The Guardian Australia

Ikea cuts sick pay for unvaccinat­ed UK staff who are self-isolating

- Jasper Jolly

Furniture retailer Ikea has cut sick pay for unvaccinat­ed UK staff who are forced to self-isolate because of close contact with someone with Covid-19, it has emerged.

Unvaccinat­ed workers at Ikea are only eligible for statutory sick pay of £96.35 a week during 10 days of isolation, compared with weekly pay of more than £400 before tax for an average worker on the shop floor.

However, managers at the retailer, which employs 10,000 staff in the UK, will consider mitigating circumstan­ces.

Some employers have experiment­ed with incentives for workers to get vaccinated, including free time off during work hours, but Ikea and utility company Wessex Water, have joined supermarke­t Morrisons in imposing a financial cost on those without an exemption who decline to be vaccinated.

People in England who are fully vaccinated – with at least two doses of most of the approved vaccines – are not required to self-isolate if they have been in close contact with someone infected with Covid-19. However, unvaccinat­ed people contacted through the government’s test-andtrace system must still self-isolate by law. Other nations of the UK have set similar rules.

Ikea’s policy was first introduced in September, while Wessex Water will implement the cut on Monday. The Mail on Sunday first reported the policies.

Wessex Water, which serves 2.8 million customers in the South West of England, has taken action after enduring record Covid-19-related absences during the past week. Workers self-isolating because they are infected with Covid-19 will still be paid their full wage.

An Ikea spokespers­on said: “We appreciate that this is an emotive topic and all circumstan­ces will be considered on a case-by-case basis. Therefore, anyone in doubt or concerned about their situation is encouraged to speak to their manager.”

A Wessex Water spokespers­on said: “The vast majority of our workforce has been vaccinated and it’s important as a company providing essential services with key-worker employees [that] the remainder get vaccinated to protect themselves, customers and their colleagues. To make it easy for our staff, vaccine appointmen­ts can be booked in work time.

“Absences due to Covid have doubled in the last week, so we need everyone to be available so we can continue to provide uninterrup­ted essential water and sewerage services.”

Wessex Water said that throughout the pandemic it had not furloughed staff, and anyone who had to self-isolate after contractin­g Covid received full pay.

In some countries, including the US, companies have insisted that staff receive coronaviru­s vaccines or else pay monthly fees, in the case of Delta Air Lines, or even lose their jobs at employers such as United Airlines, tech company Google and Citigroup, one of the world’s largest banks. French president Emmanuel Macron has also pledged to “piss off” unvaccinat­ed people (who are not exempt) by making daily life slightly more difficult for them.

Employment experts have suggested that “no jab, no job” policies would be difficult for companies in the UK to enforce because of stronger worker protection­s and rules against discrimina­tion. However, UK care workers have been obliged to be vaccinated since November.

 ?? Photograph: Dave Rushen/SOPA Images/Rex/Shuttersto­ck ?? A social distancing sign at the Scandinavi­an chain's store in Greenwich, London.
Photograph: Dave Rushen/SOPA Images/Rex/Shuttersto­ck A social distancing sign at the Scandinavi­an chain's store in Greenwich, London.

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