Alyson Rudd: Commentary
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Gareth Southgate, the Middlesbrough manager, has retaliated over the tactics used for a plan to ask every Barclays Premier League player to donate a day’s pay to a nurses’ hardship fund. The stunt has, Southgate believes, turned nasty, its tactics “bordering on blackmail”.
Has Southgate overreacted? No. The only surprise is that it has taken so long for a leading football figure to react at all. Southgate has backed up his dismay with action; he has blocked his club from paying their pledged donation to the Mayday for Nurses Hardship Fund.
The fund was the brainchild of Noreen Hertz, an economist and campaigner, and was publicised via a documentary during the summer on Channel 4 called The Million Pound Footballers’ Giveaway. I was asked to review the programme for Radio 4 and while I scoffed at a dreadful piece of broadcasting, football players must have been quietly seething.
Southgate is concerned that Hertz is leaking the names of players who have not contributed, a ploy he calls “outrageous”. It is outrageous. Imagine seeing your name on a website because you had declined to hand over cash to someone knocking on your door for Guide Dogs for the Blind. But Southgate should have been angry sooner.
Hertz promised nurses, at the Royal College of Nursing annual conference, that she would make sure that every football player in the top flight would, by the end of the season, have donated a day’s pay – amounting to £1.5 million – to their cause. By the time the final ball was kicked for the 2006-07 season she had raised half the expected sum.
There are more than 365 worthy charities to which footballers may like to donate a day’s pay (and if they did they would be penniless), but here was a woman with a camera crew in tow telling them that a hardship fund for nurses should be top of their donation list.
Why footballers? Hertz argues that the plight of nurses will not make it to the front page unless footballers are involved. The whole tone of her campaign is that the contrast is irresistible. A player can earn £20,000 for 90 minutes on the pitch, whereas a nurse earns £16 per hour and a half on duty.
A lot of people earn more than a nurse earns and it would be rude to collar them and tell them so and ask what they are going to do about it. This is, however, what Hertz and Channel 4 did. The camera crew thought that they were capturing boredom on the faces of the players as they listened to Hertz’s crass presentation, but we were, in fact, seeing the players trying to work out if they were being bullied, cajoled or scolded for earning too much. Lee Carsley, the Everton midfield player, asked the question, which Hertz ducked: “Why does it have to be a day’s salary, why not a donation?” Nurses have a strict pay structure but players do not.
A striker on £100,000 a week can receive a pass from a full back on £30,000 a week. Had Hertz simply asked for a donation, I expect every player would have made one, but Hertz, in pleading for a day’s salary, was asking them to accept that they are paid too much, given that they rarely save a life or indeed stick a thermometer in anyone’s mouth.
That half of all Premier League players pledged to give up a day’s pay was perfect. Some gave, some did not. They did not act like the sheep footballers are mistaken for. And now a club are withholding their pledge on principle. Players do not want to be coerced and should be applauded if they have the guts to say so.
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I have never in all of my nursing career been as shocked by the tactics of this woman! I earn on average £30,000 a year. Not a bad pay in my opinion.Yes I am a senior nurse however I have not got a degree or any other qualifications other than a diploma (which was easier than GCSE's) and some post grad quals. I am simply very good at a job that I do and have climbed the career ladder. A lot of nurses don't even deserve the money that they are paid at the moment never mind extra via a fund!!! A lot of nurse feel that the worls owes them something Dr Hertz has reinforced this view!!!
If the pay is so poor get out!!
Gareth Southgate I salute you!! Hopefully others will take note!!
Dr Hertz stop giving nurses pity! A lot of them need a kick up the backside not the symathy vote!!! They are not all angels!!
catherine, mancs, manc
good idea, wrong approach. We live in a democratic society.Ms Hertz played this the wrong way.People are free to do what they choose with their incomes;why should footballers be singled out? FYI Ms Hertz, A List actors and actresses in Hollywood and Formula One's elite earn more than footballers .Why didnt you try and bully them for money???
Toks, London, UK
Absolutely right Alyson. I am tired of hearing about the nurses and other so called public sector key-workers plight with their guaranteed pensions. What about shop assistants etc etc. We need a balanced debate over the ever expanding public sector.
Graham Mealor, Epsom, Surrey
Who is Noreen Hertz to say that her pet charity is more important than any other? And why footballers, why not city traders, pop stars, F1 drivers, MPs etc. Perhaps she and the channel 4 clowns would have been better targetting the government for a better pay deal for nurses.
George, Glasgow, UK
Before everyone starts having a go at footballers saying they are paid too much (we know they are ) please consider exactly Southgates views and the points made in the article, i.e. charitable donations are not compulsory and should not be forced. Next time you buy a new car or go on holiday, consider that you probably could have bought a cheaper vehicle or gone to Blackpool instead of Barbados, then you could have paid the difference in price to charity. But you would not expect to be pulled up on that. Footballers are paid the market rate and are taxed accordingly on their earnings. If the market rate is morally wrong, then that is a different argument and is not the players fault. It may be silly money, but would you say no to being offered that much?
allycat, Jersey, Channel Isles
I agree with Southgate's views, having read his statement. I have experience of working with charities and I know many people in public life, such as footballers, who turn up at all hours, for whatever reasons, and give their time or a donation, and do this privately, not for recognition or to be praised.
To make it appear that those footballers who did not donate are somehow disdainful of nurses or selfish, etc, by listing those who have donated on the website is unfair, and the issue of the rights and wrongs of people who earn lots of money for kicking a ball, compared to those who work in hospitals, is irrelevant to that.
Nobody should feel pressured into giving, otherwise it is, as Southgate says, tantamount to blackmail, rather than being a gesture of genuine goodwill. Worthy cause, unworthy methods.
Jason Kennedy, Antigua, Guatemala