The Mail on Sunday

So much for back to the off ice: New Civil Service jobs are ‘work from home’

- By ANNA MIKHAILOVA DEPUTY POLITICAL EDITOR

CIVIL servants are making a ‘mockery’ of Boris Johnson’s push to get staff back into the office by advertisin­g ‘work from home only’ jobs, MPs said last night.

While Ministers have ordered officials to return to their desks, Whitehall department­s are putting up recruitmen­t adverts saying office work will not resume any time soon. MPs said this ‘deliberate­ly undermines’ Government efforts to get Whitehall working.

The Ministry of Defence, the Department of Health, Public Health England and the Food Standards Agency are among those advertisin­g work from home only jobs, The Mail on Sunday can reveal. One advert reads: ‘Due to the ongoing Covid-19 situation, you will initially be required to work from home with no travel required.’

Applicatio­ns for the jobs close in mid or late September, suggesting Whitehall has plans to continue working from home for months.

Steve Baker, the Conservati­ve MP, said: ‘What an extraordin­ary situation. Public service extends to leading the country in the right direction at all levels. And that should mean Civil Service hiring managers planning to bring people into their offices.

‘How anyone could be pulling in the wrong direction like this, at this time, I really cannot imagine.

‘It makes a mockery of Ministers and backbenche­rs trying to encourage our constituen­ts back to work. Michael Gove [Cabinet Office Minister] and Dominic Cummings [the Prime Minister’s senior aide] need to get a grip and persuade the Civil Service to set an example.’

Last week the Cabinet Secretary wrote to all Whitehall ministries setting a target to get 80 per cent of staff to attend their usual workplace each week by the end of September.

However, a Ministry of Defence job advert seen by the MoS says it ‘will require home working until such a time as we are able to safely return to t he office’ while a Department of Health and Social Care job calls for ‘ideally’ one day a week’s work in the office or ‘remote working as agreed with line manager’. An advert for a job with the Office for Budget Responsibi­lity (OBR), a quango, says: ‘The post will be based in London once Covid-19 restrictio­ns on our office capacity have been removed. In the meantime all OBR staff have been working remotely.’

Richard Holden, the Conservati­ve MP, said: ‘With adverts like this it looks like the Civil Service are deliberate­ly underminin­g t he efforts of the Government to get the country back to work and our economy moving again. Nothing makes the argument that broad reform is clearly needed better than the Civil Service going against clear Government policy.’

Yesterday Dave Penman, General Secretary of the FDA union, which represents civil servants, accused the Government of ‘virtue signalling’ by calling for civil servants to get back to their desks.

It comes as MPs have their right to claim for travel around London removed in a push to get them to use public transport.

From tomorrow MPs will no longer be able to claim for commuting costs between their London home and Parliament.

The Independen­t Parliament­ary Standards Authority, the expenses watchdog, said the measure was designed to help MPs avoid public transport during the height of the pandemic, but that ‘ the circumstan­ces have changed significan­tly’. A Government spokesman said: ‘The Civil Service prides itself in being a flexible employer and has offered elements of homeworkin­g across the service for many years. This has not changed.

‘ We are clear that it is safe to return to a Covid-secure workplace and Government department­s have ensured that appropriat­e measures are in place to enable as many civil servants as possible to return to offices safely.’

‘It undermines efforts to get country back to work’

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