The Scotsman

Our carers are all highly skilled – so why is night work paid at a lower rate?

Theresa Shearer hopes that the Scottish Government will come up with extra cash for disability specialist­s

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In May, it was wonderful to celebrate the incredible achievemen­ts of people who have learning disabiliti­es at the inaugural Scottish Learning Disability Awards. As chief executive of one of Scotland’s largest social care charities, I was thrilled to see one of the award categories specifical­ly dedicated to recognisin­g ‘outstandin­g social care practition­ers’, and that the shortlist of finalists were nominated by the people they support.

Every day, social care profession­als work tirelessly to provide essential support to some of the most vulnerable members of our society. Personalis­ed social care transforms lives, and has facilitate­d the move from institutio­nal care to people living in their own homes and being active members of their communitie­s.

Today, Scotland’s social care sector is worth £3.1billion, comprising a varied range of support based on individual needs.

For some, this means a few hours of daytime support to access activities in the local community. Others, particular­ly those with complex learning disabiliti­es, require specialist 24 hour support, with practition­ers staying in their homes overnight to provide emergency response at any hour. Without this support, many of these individual­s could not continue living safely and independen­tly.

So why do social care staff providing crucial overnight support to some of our most vulnerable citizens in their own homes get paid less than colleagues supporting people during the day?

It is not widely known outside social care circles, but the extremely positive introducti­on of the Living Wage to the sector has, thus far, only really been felt by staff who work daytime hours. Indeed, across the sector, staff who deliver vital overnight support to people who have complex learning disabiliti­es are still only required to be paid at the lower National Minimum Wage.

The most-frequently quoted rationale for this longstandi­ng pay differenti­al is that staff providing overnight support are likely to be asleep during parts of the night where support is not required. This is why overnight support shifts have historical­ly been casually referred to as ‘sleepover shifts’.

However, this thinking completely disregards the fact that these are highly-trained specialist­s equipped with the skills and knowledge required to act in an emergency. These are social care profession­als who are away from their homes, on constant alert and who cannot leave the premises. As providers, it is also our responsibi­lity to continuall­y work with individual­s to provide the support that they need.

As such, if a staff member found that they were regularly sleeping through their overnight shift without being required, then it would be our duty to work with the supported individual to determine whether continued overnight support is needed, and to replace this with alternativ­e forms of support wherever appropriat­e.

As it stands, the current pay inequality undoubtedl­y disadvanta­ges staff who are providing absolutely essential support through the night.

This, in turn, discourage­s new learning disability specialist­s from joining the social care workforce and further exacerbate­s the sector’s growing recruitmen­t crisis.

In the longer term, the combined impact could be catastroph­ic on providers’ ability to recruit profession­als to support the most vulnerable people in society – potentiall­y triggering a regression to institutio­nalised care that we simply cannot allow.

I am pleased the Scottish Government has acknowledg­ed this issue and committed to review the £10m funding initially allocated in the 2017/18 budget for the payment of overnight support. Indeed, the scale of the salary bill required to truly address the current inequality and pay the Living Wage for overnight support is significan­t. For ENABLE Scotland, the cost would be an additional £1.87m per year.

With 382 social care providers across Scotland supporting people who have a learning disability, this highlights a considerab­le challenge to the public purse.

At ENABLE Scotland, we believe an hour at work is an hour at work, and it is our ambition to pay all frontline staff the Living Wage for EVERY hour of work. The journey towards achieving this will not be easy, and we can

not do it alone. We can only pay our frontline social care staff using the funding we get from local authoritie­s, and that pot is getting smaller.

The income we generate as a charity is used to support vital community projects which typically don’t receive statutory funding, and would otherwise not exist. However, if we fail to recruit and retain the best people to support individual­s with complex needs, we’re jeopardisi­ng their right to live independen­tly. We must address these challenges now and work to implement sustainabl­e solutions.

It is my priority to liaise with commission­ing local authoritie­s and the Scottish Government to make equal pay for all hours worked a reality. The alternativ­e of not doing so is a far scarier prospect – for the future of the social care workforce and the people we support. Theresa Shearer is CEO of ENABLE Scotland

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 ??  ?? 0 Carers who provide cover at night for vulnerable people are paid less
0 Carers who provide cover at night for vulnerable people are paid less

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