This has gone way off-topic. I think we can all agree that self-employment is not practical alternative for many people for many reasons. On-topic though, what is remarkable to me, is the divergence we are getting between public and private sector unions. Consider what many private sector unions are settling for these days...layoffs, benefits and wage rollbacks...all to save their employers. Heck, some are even accepting a reduction in benefits for their retired alumni. What's the public sector union response? It starts from a position of zero concessions and then adds demands for above inflation wage increases, and perks not available by any of their private sector counterparts (the Ottawa bus strike was a great example).
The bankable sick days (that too nearly 4 weeks worth) are a liability and the city was right to eliminate it for the other unions and is right to do it this time around. They are a curse on any organization. They allow employees to take half-year long terminal leaves right before retirement or to take several months off with the simplest of doctor's notes...leaving the departments they work for in a lurch since the position is technically filled though it's unproductive. That being said, the city should have pushed for a more phased-in elimination ie. new rules for new employees and require the old ones to cash-out by a deadline and bank only so many days. For the sake of Toronto's future, I hope Miller has learned his lesson about the city's unions and does not back down from the fight.
I have a great example of how all this can work out if its not fixed.....I work in a public sector office with one position that's been similarly unfilled. When the individual came close to being terminated for performance, she claimed stress and has not shown up for work since (she got her warning in December). HR won't replace her because the union forbids replacing workers while they are away....even temporarily (thanks PSAC!). I work on a 4 man team. So this means that I have to do 33% more to make up for the person's apparent 'stress'. I find it remarkable that she never found stress in her 17 year career in the public sector but as soon as management started disciplining her, she apparently has sufficient stress to be off for half a year. And it all worked out wonderfully, because this individual was allowed to bank her sick days.
Thankfully, at other levels of government they are realizing the liability of such policies and are slowly negotiating them. These policies are terrible. If a young worker gets injured and needs time off, they might not get it because they haven't banked enough, while older workers get to abuse the system like my example above. It is much better to have a needs based sick leave system. Have a company doctor check you out and recommend some time off. Then the employer should give as much as is requested. Time to heal should not be based on how much time somebody has banked.