ILO may be struggling with the huge load caused by EPO complaints (suggestions have been made in that regard), but occasionally it catches up with at least some of the EPO backlog and issues actual judgments, probably close to a decade after the initial complaint was made. The EPO's management has virtually been flooding or drowning out the ILO because of its sheer abuses, which caused an unprecedented number of complaints to be filed there.
1. The decisions of 16 December 2009, 4 February 2010 and 19 June 2013 are set aside. 2. The EPO shall pay the complainant 10,000 euros in compensation for the moral injury resulting from the decisions which have been set aside. 3. It shall pay her 1,000 euros in moral damages for the excessive length of the internal appeal proceedings. 4. It shall also pay her 1,000 euros in costs. 5. All other claims, insofar as they are not moot, are dismissed.
Nobbi says: Don't be distracted by the "SocialDemocracy/MoU/SocialStudy/SocialConference" manoeuvre.
1. Reduce the salay-mass and thereby the contributions to the pension fund. Motivate staff close to (early) retirement to leave, improving staff demography and creating a pension fund problem requiring further reforms. Over-recruit examiners at the lower end of the salary scale, if possible on limited contract. Does not help the pension fund problem created. It is not supposed to. Bonuses to management.
2. On top of the usual ever-increasing targets for production, add personal "quality-is-timeliness" targets for first and/or further communications in examination (Early Certainty from Advanced Examination sooner than you expected (ECfAE)) and implement the Paris Criteria. More bonuses to management.
Result: Oh!?! Too many examiners ... too few files ... less renewal fees for the EPOrg ... more for the national offices.
3. Get rid of the examiners on contract and of the more experienced yet still to costly examiners left. Push them to ridiculous production. You can always leave if you dont't like it! Bonuses ...
Result: Less costly examiners, less contributions to the pension fund. Oh! A pension fund problem.
4. Comes in the PriceworthyConsultant and says: Increase the retirement age and the contribution rate to the pension fund for the (meanwhile rubber-stamping) examiners still left. Bonuses for the consultant and ...
5. Comes in another PriceworthyConsultant and says: Outsource search and examination to finally get rid of in-house examiners. Dissolve the pension fund and use the cash for ... bonuses...
6. The AI-oracle generates fully automated zero-day search and just-in-time on-demand as-you-wish examination and says: Get rid of all non-management and lower-management staff. No need for a pension fund as we have bonuses for ...