From: Rasener Guest soprano, I do hope that is not a sarcastic comment. |
31 May 11 - 07:07 AM (#3163022) Subject: RE: BS: Polish Workforce in Britain From: Bonzo3legs If you go into any Cafe Nero of Costa coffee bars there is good chance that you will be served by a young lady from Poland. I have found them to be extremely efficient, speak excellent English and generally very nice people. |
31 May 11 - 07:54 AM (#3163043) Subject: RE: BS: Polish Workforce in Britain From: Backwoodsman At our local car-wash, they work their butts off, and they do a fantastic (and cheap) job of cleaning my car. |
31 May 11 - 09:57 AM (#3163077) Subject: RE: BS: Polish Workforce in Britain From: Musket After the war, many Poles and Ukrainians settled in North Notts, South Yorkshire etc and worked down the pit. When I was a young lad working there, the reputation the recent influx have for hard work was just as true then. Sure, people are people and there are good and bad in any group of people, but these lads were not only hard working and friendly, but I cannot think of a single man, and I worked with many, who was anything but a good 'un. The local Ukrainian Club was the cheapest beer in town too..... |
31 May 11 - 02:46 PM (#3163227) Subject: RE: BS: Polish Workforce in Britain From: Will Fly Oh God how do you all seem to meet Polish war veterans ? I never heard of one, let alone met one ! My father-in-law was one - and a better man I never met. You should get out more. |
31 May 11 - 05:20 PM (#3163323) Subject: RE: BS: Polish Workforce in Britain From: GUEST,Eliza Actually, Soprano, the French have always been delighted to welcome, for example, the British Normandy Veterans. I've been in Normandy with school groups many times, and the French I spoke to were extremely fond of the old men who attended the gatherings. You sound awfully cynical. As for the Poles, my late father often spoke with great espect for the Polish airmen drafted into our Air Force during the war. They were brave and steady men. |
31 May 11 - 05:48 PM (#3163351) Subject: RE: BS: Polish Workforce in Britain From: Richard Bridge There are two issues conflated here, and I suspect the sinister and fascistic Bonzo to be trying a switcheroo. I have much admiration for many Poles who I have met - and remember with affection (parts of) a reception I went to at the Polish Heart Club after I lawyered the TV series "Struggles for Poland". And indeed the Visnouvka. Equally I admire hard work and the self employed Poles who work here on that basis can properly work as long and hard and cheaply as they wish. Subject to the Working Time directive. The Working Time Directive saves lives. Remember the French driving posters "Trop d'heures, pas assez sommeil"? However, the use of cheap labour to drive down the wages and conditions of workers is only to be deprecated - and I infer that that is what you seek to promote. You appear to value subservience and saving your money to preserving the dignity of your fellow man or woman. Shame on you. |
01 Jun 11 - 02:28 AM (#3163539) Subject: RE: BS: Polish Workforce in Britain From: Bonzo3legs What inane drivel are you talking now Richard Bridge?? |
01 Jun 11 - 04:15 AM (#3163558) Subject: RE: BS: Polish Workforce in Britain From: Musket You know, if I were Richard Bridge, I would ensure people are talking about the correct Richard Bridge. After all, he says he is a lawyer in Kent. If you google lawyers in Kent, you find a Richard Bridge, who, in his practice website potted bio reckons; "He was one of the very first "name" lawyers to pioneer the "zero-overhead" route, using modern technology to replace ALL staff – secretaries, receptionists, assistants so as to reduce costs to clients," I assume our Richard isn't this one? After all, what would the Luddites say when his club subscription comes up for renewal? Let alone blaming influx of Poles for keeping labour costs down... Hows that new computer shaping up Richard? I note you say it is quad core. Perhaps the "other" Richard Bridge equals that to secretary, clerk, receptionist and cleaner. |
01 Jun 11 - 07:35 AM (#3163632) Subject: RE: BS: Polish Workforce in Britain From: GUEST,lively Two groups do very well indeed from Eastern European economic migration, that is a) the owners of business and industry, and b) the economic migrants. The group who does extremely badly out of it however, are the British working classes. It makes sense for motivated, educated, fit young Poles to spend time cleaning toilets, picking potatoes and serving coffee in the UK, as the wages here are worth four times what they are worth in Poland. Take a crappy job of say £7 an hour, that's worth £28 pounds an hour (or so) to a Polish person (you'd normally need a degree to get that kind of wage in the UK), add the absence of a young family and mortgage (which has broken the backs of many even on a decent income today) and your young Polish person can readily afford to take a lower rate than an average British bloke with even the smallest mortgage and family to keep could afford to do in this country. This issue continues to forment a great deal of political discontent among the working-classes, and it also furthers to increase the class divide in this country. Particularly (forgive me, I think this will annoy some here) when many middle-class liberals would prefer to dismiss such legitimate concerns and political discontent as mere 'racism' (though increased racial tension and prejudice can indeed be a further bi-product). For as one person put it to me: "It's easy for them to do so, because it's not *their* jobs." |
01 Jun 11 - 09:11 AM (#3163684) Subject: RE: BS: Polish Workforce in Britain From: Musket That's why I said he wouldn't wish to be connected to the other Richard Bridge, who is also a musician, a Kent based solicitor and has been known to "lawyer" TV programs. After all, surely OUR Richard, after having a pop at anybody who lives in the real world can't be boasting about demarkation with his own practice staff??? McD or not McD, that is the question. Not that I have a fascination about the old chap, just a bit concerned when he pees all over sensible comments using his qualifications in law to mask his lack of understanding of reality. Comments above being a case in question. |
