Friday 29 May 2020

Angela Rayner chats to UNISON carers

Before becoming an MP, Angela Rayner was a care worker and UNISON rep. One of the reasons she stood to become an MP was to help make sure that care workers were treated better.

Speaking to 12 care workers on an online call this week, she introduced herself as Angie, saying “I’m one of you guys.

“There’s no better way of understanding what’s been happening than by listening to care workers themselves.”

With the promise of anonymity, the carers on the call spoke frankly about their unsafe working conditions, low pay and the personal protective equipment (PPE) challenges thrown up by COVID-19.

As one carer working for a private care provider said: “I used to love my job, but it’s all changed with COVID-19.

“Our regular clients have been taken off us and we’re taking people directly from hospital who are COVID-19 positive or suspected to be.

“We’re given a flimsy plastic apron, a fluid-resistant surgical mask – which we had to fight for – and a pair of goggles.

“We’ve been told the virus doesn’t move on clothing, but I’m seeing 11-13 clients a day, going from house to house. Everyone’s frightened to go to work.”

Another carer, who works for a local authority, stated: “For PPE, you have to wear the same mask all day for all calls. That’s just a disposable mask you’re not meant to wear for more than one call.

“I can see 20 clients in a day. We’re told to change our gloves and apron, but keep the same mask on.”

Ms Rayner responded: “I used to do home care, and when you have a cough or cold, you can’t go into work – it feels like you’re going to kill your service user.

“It’s not just about bringing it home to your family, but being terrified you’re going from one door to the next and infecting your service users. To know you’re in that position is heart breaking.”

Low wages for ‘unskilled work’

A key point of the discussion was how carers are devalued by the government as ‘unskilled’ and paid low wages.

One carer described it as “unacceptable that carers and support workers are being paid minimum wage.

“That’s why I’ve come here today. We do the fundamental parts of so many jobs: we’re cleaners, we’re nurses, we’re psychologists and we have to get specimens for doctors.

“We’re exposed to all the signs of the coronavirus and we’re not even given the adequate facilities or PPE to look after ourselves. The fact that most carers are paid minimum wage is deplorable.”

Another added: “If you’re 35 years old, the minimum wage is £8.72 an hour. It’s really hard, and you’re having to do long hours, sometimes without breaks.

“I find it really hard to cope, even when you have a family. We regard the people we work with as family as well and we have a duty of care to look after them. We should be paid twice the minimum wage.

“It’s so sad that it was voted down in the House of Commons that carers should have a pay rise. Most of us can’t afford to be off work during COVID-19 because we can’t afford to live off statutory sick pay.”

A domiciliary care worker shared her experience: “I have to pay my own petrol money. When you take that off the minimum wage, you aren’t even receiving the minimum wage.”

There was widespread anger at the recent government declaration that care work is ‘unskilled’. One of those taking part in the discussion declared: “Care workers need to be regarded for what they do – and not just through clapping.

“They’ve recently increased the amount of education you need to obtain a care certificate and be considered as a carer, but they don’t give too much of an increase once you get that.”

And she continued: “It’s a good thing that the Labour leader argued that NHS workers should not pay the health surcharge and should be regarded as highly-skilled workers.

“Recently, when I was coming home from work, my car broke down, and the delivery driver who drove me home asked me what I’m doing. When I told him, he told me that it’s too much work for peanuts money.

“So many people might want to do the job, but aren’t attracted to it because of the pay rates.”

And she added a salutary note: “80% of the population, at one point or another, will find themselves being looked after by a care worker.”

Another of those taking part has been in social care for 36 years and is a residential care worker.

“I work in a care home and we’ve got staff leaving because of having to work in conditions where there aren’t enough staff to give residents the care they’re paying for.

“We came into this job to care, but you find yourself having to rush past residents saying ‘I’ll come back in a minute!’ because you haven’t got enough staff to do the caring work to be done.

“We’re so undervalued and these residents’ lives are at risk. It’s someone’s grandma, mum or dad. Care is care and if you’re going to do it, do it properly.”

Ms Rayner attributed the devaluation of carers to economic ideology.

“Privatisation has fragmented the care sector. Ten years ago, UNISON and GMB brought in a career structure on the back of the NVQ level 2, to recognise the skills that care workers had.

“But this has been undermined by the fragmentation of the system. Now, private providers are delivering care packages at rates they can’t afford, and some are handing them back to local authorities because the council aren’t putting enough money into it and can’t run the service.”

Furlough and COVID-19

A care worker who is also a UNISON branch secretary said: “We’re seeing big issues around furlough and childcare. The furlough scheme is not being used for people who need childcare, and they’re being told to use annual leave.

“I work in the same service as my daughter is the single parent of two children aged 10 and 14, and she’s got a mortgage to pay. This week, she’s working 60 hours and I’m working 70 hours, while trying to organise the care of the children.

“We can’t rely on our usual support networks, and school provision that’s in place is totally inappropriate for care workers who work 12 or 24-hour shifts.”

“We’re sharing the care of the boys, and we’re grateful, but seven miles down the road is my 98-year old father and I haven’t seen him for months. It’s really, really difficult.”

There was cynicism among the group about #ClapforCarers, and concern that, once COVID-19 is over, carers will be forgotten once more.

“Carers who are looking after people who need help should be taken care of themselves,” said one. And they continued: “Carers have to work so many hours and, at the end of the day, they still struggle to keep a roof over their heads.

“There were issues in care before COVID-19, but now we’re at the centre of the public attention and there’s more sympathy.”

She suggested that once the pandemic is over “we’ll go back to being unskilled, invisible and on rubbish pay. The highest qualification you can get is an NVQ, which is pretty much just writing what you do every day. You’re not really learning anything to pass.

“How can we get carers to be skilled, something that you can get UCAS points for? Anything that stops carers staying at the bottom, where nobody has any respect for them.”

Another carer observed: “The clapping on a Thursday really irritates me. I see people clapping, then they all mix down the shop and on the beach. I’m saying: ‘don’t clap – support us at the end of all this when I hope the unions are going to campaign for us to get a decent wage.’

“Optimistically, people are realising how much we do and how much society relies on this. But the cynical part of me says that people won’t care and we’ll go back to being the lowest of the low.”

Responding to fears that carers would be forgotten, Ms Rayner told them: “One of the reasons I went into Parliament was for the domiciliary care sector and to make sure people were treated better.

“I remember UNISON and GMB were bringing in a career structure, and we’d gotten away from caring being seen as part-time women’s work. But in just over 10 years, it’s all been decimated by austerity.

