South China Morning Post

ISOLATION CENTRE CLOSURES TO LEAVE 6,000 OUT OF WORK

Legislator­s urge authoritie­s to protect jobs and avoid ‘largest one-day redundancy’ in city’s history

- Fiona Sun and Nadia Lam

More than 6,000 workers at six makeshift community isolation facilities are set to become jobless as authoritie­s plan to suspend operations at the centres as early as next Thursday in response to the easing Covid-19 outbreak, lawmakers have revealed.

The legislator­s yesterday also called on the government to avoid the “largest one-day redundancy” in the city’s history by protecting the jobs of the workers by using the facilities to house cross-border truck drivers and arriving domestic helpers.

“It would be the largest number of employees being fired on a single day in Hong Kong’s history and would further push up the city’s unemployme­nt rate,” labour sector lawmaker Dennis Leung Tsz-wing said.

Leung said he had learned the Department of Health planned to wind down operations at the six community isolation facilities at Fanling, San Tin, Tam Mei, Hung Shui Kiu, the Hong KongZhuhai-Macau Bridge and Tsing Yi as early as next Thursday.

He added that the sites could be relaunched if a sixth wave of the virus emerged.

The government had hired about 5,400 temporary cleaners and security guards to help at these facilities under contracts with a terminatio­n notice period of seven days, Leung said.

The Security Bureau also hired about 1,000 people, including retirees from the discipline­d services and employees deployed from other units, to provide logistical and telephone hotline services, he said.

The bureau already told about 100 people yesterday that their jobs would be terminated, the lawmaker noted, saying he believed more employees would receive notices in the next few days. Leung said although staff knew their jobs were temporary when they were hired, they only began working in March and had expected to remain employed until at least June or July.

With not enough vacancies in the job market to meet the demand created by such a large number of simultaneo­us redundanci­es, he said many temporary workers now felt hopeless.

“Some had already experience­d being jobless twice or even three times during the pandemic. They are really frustrated about the future,” the legislator said.

A 32-year-old cleaner, who only gave her surname as Li, started working at the facility in Tam Mei on March 24 for HK$22,000 a month. The former clerk applied for the position after losing her job in early March.

She said despite the infection risks, the job had helped her survive and she was initially told by the person who interviewe­d her that she could work there until September.

Though she learned earlier that the centre would be shut down on May 12, she said she was told yesterday that she could continue working there until the end of this month.

“I never expected to work for such a short amount of time and become jobless again. This arrangemen­t is chaotic. Although it is a temporary job, it should not end this suddenly,” she said.

Li urged the government to give workers at least until the end of June to find new positions, as she believed the job market would improve by then. She also called on authoritie­s to create more government jobs for the unemployed. Leung called on authoritie­s to save the workers’ jobs by using the community isolation facilities as part of a closed-loop arrangemen­t to house 1,000 to 2,000 cross-border truck drivers. He also said domestic helpers could quarantine at the centres on arrival in the city.

“So we cannot only help cross-border drivers, as well as foreign domestic helpers, but also retain the jobs of the cleaners and security guards,” he said.

Lawmaker Kingsley Wong Kwok, who also serves as chairman of the Hong Kong Federation of Trade Unions, said jobs at the facilities had served as a “lifebuoy” for unemployed people during the pandemic.

The federation chairman urged authoritie­s to provide such workers with a transition­al period by retaining them until late May.

“We hope the authoritie­s can postpone the closure or cease operations gradually as the [second stage of] social-distancing measures were just relaxed,” he told a radio programme.

“When the economic situation has got better following the easing of social-distancing measures … it could bring the unemployed back to the [travelling, catering and retail] industries,” he said, calling it a “better approach”.

He also advised the government to explore whether similar job positions were available for the affected workers.

In response, the Security Bureau said considerin­g the latest pandemic situation, the government would only use one of the community isolation centres for cost efficiency, while putting the other facilities on standby in case a sixth wave emerged.

According to a government source, authoritie­s would continue using the facility in Penny’s Bay, while the other six, which provide a total of 5,000 units, would be on standby.

The source said the cleaners and security guards were hired by the Department of Health through property management firm China Overseas Property Holdings, while the bureau employed 1,600 temporary workers from the tourism and fitness industries to help with the daily operation and management of the facilities.

He added that their contract would end between the middle and end of May but the bureau would renew it for 600 staff and let them continue working, including those employed in the facilities on standby.

A department spokesman said the number of workers at the community isolation facilities depended on the city’s pandemic situation, the government’s latest anti-epidemic measures and the occupancy rate at the centres.

He said the department would communicat­e with the service contractor to ensure there was enough staff at the facilities.

 ?? Photo: Felix Wong ?? This Fanling site is one of six makeshift community isolation facilities set to halt operations as the fifth wave subsides.
Photo: Felix Wong This Fanling site is one of six makeshift community isolation facilities set to halt operations as the fifth wave subsides.

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