The union claims both sides are close on salary issues but mandatory overtime and understaffing questions are unresolved. |
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If understaffing results from an insufficient creation of posts, it can also be the consequence of an underutilization of human resources. |
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Indeed, the U. S. health system is no stranger to the consequences of understaffing and budget cuts. |
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Due to understaffing I regularly work for nearly 13 hours without a break, even though I know I should take one. |
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Because of the understaffing, controllers were required to work extra duty shifts to make up for the shortfall. |
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Accordingly, we recommend that the employer start recording the costs of understaffing and overwork. |
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When businesses fail to meet the demand for their products or run into problems with the quality of their products and services due to understaffing, their customers begin to look elsewhere. |
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We reported understaffing across the entire border line, containers at ports not being inspected, and boats going back and forth in certain areas and not being stopped and checked. |
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Due to understaffing junior doctors must work extra shifts to cover for gaps in rotas. |
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Nurses at Armidale, Gunnedah and Tamworth hospitals held lunchtime rallies to highlight the safety risks inherent in frequent understaffing. |
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Before the overhaul, statistics released by the Government showed there were already understaffing issues at Holyhead. |
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Companies need to have a more realistic expectation of WFM, understanding overstaffing and understaffing occurs. |
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A recent study conducted by Statistics Canada finds that nurses working extra shifts due to understaffing are more likely to make medication errors. |
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We all know that the staff are under that much pressure due to understaffing and working too many hours. |
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Dennis O'Connor for the National Coastguard SOS Campaign group said understaffing at any maritime rescue coordination centre was unacceptable. |
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The second reason is what I believe to be a larger factor and that is the intentional understaffing of the laboratory. |
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Whatever term you choose, today's restructuring may result in understaffing. |
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In this study, understaffing was a significant factor, exacerbated by poor ward hygiene. |
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According to the Chief Security Officer in UNMIK, the Security Section was dangerously close to being ineffective owing to understaffing and the inappropriate security skills and experience of current staff. |
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Managers cited understaffing, scheduling deficiencies, the need to respect collective agreements when granting leave, and workload issues as key causes of overtime. |
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It must be noted, however, that as a result of understaffing compared to the workload, a significant backlog in publications existed at the time of the JIU inspection, despite intensive work and frequent overtime. |
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For example, understaffing and long hours of work, both endemic in the new restructured world of work, are directly related to an increase in injuries, illnesses and even death. |
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These numbers likely underestimate the 11 problem of understaffing because we inquired about facilities that operated short-staffed due to illness or vacation only. |
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The dearth of basic facilities is only a minor problem within this school compared to shortages of classroom resources, under-qualified teachers, understaffing, and outdated teaching methods. |
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Nurses were reduced to tears by their workload at a Nottinghamshire hospital where understaffing contributed to patients being left hungry and dehydrated, the NHS watchdog has reported. |
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Pressure on wards is such that 82 per cent of nurses consulted by the RCN reported going to work while sick, because they feared patients would be at risk because of understaffing. |
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This situation is made difficult by understaffing. |
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However, the inter-American human rights system continues to face serious problems, in particular the lack of compliance on the part of certain states as well as underfunding and understaffing. |
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In addition to health conditions, which were now said to be good, the Committee had criticized the quality of prison food, the lack of regular meal times and understaffing. |
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When we take on such a major reform and try to resolve the 18-month backlog of requests caused by understaffing, it is not the time to bring in beginners, but the time to keep experienced people in place. |
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I understand that it is a big challenge to Irish society and its government to handle the waste problem, and I have of course made my understaffing problem known in the Commission's internal discussions on resources. |
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Severe understaffing, excessive workloads, and abysmal recruitment and retention practices have caused the facility to operate below industry standards on a number of levels. |
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Most cases involving understaffing involve suits by patients who have been adversely affected by nurses who are overworked, as a result of understaffing. |
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Members of the Public and Commercial Services union are expected to walk off their jobs on Monday in protest at understaffing and pay, press tv reported. |
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Chief among the risks today is understaffing and underbidding. |
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Because of severe underfunding and understaffing in the past three decades, however, Humphreys said, the pumps are inspected only once every 16 months to 18 months. |
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