“We’re collecting information and working with UNISON and yourselves to make sure that it happens. When I was a home carer and union rep, we were considered low-paid and at the bottom rungs of the NJC (the national pay grade for council workers), but it’s got so much worse since then.

“There’s no national framework or minimum for identifying skills. Care has changed. People think you just go round and make someone dinner, but it’s not like that at all.

“It’s really complex care needs that community carers are handling. It’s a very skilled job. Care workers are predominantly female, with a huge proportion of black and minority ethnic people in the sector.”

Ms Rayner identified the COVID-19 crisis as an opportunity for lifting the profile of carers.

“While people have realised care workers are here, we need to seize this moment. While everyone’s looking at what’s going on in your sector at the moment, let’s do something about it.

“We won’t miss this moment to make sure you’re valued. That you have fair pay for the work you do. That we recognise the skills for the work you do.

“We recognise you putting your life on the line for us.”

UNISON national officer Gavin Edwards said: “Listening to UNISON care members report on the situations they have been forced to deal with is very moving.

“The pandemic has brought the serious problems with social care into stark relief. Our care workers and the people they care for should never have been exposed in this way, through lack of PPE, a testing regime that isn’t fit for purpose and financial penalties for care workers who are following public health advice.

“UNISON has made it clear this is totally unacceptable.

“It has happened because, for far too long, care has not been given the priority which an essential public service needs. UNISON is now calling for a complete overhaul in the system, including proper funding, fair pay and an end to profiteering.”

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Blog: a long way to go on equal pay

Today, 29 May, is an opportunity to celebrate 50 years since the introduction of the Equal Pay Act.

UNISON has led the way in using the legislation to achieve equal pay for significant numbers of low-paid women members – school staff, nursery workers, care workers, caterers and cleaners – who are doing the same work as men.

However, figures published earlier this week show that there are 29,000 equal pay claims a year – in spite of the Equal Pay Act.

We’ve made a lot of progress, but there is still a lot to do to end long-term inequality in pay for women.

Factors that underlie pay inequality have become stronger during the coronavirus crisis. Women and the work they do are consistently undervalued – and this is never more the case than for women working in the social care sector.

Eight out of 10 social care workers are women. Many are also Black or migrant workers. They are undervalued and low-paid, with many on insecure contracts, but they are paying the highest price in the fight against the deadly virus.

A report from the influential Institute of Fiscal Studies shows that more women are losing their jobs, and taking on more domestic responsibilities, as a consequence of COVID-19. The pay gap in working families has increased by 10%.

UNISON has long argued that society’s expectation that women are the prime carers stands in the way of achieving pay equity.

Pay inequity cuts across all aspects of women’s lives. Addressing low pay and pay inequality remain central bargaining priorities as restrictions imposed to fight COVID-19 begin to ease.

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New agreement to ensure NHS staff in England are paid properly for every working hour

Health workers across England should now be paid properly for every hour they’re at work during the pandemic, following an agreement reached between health unions and NHS employers today (Friday).

Since March staff have been working flat out, treating and caring for patients, and keeping the NHS running under immense pressure – but often not getting paid for all the hours they put in, says UNISON.

Some NHS trusts have made sure staff are paid for every hour of overtime worked, but this hasn’t been the case everywhere.

That’s why 15 unions representing staff working in English NHS trusts – including UNISON, the Royal College of Nursing and the Royal College of Midwives – have agreed an overtime template with employers. This will now be used locally to ensure health workers across England get all the pay they are due.

In more normal times, NHS staff frequently work beyond their shifts – sometimes without payment or on reduced bank hourly rates.

But given the pressures the entire NHS team has been under in recent weeks – often working under extremely challenging and difficult conditions – unions were determined this situation couldn’t continue into the pandemic.

Ensuring proper payment for every hour worked for all NHS staff – including those on higher grades not usually able to claim overtime – was contained in a nine-point blueprint published by health unions earlier this month.

This document sets out how the NHS can safely start to reopen many of the services forced to close as the pandemic hit, and includes measures around PPE supplies, social distancing and pay.

Commenting on the new agreement, UNISON head of health Sara Gorton said: “These are challenging times, and no one can deny the huge contribution staff across the NHS are making during the pandemic.

“Every week people have been on their doorsteps, drives and balconies to show their support and appreciation. They will be pleased that health staff who go the extra mile should soon be going home with more money in their pockets.

“But securing overtime pay for all is just the start. Health workers and the public will expect ministers to remember the applause long after the clapping has stopped – and especially when they sit down with unions and employers later in the summer to agree the next NHS pay rise.”

Notes to editors:
– The NHS unions are: British Association of Occupational Therapists, British Dental Association, British Dietetic Association, British Orthoptists Society, Chartered Society of Physiotherapists, College of Podiatry, Federation of Clinical Scientists, GMB, Managers in Partnership, Prison Officers Association, Royal College of Midwives, Royal College of Nursing, Society of Radiographers, UNISON and Unite.
– The blueprint published earlier this month is here.
– UNISON is the UK’s largest union, with more than 1.3 million members providing public services – in education, local government, the NHS, police service and energy. They are employed in the public, private and voluntary sectors.

Media contacts:
Liz Chinchen M: 07778 158175 E: press@unison.co.uk
Anthony Barnes M: 07834 864794 E: a.barnes@unison.co.uk

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Thursday 28 May 2020

Kindness in the age of COVID-19

Despite the overwhelming nature of COVID-19, people have been stepping up to support their friends and their communities.

Here are some heartwarming UNISON members’ experiences of kindness during the coronavirus pandemic.

Alison Hann says: “Our branch welfare officer, Aly Thornton, sent small gifts to each member of her work team.

“It really lifted spirits and she did it anonymously, so the gift kept giving as people tried to guess who the mystery gift giver was.

“So kind, so thoughtful.”

Craig Stevens from Telford explains that “the school I work in has been giving us free lunches while we are in school looking after key workers’ children.”

He goes on to add that it’s “been well received by us all at work – we thought it was a nice touch.”

Over in Suffolk, Jusie Rublico says that she was “down with the virus for five weeks.”

Fortunately for her, “my neighbour is doing my shopping, and many of my friends left me cooked food in my front door. I owe them a dinner party when we eventually get our freedom!”

Gillian McLaren works at Fife Council. It was her birthday earlier this week and she says: “A colleague sent a text to say she had left something at my door – she had made me six cupcakes”

Ambulance worker Eamon Murphy says that “a very kind gent paid for some shopping at the beginning of my shift – insisted on doing it.”

Have you experienced or witnessed small kindnesses during COVID-19? Then why not share your stories here and inspire others?

Kindness in COVID-19

Have you experienced any small acts of kindness during COVID-19? Share them here.

