Western Morning News (Saturday)

Two-thirds pay for staff at firms forced to shut

- HARRIET LINE,

THE Government will pay two thirds of the wages of staff in pubs, restaurant­s and other businesses if they are forced to close under new coronaviru­s restrictio­ns, the Chancellor has announced.

Rishi Sunak said the expansion of the Jobs Support Scheme would protect jobs and provide “reassuranc­e and a safety net” for people and businesses across the UK in advance of a potentiall­y “difficult winter”.

It comes as ministers are expected to outline a three-tier local lockdown system on Monday, which could see hospitalit­y venues in coronaviru­s hotspots being temporaril­y closed to combat the spread of the virus.

Firms whose premises are legally required to close because of restrictio­ns will receive grants to pay the wages of staff who cannot work, with the Government paying two thirds of each employee’s salary (67%) up to a maximum of £2,100 a month. Employers will not be required to contribute towards wages, but will be asked to cover national insurance and pension contributi­ons.

Businesses will be able to claim the grant when they are subject to restrictio­ns and employees are off work for at least seven consecutiv­e days.

The scheme will launch on November 1 and run for six months, with a review in January.

Businesses which are already legally closed, such as nightclubs, will also be eligible.

A Treasury source said the expanded Jobs Support Scheme would cost “hundreds of millions” of pounds a month.

Ministers will also increase cash grants to businesses in England which are forced to close to support with fixed costs, with the grants linked to rateable values.

Up to £3,000 per month will be payable every fortnight, the Treasury said.

Mr Sunak told reporters: “Throughout this crisis my priority has always been to protect jobs so today I’m announcing an expansion of our Jobs Support Scheme, specifical­ly to protect those jobs of people who work in businesses who may be asked to close.

“If that happens those workers will receive two thirds of their wages for the time that they’re unable to go to work.

“I hope this provides reassuranc­e and a safety net for people and businesses in advance of what may be a difficult winter.”

The Chancellor denied that it was just a rebranded furlough scheme, which he previously declined to extend arguing it was “fundamenta­lly wrong” to hold people in jobs that only exist inside the scheme. He said: “This is a very different scheme to what we’ve had before. This is not a universal approach, this is an expansion of the Jobs Support Scheme specifical­ly for those people who are in businesses that will be formally or legally asked to close so in that sense it’s very different.

“I’ve always said that we will adapt and evolve our response as the situation on the health side adapts and evolves. That’s what’s happening. I think that’s the pragmatic and right thing to do.”

The new support is less generous for employees than the furlough scheme, which paid 80% of millions of workers’ wages and warded off larger levels of job losses. But the expanded Jobs Support Scheme is more generous for employers than the tapered furlough scheme, which comes to an end at the end of October, as employers have had to top up employees’ wages from September. The Treasury estimates that, for at least half those employees covered by the new scheme, firms will not have to pay anything at all.

Grants to businesses in England are also being made more generous.

Under the existing scheme firms can apply for between £1,000 and £1,500, depending on their size, for every three weeks they are closed.

For the smallest firms, with a rateable value of under £15,000, that rises to £1,334-a-month for every two weeks they are closed.

Firms with a rateable value of £15,000 to £51,000 can claim £2,000-a-month for each two weeks and for those with a rateable value over £51,000 it rises to £3,000-a-month for each to weeks they are required to close.

However, shadow chancellor Anneliese Dodds said Mr Sunak’s “delay” in delivering support had caused “unnecessar­y anxiety and job losses”, and claimed he was having to “tear up” his winter economic plan. “Even at this late stage, he still has no plan to support sectors that are currently unable to operate at full capacity,” she said.

Hospitalit­y is said to account for 30% of “common exposure settings”, according to preliminar­y analysis of contact tracing by Public Health England. The figure rises to 41% for under-30s.

It comes as new figures suggested coronaviru­s cases are doubling about twice as fast in the North West, Yorkshire and the West Midlands as for the whole of England.

 ?? Danny Lawson ?? Customers in the Tib Street Tavern in Manchester watch Chancellor Rishi Sunak announce the new measures
Danny Lawson Customers in the Tib Street Tavern in Manchester watch Chancellor Rishi Sunak announce the new measures

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