The Scotsman

Unions sound alarm over leaked

- By PARIS GOURTSOYAN­NIS Westminste­r Correspond­ent paris.gourtsoyan­nis@scotsman.com

Unions have reacted with anger to leaked UK government guidance on reopening the economy, warning that the health of workers is being put at risk.

Draft documents covering seven areas of the economy suggest sweeping changes to the way businesses work, but union leaders claimed the measures would be largely voluntary and offered no guarantees that employees’ health would be protected.

Under proposals included in the documents, which cover settings like work in vehicles, hotels, warehouses and outdoors, builders and shop workers will be encouraged to communicat­e by radio rather than in person, while office workers will be barred from hot-desking or sharing equipment – covering everything from computers to pens.

Staff should work side by side or facing away from each other, the guidance states, while those who have to work close together should be paired to limit the number of contacts.

The guidance has been sent to unions and business leaders for consultati­on but must be finalised in the next few days, with a government review of the lockdown due on Thursday. Ministers say they want to “come to a shared view” about how best to protect workers.

Boris Johnson is expected to make an announceme­nt on Sunday setting out the next steps to get the UK economy moving while preserving large parts of the social distancing regime.

Union leaders said they had “urgent concerns” about the back-to-work plans, with the TUC saying the guidance places no new requiremen­ts on employers to keep workers safe.

The organisati­on said there is no commitment from ministers to increase enforcemen­t to stop companies flouting the law and putting staff in danger.

The guidance repeatedly suggests that “employers should consider” actions enabling social distancing or providing handwashin­g facilities, but also suggests individual employers can decide to ignore the suggestion­s, said the TUC.

Unions also raised the alarm over the lack of any recommenda­tions on businesses supplying staff with personal protective equipment (PPE).

Tucgeneral­secretaryf­rances O’grady said: “Throughout this crisis the TUC has sought to engage constructi­vely with ministers. But we cannot support the government’s back-towork plans as they stand.

“We want new binding rules for employers to publish their risk assessment and action plan. We want clear guidance to set out the minimum standards that employers must meet in order to protect public safety. And we want ministers to outline a new tough approach to enforcemen­t.

“Unless the government significan­tly strengthen­s its plans, safe working will not be guaranteed.

“The current proposals fail to provide clear direction to those employers who want to act responsibl­y. And they are an open goal for rogue employers, who will cut corners and put their workers – and the wider community – at risk.”

Prospect union general secretary Mike Clancy said: “If the economy is to recover sustainabl­y and safely then a return to work needs to be managed properly.

“The government must provide absolute clarity on how workplaces can operate safely, and it must set out the evidence for its advice.

“We all want to get back to work, but there is no point in easing the lockdown if the guidelines put people at risk, potentiall­y causing a spike in cases and another full-scale lockdown.”

John Phillips, acting general secretary of the GMB Union, said: “Nobody is keener than GMB to get people back to work – but this guidance was thrown together in a hurry and it shows. Giving unions and employers just 12 hours to respond is not good enough and means crucial changes will not be made. We cannot endorse crucial guidance if it is incomplete.”

Labour’s shadow employment rights minister Andy Mcdonald said: “Taking the necessary steps to protect employees is not a matter of expectatio­n or guidance, it is the law.”

It comes as Tory MPS put pressure on the government to ease the lockdown to protect personal liberty and the economy.

Leading backbenche­r Steve Baker branded social distancing measures “absurd, dystopian and tyrannical”. And during a Commons debate on the government’s Covid-19 regulation­s, Tory MP Marcus Fysh argued against the idea that “health trumps liberty”.

Speaking out against plans for a contact-tracing app, Mr Fysh said: “We’re not a people who take well to surveillan­ce and it’s a little ironic that the country that has probably been surveillin­g its population more than any other appears to have been the source of this virus” – a reference to China.

Former Tory cabinet minister Sir John Redwood said it can be easy for MPS with a “guaranteed high salary” to dismiss economic concerns.

And Sir Charles Walker warned that “if hundreds of thousands of those businesses go under, or a million or more, we will unleash a tidal wave of human misery.”

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