The article Kindness in the age of COVID-19 first appeared on the UNISON National site.



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Support staff losing sleep and suffering anxiety ahead of return to school in England, says UNISON

Anxiety is widespread among school workers about their safety, their families’ and that of pupils ahead of a return to the classroom across England, says UNISON today (Thursday).

On the day unions are due to meet with education secretary Gavin Williamson, UNISON has published a catalogue of concerns from support staff who make up more than half the schools’ workforce.

Teaching assistants, catering staff, administrative workers, caretakers and other school employees have told the union they are being banned from wearing protective masks, denied gloves when handing packed lunches to parents and being spat at by children with behavioural issues.

These issues are among hundreds reported to UNISON’s PPE alert web page by support staff, including many who have continued to work in schools during the lockdown.

They also include accounts of having to buy their own hand sanitiser, parents failing to social distance when they visit and working without hot water in schools attended by the children of key workers.

In separate findings, a survey by UNISON based on responses from 12,781 support staff has found that three in ten (30%) are losing sleep, suffering high anxiety or both as a result of plans to open schools more widely in England. Only a small minority (4%) said that schools had adequate personal protective equipment (PPE).

The union is calling on ministers to make schools have enough PPE to protect staff, their families and the children they look after from the risks of infection from coronavirus.

UNISON head of education Jon Richards said: “Support staff are essential to schools running properly and they shouldn’t have to feel scared about doing their jobs.

“But it’s no wonder they feel anxious and are losing sleep – and that makes for worried parents too.

“Schools need much more time to complete their risk assessments and ensure that, wherever possible, support staff aren’t being made to fill in for teachers.

“Parents need their minds putting at rest that teaching assistants, catering workers and other support staff have access to all the masks and gloves they need. Or they simply won’t send their children back.

“A delay to the reopening plans will allow unions and government the space to work together to reassure staff and families in England that the return to school can happen safely.”

Notes to editors:
Comments made by school support staff in emails to UNISON’s PPE alert include:

  • “I‘m making packed lunches in a primary school and also work as a cleaner (in a primary school). I have to hand over the lunches to the children’s parents each day and was told I cannot have gloves as they are a risk.”
  • “We’ve been told we can’t wear masks. But if a child has a first aid issue then we have to be close to that pupil to administer first aid.”
  • “I’m a teaching assistant working with key worker children. We have no PPE – no hand sanitiser, no gloves, nothing. We have soap but no hot water.”
  • “The school cannot source sanitiser anywhere so we need to supply our own and claim the money back from the school.”
  • “Parents aren’t maintaining distance at the door, and children aren’t being sent in clean clothes as requested. I was coughed on twice today and a child sneezed on me.”
  • “I’ve worked one-to-one with a pupil who on the first day spat at me. He’s aggressive and they’ve placed us in a small room together. My daughter has asthma – I’m so worried we considered sending her to grandparents until this is over. We’ve been told not to wear masks because they could scare the children.”

– UNISON is the UK’s largest union, with more than 1.3 million members providing public services – in education, local government, the NHS, police service and energy. They are employed in the public, voluntary and private sectors.

Media contacts:
Sophie Goodchild M: 07767 325595 E: s.goodchild@unison.co.uk
Liz Chinchen M: 07778 158175 E: l.chinchen@unison.co.uk

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Wednesday 27 May 2020

Winning for care

Care workers have faced some of the toughest situations during COVID-19. Caring for those most vulnerable to the virus, whilst grappling with failures from an inadequate government response, some unfair employers and a dysfunctional care system. But UNISON have been fighting back. And we have been winning.

Here, we share some victories from care workers campaigns throughout the UK in the last few weeks.

In Norfolk, a care home member contacted UNISON concerned about a lack of masks. UNISON contacted local officials who arranged for 300 masks to be quickly transferred while supply line issues were sorted.

In Leeds, a UNISON rep spotted that staff were being issued with out of date face mask. Thanks to the swift and determined intervention of our rep, UNISON escalated this issue quickly with the employer and got them replaced.

In the South West, UNISON negotiators and reps negotiated with a care home provider, getting them to agree to pay full pay for anyone self-isolating or off sick due to Covid-19. This affected 1200 members of staff.

In Scotland, UNISON negotiated with the Scottish Government and secured the Scottish Living Wage of £9.30 for social care workers for all hours worked from 1st April 2020

In Haringey, the Local Government Branch supported members in challenging one Social Care provider to change their policy and furlough staff who are shielding, to ensure their pay doesn’t drop down to Statutory Sick Pay.

In Barnsley, a group of workers in a care home contacted UNISON, concerned about resident admission without testing. UNISON arranged a virtual meeting and spoke to the care home owner. The issue was resolved and new members joined UNISON from this workplace.

In the North West, UNISON campaigning has led to nine councils agreeing to ensure care workers receive full normal pay for COVID-19 related absence

In the New Forest, staff at a care home were forbidden by management to wear PPE, despite a resident having died after contracting coronavirus. UNISON made it clear this was unacceptable. The employer relented and staff were given access to protective equipment.

In Northern Ireland, UNISON pressure led to the Health Minister committing to improve pay and introduce universal testing for all care home workers.

There’s never been a more important time to be a member of a union. If you know a care worker, ask them to join us. Care workers are stronger together. 

Care workers can join online here

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Tuesday 26 May 2020

New care home death figures show government claims of protecting the sector ​ring hollow

Responding to figures published today (Tuesday) by the Office for National Statistics showing more than half of all deaths linked to coronavirus occurred in care homes, UNISON assistant general secretary Christina McAnea said:

“It’s shameful that hundreds of people in care homes are still dying of C​o​vid-19 every week.

“Vulnerable residents and ​care workers looking after them have been left to fight the disease alone. Many staff still don’t have the safety kit or tests they need. Government claims of a protective ring being placed around care homes ​ring rather hollow.

“The care sector needs to be completely overhauled once the crisis has passed. Never again should the concerns of staff​, unions and employers be ignored.”

Notes to editors:
-The union has launched a petition demanding the government step up and deliver on its promises around PPE and do much more to protect care staff and elderly people.
– UNISON is the UK’s largest union, with more than 1.3 million members providing public services – in education, local government, the NHS, police service and energy. They are employed in the public, voluntary and private sectors.
Media contacts:
Garfield Myrie M: 07778 158175 E: g.myrie@unison.co.uk
Anthony Barnes M: 07834 864794 E: a.barnes@unison.co.uk

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Ministers mustn’t forget important workers delivering essential services, says UNISON

The government must do more to help thousands of “hidden workers” who are being put under extra pressure or are seeing their health put at risk as a result of the coronavirus pandemic, says UNISON today (Tuesday).