02 Jun 11 - 02:41 PM (#3164297) Subject: RE: BS: Polish Workforce in Britain From: Joe Offer Please keep this discussion on a civil level and refrain from personal comments - and false identities. Thank you. -Joe- |
02 Jun 11 - 04:38 PM (#3164351) Subject: RE: BS: Polish Workforce in Britain From: Dave the Gnome So then, lively. What are you proposing is done? DtG |
01 Jul 11 - 08:51 AM (#3179668) Subject: RE: BS: Polish Workforce in Britain From: Richard Bridge How did that man ever get to be an officer? Unless you adhere to the "lions led by donkeys" view. His party are busy smashing the welfare state to ensure that the oppressed can be coerced into servility, and now he proposes wholesale illegal race discrimination. Cuckoo! |
01 Jul 11 - 12:47 PM (#3179772) Subject: RE: BS: Polish Workforce in Britain From: GUEST,livelylass "What are you proposing is done?" Umm, Communism? Or at least the introduction of some political system where a) the welfare and interests of the working-classes are not completely politically unrepresented b) when the working-classes are not also simultaneously scapegoated as feckless benefit scroungers. So long as the Capitalist principles of greed and profit continue to run the show, I can't imagine that ever happening because economic migration is good for business. Ian Duncan Smith's pious pleading to employers to employ British workers, is empty grandstanding intended to do nothing to improve the employment prospects of the jobless, he's just trying to shift the heat away from the government. Nothing will be done, the working classes will continue to be squeezed from every direction until we return to a vast class gulf between owners and serfs. Well, maybe a revolution might help.. |
01 Jul 11 - 12:49 PM (#3179775) Subject: RE: BS: Polish Workforce in Britain From: Richard Bridge Incidentally, there appear to be turds with telescopes watching from the bunker. Yes, that bunker. |
01 Jul 11 - 01:32 PM (#3179812) Subject: RE: BS: Polish Workforce in Britain From: GUEST,livelylass "that bunker" Ahh, that bunker.. Well, contentious it no doubt is, that's as much as I'll be adding to this thread. |
02 Jul 11 - 09:46 AM (#3180146) Subject: RE: BS: Polish Workforce in Britain From: Dave the Gnome "What are you proposing is done?" Umm, Communism? Well, good luck then. I am sure you will make it run far better than everyone that has gone before you. BTW - You know the lazy, scrounging Polish chap that I mentioned before? The one who has not worked for years and gets everything paid for? Well, he's my Dad. 90 next year. Fled Poland to escape the comunist Russia. Didn't stop him, or me for that matter, being a lifelong working class and active Trade Unionist. I'll look out for you on the campaign trail rather than pontificating on a meanigless discussion group shall I? Cheers :D tG |
02 Jul 11 - 05:46 PM (#3180413) Subject: RE: BS: Polish Workforce in Britain From: Bonzo3legs You are forgetting that a good proportion of the immigrant population from Eastern Europe are middle class professional people - or you pretend to ignore it! |
03 Jul 11 - 05:30 AM (#3180580) Subject: RE: BS: Polish Workforce in Britain From: Dave the Gnome You are forgetting that a good proportion of the immigrant population from Eastern Europe are middle class professional people Huh? 1. Who is? 2. Anything to back that up? and 3. Even if it was so - What does it matter? DtG |
03 Jul 11 - 05:42 AM (#3180587) Subject: RE: BS: Polish Workforce in Britain From: Bonzo3legs It matters because of the hangups people have here about being middle class!! |
03 Jul 11 - 06:22 AM (#3180609) Subject: RE: BS: Polish Workforce in Britain From: Dave the Gnome I am still confused Bonzo. What does that have to do with anything. Or are we just throwing in random ideas? Maybe it is the unicycles! Cheers DtG |
03 Jul 11 - 04:26 PM (#3180861) Subject: RE: BS: Polish Workforce in Britain From: GUEST,livelylass "my Dad. 90 next year. Fled Poland to escape the comunist Russia. Didn't stop him, or me for that matter, being a lifelong working class and active Trade Unionist." Good for him, and for you too Dave. Though I gather from your post that your father was a refugee fleeing an oppressive regime rather than an economic migrant taking advantage of better employment opportunities abroad. As such, are you are making some link between his particular flight from tyranny and recent mass economic immigration? Or just using the example of the failed Russian Communist state to belittle my (admittedly somewhat tongue in cheek) attempt at advocacy for seeing some (as opposed to none) political interest in the welfare and interests of the working-classes of this country? This is a difficult forum to express the kinds of opinions I have expressed, and not because I am a Daily Mail reader, but because I recognise from personal interaction, a deep disconnect between the middle-income & middle-class liberal left and the low-income working class who having been entirely abandoned by New Labour are increasingly responding to the seductions of the far right. Now, we can either shout at these people and call them "Racists" or we can actually take their problems seriously. You might not be one of them, but I suspect that most members of this forum would be inclined to do the former, maybe even after a good quality whiskey or three (no ice). |
03 Jul 11 - 04:47 PM (#3180874) Subject: RE: BS: Polish Workforce in Britain From: Richard Bridge Income and class are not the same thing. |
03 Jul 11 - 05:11 PM (#3180884) Subject: RE: BS: Polish Workforce in Britain From: GUEST "Income and class are not the same thing." Too bloody right they're not. I worked for two "barrow boys" masquerading as sales directors selling Ricoh office machines, both driving porsches - both serious working class oiks. |
03 Jul 11 - 05:17 PM (#3180886) Subject: RE: BS: Polish Workforce in Britain From: Dave the Gnome No, none of them lively. Don't bother trying again. Ta. DtG |