Alongside the frontline health and care staff, there are people around the UK keeping essential services going, who are being largely forgotten as they too face serious dangers and are being overwhelmed with work, the union warns.

They include refuse collectors, housing officers, social workers and teaching assistants whose work must continue but who are often unable to keep a safe distance or not entitled to safety kit.

Some are handling more potentially hazardous waste or facing other daily problems such as an increase in abuse as a result of lockdown measures, says the union.

UNISON has written to communities secretary Robert Jenrick, asking for proper risk assessments for these workers and a wider distribution of protective equipment (PPE) to cope with the dangers they’re facing. But staff are still facing problems.

Among those facing added pressures according to UNISON are:

  • Refuse workers, particularly those working for private contractors who are forced to sit in close contact in the cab. Some sensible employers have redeployed drivers to minibuses to take staff to their routes allowing correct social distancing.
  • Crematorium and cemetery workers who’ve faced virus risks where families have refused to follow the limit on numbers at funerals. Some have also faced abuse when they’ve challenged groups congregating in cemeteries.
  • Housing workers who run a wide range of risks. They deal with emergency situations such as domestic violence incidents, carry out emergency housing repairs and work with the homeless to get them into hostels and other accommodation.
  • Trading standards staff who’re looking into hundreds of coronavirus scams and online ‘phishing’ attempts, as well as dealing with distressed older people who have been duped.

UNISON is calling for urgent talks with the government to discuss the concerns of these workers and help to tackle them. The union represents more than 600,000 staff working in local government or in outsourced services such as social care.

UNISON head of local government Jon Richards said: “It’s understandable that throughout the crisis, public attention has been focused on the UK’s health and care workers.

“But it’s important the government and the country as a whole don’t overlook the people providing vital services who also face added risks during the pandemic.

“We’re hearing day in and day out of the difficulties and dangers. People want to do all they can to get us through the crisis, but they’re worried and being made increasingly anxious by their working conditions.

“Ministers have to make sure the concerns of all essential workers are addressed. It’s also vital they show a commitment to underfunded local services by increasing budgets so local authorities can increase the pay offer they’ve made to council workers.”

Notes to editors:
– Examples of UNISON members who have raised concerns about safety during the pandemic include:

  • Refuse collector
    “We have concerns about government guidelines over distancing. It’s less than a metre from shoulder to shoulder in a cab. Also our people don’t feel safe doing their job because of the risks of contamination from old tissues, disposable gloves and the like.”
  • Teaching assistant
    We have no PPE to protect us at all. The smaller children don’t understand keeping a distance from anyone. The other day I had two upset reception children clinging to each side of me, and if you need to help them with personal needs, for instance if they wet themselves, then this definitely can’t be done at a distance. I’m not even sure about the effect of children passing something on to other children.”
  • Teaching assistant
    “It is all too little, too late. PPE could have and should have been made available before the schools closed to non-key workers. Many school staff have become ill with the virus. 
    We continue to go to work without any available protection and are in close contact with pupils whose parents are also key workers and therefore most at risk of catching and spreading the virus.
  • Social worker
    “PPE in children’s services is only available for home visits where it’s known that someone has COVID-19. But sometimes it may be unknown and the signs are not necessarily fever and cough (and there’s a five-day incubation period). We need PPE when we are seeing anyone who is unwell. Also, the recommendation is to wash your hands before entering and on leaving a home. But no hand gel or soap or wipes are provided to staff to enable this.

– UNISON is the UK’s largest union, with more than 1.3 million members providing public services – in education, local government, the NHS, police service and energy. They are employed in the public, voluntary and private sectors.

Media contacts:

Anthony Barnes M: 07834 864794 E: a.barnes@unison.co.uk

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Friday 22 May 2020

Blog: A u-turn from the government and a real victory for our union

This week, years of UNISON campaigning and lobbying brought about a massive change for many of our members. UNISON has opposed the Immigration Health Surcharge since its inception in 2015, for a simple reason – it’s fundamentally unfair. Migrant workers already contribute to the NHS the same way we all do – by paying their taxes.

Not only do migrant workers make a “fair contribution” and then pay extra with the surcharge, those working in the NHS, social care and other health roles make a third contribution with their work. They provide care for others, day in day out, knowing that they have to pay extra to access healthcare for themselves and their families.

During the pandemic, they’ve done this knowing they are risking their lives at the same time.

Back in 2018, one nurse told us that she was already trying to save £150 every month, by working more overtime, to pay the health surcharge before her visa renewal in 2020. She calculated that it would cost her almost £2,000 altogether. This was money that couldn’t be used to buy food, pay rent or bills.

This is a clear injustice, and one UNISON is determined to reverse. We have lobbied ministers, civil servants and employers. We have campaigned with health and migrant rights charities against the charge. We have worked with opposition politicians to consistently raise the concerns of UNISON members.

So yesterday’s announcement that the government would be scrapping the charge for health and social care workers was a real victory for our union, and forced the government into a screeching u-turn. It means that many UNISON members, migrants working in health and social care, looking after our communities, will be spared this deeply unfair charge. But UNISON won’t stop there. We will continue to campaign for the surcharge to be scrapped for everyone. So that no UNISON member – no migrant whatsoever – is expected to pay extra to access the NHS that exists for all of us, an NHS so many of them have helped to build, an NHS that relies on their contributions.

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Government should listen to independent scientists and pull back from 1 June start date

Commenting on the report on school safety from the committee of independent scientists chaired by Sir David King published today (Friday), UNISON head of education Jon Richards said:

“This is the evidence school staff and parents have been waiting for. Not only do these scientists say the government’s plans for schools in England are premature, they also suggest any risks to children would be halved by waiting a fortnight.

“Ministers need to heed these concerns, stop doggedly pushing schools to meet the arbitrary 1 June deadline, and ensure proper tracking and tracing is up and running first.

“There are real concerns the government is gambling with the safety of pupils, staff and the wider community.

“It makes no sense for ministers to push schools to open more widely in England, while other parts of the UK take a more considered approach.

“It’s time ministers took a step back and delayed any moves to increase the number of pupils in schools until it’s safer to do so.”

Earlier today, UNISON – which represents caretakers, administrative staff, teaching assistants, cleaners and caterers – published the results of a survey of more than 45,000 school support staff.

This found an overwhelming majority don’t feel reassured by government claims that English schools are safe to open to more pupils at the start of next month, and that ministers’ rushed back-to-the-classroom plans aren’t putting safety first.

Workers’ confidence in their own schools’ ability to be ready for a wider opening in June was low. Just over three quarters (77%) didn’t feel their school would have the resources to cope with the additional responsibility of putting health, safety and risk assessments in place in time.

Support staff – which make up more than half of the schools’ workforce – were also concerned about the impact of a rushed return on their own children.

Of those with school age children, 95% said they didn’t feel it was safe to send them back to school. One worker said she was ‘petrified’ at the thought of her seven-year-old going back.

UNISON is concerned that because support staff tend to be older, are disproportionately from the BAME community and come from more disadvantaged backgrounds, they are more at risk from the virus.

Notes to editors:
– UNISON is the UK’s largest union, with more than 1.3 million members providing public services – in education, local government, the NHS, police service and energy. They are employed in the public, private and voluntary sectors.

Media contacts:
Garfield Myrie M: 07778 158175 E: g.myrie@unison.co.uk
Anthony Barnes M: 07834 864794 E: a.barnes@unison.co.uk

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Unions urge immediate protection of Black probation workers from COVID-19

UNISON is calling on the National Probation Service and Community Rehabilitation Companies to proactively reduce risk for Black probation staff.

NHS England confirmed on 7 May 2020 that members of Black communities are at a disproportionate risk of fatal COVID-19.

The NHS has subsequently issued detailed guidance for NHS employers to undertake specific risk assessments of the vulnerability of Black/BAME staff to COVID-19 and take appropriate action to reduce their exposure to and risk from the disease.

The police service has quickly adopted the same approach for police officers and police staff, and now UNISON, NAPO and GMB/SCOOP are calling on the government to implement the NHS risk assessment programme to protect Black probation staff.

In a joint statement, the three unions assert that: “The unions do not believe that there is time to wait for further research on the risk of COVID-19 to Black/BAME communities, which Public Health England is due to publish in a few weeks’ time. We need action now to protect our Black/BAME members.”

Ben Priestley, UNISON national officer for the Probation Service, said: “The risks to Black probation staff from COVID-19 are now well known. The NHS confirmed this to its staff on 7 May, and put in place measures to protect them, and yet we are still waiting for the National Probation Service to take decisive action to protect its Black workers.

“UNISON and our sister unions in probation are calling on the National Probation Service to take action now.”

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Tell us your lockdown story

At UNISON we’ve been very busy since the start of the coronavirus crisis writing stories about members on the frontline, focussing on the amazing work they do – saving lives and keeping the country running.

We’ve also been busy holding the government to account and campaigning for PPE to make sure our members and all key workers are protected – both financially and physically – at this incredibly difficult time.

But not all of our members have been contributing in such a high-profile way, on the front line.

So, we’d also like to shine a light on some of the more unusual, imaginative, even fun ways that UNISON members and branches have been contributing to the fight against COVID-19 and helping their colleagues, families, neighbours and communities to cope – whether it’s baking banana bread on an industrial scale for key workers, organising food bank collections, sewing scrubs or setting up a Zoom yoga class.

You tell us. It would be great to hear and share your lockdown stories.

Lockdown stories

What have you been up to in lockdown? Share your experiences with the UNISON community

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‘I’ve felt like I’m more at risk of exhaustion than COVID-19’

UNISON member Sarah Wall is a team leader in a homeless hostel in Birmingham. In the week that the lockdown was announced, Birmingham City Council urged local services to get all rough sleepers off the streets.

Sarah remembers it clearly. “The busiest Monday I’ve ever had was at the end of March. There was a lot of last-minute pressure from Birmingham City Council for us to get everyone off the street.

“Two weeks before that, all the local housing providers were called into a meeting to look at potential strategies for rehousing people.

“Usually, the rough sleeper team go out and approach people, and signpost them to an emergency bed. We’re continuing to do that, but since COVID-19 broke out, a hotel has been rented out so individuals can have their own self-isolation spaces.”

She explains that the city didn’t have the capacity to house every single homeless person. Some services were already full before the outbreak. Without the hotel, there’d be no other way of managing it – particularly as some homelessness services do not have self-contained units, meaning that people were sharing rooms or communal facilities.

Despite Birmingham being known as one of the UK’s worst homelessness hotspots, statistics from February show that the city had made a huge reduction in rough sleeping.

However, even when homeless individuals have been housed, Sarah and her team face another set of challenges.

“We’ve got certain people who are housed, and they’re going out and breaching lockdown. We can’t manage it. Rough sleepers are the most vulnerable group of people in society, with so many different agencies involved in their lives.

“I work in a complex needs service, with people who are substance users. The limited access to external services has resulted in people relapsing and going through withdrawals.

“A lot of our service users are dependent on soup kitchens and food banks, and almost all of them have had to be shut down immediately, so we’ve been receiving food donations at the hostel.”

Sarah feels like frontline homelessness services have been forgotten in the national narrative around personal protective equipment (PPE) and “heroes”.

“Everybody’s talking about PPE for the NHS and people working in care homes. I’ve never heard anyone mention other auxiliary services or homeless services,” she notes.

“None of my team members, or anyone in the entrenched rough sleeper team, was put on the supply list.

“You have no idea how much risk we take in a face-to-face homeless service. The amount of exhaustion people feel goes unrecognised. I’ve felt like I’m more at risk of exhaustion than COVID-19. And exhaustion could lead to infection.”

Staffing is also part of the challenge.

“I’ve got a team where staff are coming in. In another service, there’s no staff and they’re running on agency workers only because people are all in self-isolation or the vulnerable category as outlined by the government guidelines.”

“The other week I walked into a complex care service, and all of the residents were all in the corridor, all wanting support and interaction, and their anxiety levels were quite high. How can we keep safe measures and social distancing in that environment?”

Despite its challenges, COVID-19 has proven that it is possible for the government to house rough sleepers. The UK has drastically managed to reduce homelessness over a period of two to three weeks.

Sarah fears that it will go back to where it was before, though.

“We should be planning a strategy for all the way to December and into January, not just up until September. We also need to look at our personal resilience and take precautions to make sure we’re safe.

“The government needs to remember homelessness services alongside care homes when it comes to COVID-19 responses. We’ve managed to house a lot of people during COVID-19, so what now?”

UNISON West Midlands community branch secretary James Hawker says that this “is a story we are seeing repeated in services across the region.

“Many third-sector organisations dealing with homelessness, and drug and alcohol units, have continued to work over and above capacity throughout the lockdown, with members feeling they are getting little support or guidance from government departments.

“These services were systematically underfunded prior to the pandemic and the amount of funding being injected now is a drop in the ocean compared to what is needed to make these services effective and safe for both service users and our members.”

James points out that, unlike in the health service, which is a much more controlled environment, members looking after homeless people “are on the street or in hostels where they have very limited influence over the coming and goings of their service users and how they interact. They place themselves at risk every day with little or no PPE, depending on how their employers are interpreting guidance.

“The members working in these tough and unforgiving environments have my complete admiration, and we are doing everything we can to make sure they’re safe and can work without fear.”

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Support staff have little confidence in government school safety plans, says UNISON

An overwhelming majority of school support staff don’t feel reassured by government claims that English schools are safe to open to more pupils from the beginning of June, according to a UNISON survey published today (Friday).

Only 2% of employees felt reassured by the Prime Minister saying it was safe to open schools more widely from 1 June.

Almost all staff (96%) felt ministers hadn’t put safety first when developing their back to school plans, according to the survey of 45,200 teaching and classroom assistants, cleaners, administrative, management staff, and technicians*.

The primary, secondary, special and early years workers were surveyed soon after Boris Johnson’s call earlier this month for children in reception and years 1 and 6 to return to schools in England from a week on Monday.

More than three in five (61%) of staff surveyed were already working in schools – on a rota basis or full-time throughout the lockdown – so are well aware of the challenges of operating in schools during the pandemic.

Workers’ confidence in their own schools’ ability to be ready for a wider opening in June was low. Just over three quarters (77%) didn’t feel their school would have the resources to cope with the additional responsibility of putting health, safety and risk assessments in place in time.

As well as the threat to their own health, staff were concerned about the impact of a rushed return on their own children.

Of those with school age children, 95% said they didn’t feel it was safe to send them back to school. One worker said she was ‘petrified’ at the thought of her seven-year-old going back.

The research provides insights from school staff who have often been shut out of the debate about schools opening more widely, despite being among those who would be hardest hit if they contracted Covid-19, says UNISON.

That’s because support staff tend to be older, are disproportionately from the BAME community and come from more disadvantaged backgrounds than teachers, says UNISON. The government has not modelled the impact of an increase in pupil numbers on this group of staff.

Commenting on the findings, UNISON head of education Jon Richards said: “The survey sends out a strong message that ministers shouldn’t gamble with the safety of pupils, staff and the wider community by sending them back to school too early.

“It makes no sense for there to be such a push for schools to open more widely in England, while other parts of the UK are taking a much more considered approach.

“The government must commit to a safe and structured return. There’s little confidence in ministers’ plans, that’s clear to see. Staff, parents and schools aren’t ready to go back without reassurances that safety is the number one priority.

“Unions want to work with ministers to make schools as safe as possible, so that parents, their children and staff will want to return. But the rush to get some schools open to meet an arbitrary date isn’t at all helpful.”

Notes to editors:
Case study: A teaching assistant working with reception age children (five-year olds) and year 1 (six-year olds) said: “I haven’t seen my school’s risk assessment. I don’t feel schools are ready for pupils to come back. Plans haven’t been thought through properly. I’m sure with time they’ll find a way, but it’s happening too soon. There’s a broad one size fits all plan that doesn’t fit anybody. I wouldn’t want to wear a mask at school because it would be worrying and traumatic for the children. But as things stand, I wouldn’t be happy to go into work without one.”

– The survey was opened to support staff on 12 May and closed on 18 May 2020. There were 45,274 responses. The full survey report is available here.

– *Support staff includes: teaching assistants/learning support assistants, administrative and management staff, nursery nurses, technicians, behaviour management specialists, learning mentors, cleaners and family support advisors.

– UNISON is the UK’s largest union, with more than 1.3 million members providing public services – in education, local government, the NHS, police service and energy. They are employed in the public, private and voluntary sectors.

Media contacts:
Garfield Myrie M: 07778 158175 E: g.myrie@unison.co.uk
Anthony Barnes M: 07834 864794 E: a.barnes@unison.co.uk

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Thursday 21 May 2020

Scrapping of NHS surcharge for migrant health and care workers ‘long overdue’

Commenting on the announcement that NHS and care workers are to be exempt from paying the NHS surcharge, UNISON general secretary Dave Prentis said:

“This is long overdue. The pandemic has shown the enormous contribution of overseas workers to our health and care system. They’re putting their lives on the line every day to keep us safe.

“It’s a moral injustice to ask migrant staff to make double the contribution of others and pay extra for the very services they help provide.

“This must also apply to the workers’ families. And the government should go further by removing the charge for all migrant workers.”

Notes to editors:
– UNISON is the UK’s largest union, with more than 1.3 million members providing public services – in education, local government, the NHS, police forces and energy. They are employed in the public, voluntary and private sectors.

Media contacts:
Anthony Barnes M: 07834 864794 E: a.barnes@unison.co.uk
Garfield Myrie M: 07778 158175 E: g.myrie@unison.co.uk

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Funding must go to care workers in need, not employers’ bank accounts, says UNISON

The government must introduce measures to ensure employers don’t hold on to millions of pounds of taxpayers’ money intended for hard-up care workers, says UNISON today (Thursday).

The funding is part of a £600m social care package announced last week by the Prime Minister. Some of the money is aimed at providing financial help to care staff self-isolating with Covid-19 symptoms so they do not feel pressured into going into work. Its intention is also to top up the wages of those doing shifts at several care homes by encouraging them to reduce the number of workplaces they visit.

But UNISON believes checks are needed so care companies do not keep the money or use it to cover costs unrelated to the pandemic. Without any enforcement, there’s a danger the funding will never reach care staff in financial need, says UNISON.

UNISON has written to health and social care secretary Matt Hancock demanding guarantees that the money will be distributed properly.

In the letter, UNISON general secretary Dave Prentis warns of a “serious possibility” that the funding could end up in the accounts of employers. He says this includes those with “a long track record of behaving irresponsibly and unfairly towards their staff.”

The letter adds: “Many social care workers could lose out and be left with no means of redress.

“Some have been off work shielding vulnerable family members for many weeks now, either having to get by on statutory sick pay rates of just over £95 a week, or in some cases on no pay at all.”

UNISON is also calling for the government to clarify whether payments for care workers who have been off work will be backdated to the start of the crisis. This would ensure their family finances are not affected, says the union.

Notes to editors:
– The full letter can be found here.
– Of the £600m, £113m will go to devolved administrations using the Barnett formula, with the Scottish government receiving £58m, the Welsh government £35m and Northern Ireland £20m.
– UNISON is the UK’s largest union, with more than 1.3 million members providing public services – in education, local government, the NHS, police service and energy. They are employed in the public, voluntary and private sectors.
– UNISON has been campaigning to ensure care workers can self-isolate if they show symptoms of Covid-19 on full pay. Care workers are being forced to choose between their family’s survival and spreading the virus to the elderly, vulnerable people they care for. There is more about UNISON’s campaign to #StopTheSpread at www.unison.org.uk/stopthespread

Media contacts:
Anthony Barnes M: 07834 864794 E: a.barnes@unison.co.uk
Sophie Goodchild M: 07767 325595 E: s.goodchild@unison.co.uk

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Wednesday 20 May 2020

Exemptions would be welcome but health surcharge should be scrapped, says UNISON

Responding to Labour leader Keir Starmer’s proposal at Prime Minister’s questions today (Wednesday) that health and care staff should be exempted from the immigration health surcharge, UNISON assistant general secretary Christina McAnea said:

“Dealing with the pandemic has shown more than ever how NHS and care services rely on staff from overseas. It beggars belief that we’re making them pay extra to work here and keep us safe.

“Workers who come to the UK pay for the services they use through tax and national insurance. This fee should be scrapped completely but exempting health and care staff would be a good first step.”

Notes to editors:
– UNISON is the UK’s largest union, with more than 1.3 million members providing public services – in education, local government, the NHS, police service and energy. They are employed in both the public, voluntary and private sectors.

Media contacts:
Anthony Barnes M: 07834 864794 Ea.barnes@unison.co.uk

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Tuesday 19 May 2020

Blog: The inequality of the pandemic

By Christina McAnea, UNSION assistant general secretary

The evidence of COVID-19’s devastating impact on Black workers should shock us all. We don’t yet have the whole picture. Undoubtedly, the reasons are complex.  

But too many of the theories flying around imply Black communities are in some way responsible for the devastating toll on them. Lifestyle, family structure, eating habits, language barriers. The list goes on.

This victim–blaming absolves policy makers and employers of responsibility at exactly the time when we need urgent action to address the increased risk. We don’t want knee-jerk reactions.  

The answer is not to pull all Black staff away from COVID hotspots. We want exactly what we have been demanding since day one. Proper risk assessments for ALL staff, including a sensitive assessment of underlying health conditions that put staff at increased risk.  

We want every worker to have the correct protective equipment for their role, taking account of their individual needs and circumstances. We want equality impact assessment built into risk management. Individual risk assessments –yes – but these must be alongside checks for patterns of inequality across teams and departments. 

The focus is rightly on Black staff at the moment. But members of all equality groups are facing COVID challenges. And Black staff are not simply defined by race. They are also women, carers, LGBT+, young, older, disabled, all of which have an impact upon how they are surviving the pandemic.

Risk increases where workers are unable to speak out about safety concerns. We  know that workers facing racism and other forms of systemic discrimination are less likely to report concerns. They have less confidence they will be taken seriously, or that speaking out will improve anything. Indeed, many fear that raising concerns will simply make things worse. 

Risk also increases when vulnerable workers feel compelled to work when they are unwell or in unsafe conditions simply to feed their families or pay their rent.  And we know high numbers of Black, women and younger staff are in insecure work.

UNISON is putting equality at the heart of the agenda in our negotiations with employers and meetings with government. We have threaded it through all our advice to reps.  

We have submitted our members’ evidence on the unequal impact of COVID-19 to the Women and Equalities Select Committee and in our lobbying on the current Domestic Abuse and Immigration Bills.

This crisis sets in stark relief so many of our concerns. Job segregation, low pay, deep-seated and systemic discrimination. We demand urgent action now. 

But we also want to see a future that is different. We want to come out of this crisis with a better, more equal and more inclusive society. One with more respect for workers and proper investment in the public services that keep us all safe.

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UNISON demands extra government funding to save universities from crisis

Higher education member Bill Acharjee (above) works at Solent University in Southampton as a research governance officer, with the task of ensuring that students and academics maintain ethical standards while they conduct their research projects. He’s thoughtful, conscientious. And while working from home during the COVID-19 crisis, he has a very sobering thought.

“A world without universities would be tragic,” he says. “I just can’t comprehend it.”

But there’s a very real danger some may struggle to survive, Mr Acharjee feels, if the government continues to refuse to come to the aid of universities during the health crisis and its aftermath.

“I’ve read articles that suggest that due to the financial issues that lots of institutions are facing, we may see some universities going into administration. I think we just need some assurance from the government, for them to make a statement to say that they are committed to ensuring the best for the future of HE.”

UNISON and its HE members (see below) agree. Today the union launched its Don’t Fail our Future campaign, which is seeking urgent additional funding from the government that will enable universities to survive the devastating financial fallout of the pandemic.

Many HE institutions were already in a precarious position due to competition, rising costs and concern around the potential consequences of Brexit. They receive a substantial proportion of their funding based on student numbers – and are now likely to be massively short of both home and international students for this coming academic year, including those who decide that distance learning – potentially the only option – is not worth the fees.

And yet so far the government has refused to provide any new funds. The treasury has agreed some advance on student fees, but otherwise has instructed universities to take out loans.

Don’t Fail our Future highlights the value of higher education to the country – for staff, students, public services and the economy.

Ruth Levin, UNISON’s senior national officer for higher education, said: “Universities are one of the UK’s biggest success stories, providing a world-class education and high quality research. Their workforce of nearly half a million people includes the skilled and dedicated support staff UNISON is proud to represent.

“Our members are the backbone of these institutions: cleaning campuses, fixing IT, running labs, preparing food, supporting students’ wellbeing and so much more. UNISON is campaigning for urgent funding to ensure high quality, accessible higher education is maintained and our members’ jobs are protected.”

Mr Acharjee, who’s the Black members officer for Southampton District branch, has been with Solent University for 12 years, the past four as the research governance officer. The role involves him working with a panel of academics to ensure that research projects adhere to industry standards and regulations regarding their ethical approach.

Up to 3,000 ethics application forms come his way each academic year, raising such diverse issues as whether a survey of people’s responses to horror films risks respondents feeling overly scared or vulnerable, pensioners being quizzed about their wartime experiences don’t become distressed, and that a student researching online terrorism keeps his or her data secure.

“If I wasn’t in post, potentially you would have academics allowing their students to run wild. We have to safeguard our students – that comes first – as well as any participants they engage with.” He laughs. “And without my role, to advise and guide staff as well as students, there could be anarchy.”

I’m still one of the lucky ones at the moment who has a job

Reflecting on the plight that his sector currently finds itself, Mr Acharjee says: “The value of HE is huge, in terms of helping to instil those higher level skills in students that are required in an ever-changing employment landscape.

“And I believe that individuals who engage with university courses have a better understanding of the world. You think the world is black and white, then you go to university and you see the other shades.”

He sees another value in ‘widening participation’ universities such as his own, whose students are traditionally from working-class families – often the first in their families to take degrees. “That’s so important, because it helps those students to enhance their social capital and compete against students from more privileged backgrounds. If you take that opportunity away from them, it could be devastating.”

And so he believes that the need for a bail-out is essential.

“Over the last few years we’ve been haemorrhaging good, talented professionals. People are being made redundant or leaving because of the stress caused by the shortage of funds. We’re all expected to do much more for less.

“I’m still one of the lucky ones at the moment who has a job, but I’m aware there are of lots of colleagues throughout the country – really good, highly qualified staff of great experience, who are sadly losing their jobs. And the pandemic is not going to help at all.”

Marina Granados, cleaning supervisor for a private contractor, University of Arts London

“My job is to supervise the cleanliness of the university every morning, to ensure that everything is clean by 8 am. In this way I contribute so that the office staff, teachers and students can work and study in a clean space with good hygiene.

“I think that cleanliness inspires neatness and imparts respect. It also creates a good image of the site. Besides, with good hygiene many diseases are prevented. Cleaning staff are indispensable. If nobody covered my work it would be a disaster for everyone in the university, because it is impossible to work in a dirty place.”

Tom Riley (above), central student services, Leeds University

“I work in the central student services of a large university in the north of England. Universities are large complex organisations, and it is my job to put students in contact with those who can help them with issues they are facing.

“A typical day will have queries about lost student ID cards, exam support, accommodation, visas, and accessing financial support.

“In early 2020, we were one of the first services to become aware of the impact of coronavirus, as many students from China were unable to make fee payments and came to us for advice. Speaking about their situation, and their fears for their families, was an ominous sign of things to come.

“Without support staff, these pastoral and administrative responsibilities would fall on academic staff. This would impede their ability to teach the next generation of graduates. It would also impact the research going on in the UK, as our support allows academics to study climate change, effective business management and, of course, clinical research about coronavirus.”

Antonia Berelson, registered nurse, University of Brighton

“I am employed by the university to work as a practice nurse within their Eastbourne campus. The university has a partnership with a local GP surgery that means that all students who attend the university can register there.

“I work in the sister surgery that is set up within the student services building, running daily term-time clinics and supporting the GPs when they come to run their clinics there.

“I am available to the students either via appointment or drop in during term time. I run a catch-up clinic for students who may have incomplete vaccination status, which is vital as the student population are more at risk of Meningitis. I can also provide sexual health and contraception advice, liaising with the local sexual health team so I can give out condoms and offer chlamydia testing. I triage minor illnesses, referring them on to the GP as appropriate, or in some cases straight to hospital. I also find a large percentage of my appointments are mental health related, and support and refer as needed. I’m able to run health promotion events within the university, working with local services within the community.”

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Care home deaths expose social care system ‘unfit for purpose’, says UNISON

Responding to figures published today (Tuesday) by the Office for National Statistics showing UK care home deaths linked to coronavirus have now exceeded 10,000, UNISON assistant general secretary Christina McAnea said:

“This is a shocking price paid by elderly and vulnerable people whose families believed they were being kept safe.

“These deaths show the government’s failure to support those in society who are most in need of care.

“Staff looking after these residents have effectively been abandoned too. They’ve struggled with protective equipment shortages, testing delays and inadequate guidance on how to keep themselves safe.

“The Covid-19 crisis has exposed a social care system that’s unfit for purpose. A complete overhaul is needed once the pandemic passes to ensure no one is left unprotected again.”

Notes to editors:
-The union has launched a petition demanding the government step up and deliver on its promises around PPE and do much more to protect care staff and elderly people.
– UNISON is the UK’s largest union, with more than 1.3 million members providing public services – in education, local government, the NHS, police service and energy. They are employed in the public, voluntary and private sectors.

Media contacts:
Sophie Goodchild M: 07767 325595 E: s.goodchild@unison.co.uk
Liz Chinchen M: 07778 158175 E: l.chinchen@unison.co.uk

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Monday 18 May 2020

Government’s treatment of migrant workers is shameful

Commenting on the second reading of the Immigration and Social Security Co-ordination (EU Withdrawal) Bill, UNISON assistant general secretary Christina McAnea today (Monday) said:

“Pushing ahead with the Immigration Bill is a triumph of bloody-mindedness over common sense.

“Migrant workers are in the frontline of the fight against Covid-19 in care homes, propping up a neglected system that would collapse without them.

“Hundreds of thousands of care jobs are unfilled, yet the government is intent on cutting off a source of skilled workers just when the UK needs them the most.

“The pandemic has taught us that low pay doesn’t mean low-skilled. Out of touch ministers measuring value only in pounds and pence – and decreeing that those earning less than £25,600 can’t contribute – clearly have never been to a care home.

“Migrant workers have proved themselves vital to the country time and time again. To slam the door in their faces now is shameful.”

Notes to editors:
– UNISON is the UK’s largest union, with more than 1.3 million members providing public services – in education, local government, the NHS, police forces and energy. They are employed in the public, voluntary and private sectors.

Media contacts:
Garfield Myrie M: 07778 158175 E: g.myrie@unison.co.uk
Anthony Barnes M: 07834 864794 E: a.barnes@unison.co.uk

The article Government’s treatment of migrant workers is shameful first appeared on the UNISON National site.



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Low-paid hospital staff to get a pay rise

Thousands of low–paid health workers employed by private company Medirest are to get a pay rise, says UNISON today (Friday).

The 2,200 staff, who provide cleaning, portering and catering services in NHS hospitals across England, will see their pay increase by an average of 5 per cent from the beginning of next month. 

Hourly rates for the lowest paid workers will rise from around £8.75 to £9.21 an hour, bringing their pay in line with NHS staff doing similar jobs.

UNISON assistant general secretary Christina McAnea said: “These workers, who are among the lowest paid in hospitals, have earned this increase. 

“It’s right and proper their dedication and commitment be recognised and rewarded.  

“We’re pleased Medirest values their work and have done the right thing by making sure they earn the same as NHS staff.”

Notes to editors: 
– UNISON is the UK’s largest union, with more than 1.3 million members providing public services – in education, local government, the NHS, police service and energy. They are employed in the public, voluntary and private sectors.

Media contacts: 
Garfield Myrie M: 07778 158175 E: g.myrie@unison.co.uk
Liz Chinchen M: 07778 158175 E: press@unison.co.uk

The article Low-paid hospital staff to get a pay rise first appeared on the UNISON National site.



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