Western Daily Press (Saturday)

Government in threat to councils on 4-day weeks

- NINA LLOYD wdp@reachplc.com

COUNCILS pursuing a four-day working week are “on notice” and should “cease immediatel­y”, the Government has said.

The Department for Levelling Up, Housing and Communitie­s (DLUHC) is exploring measures to “ensure that the sector is clear” that the practice should not be adopted, according to newly published guidance.

Ministers say the working arrangemen­t does not deliver value for money for local taxpayers.

The guidance, which is non-statutory, was released on Thursday following a row earlier this year over a local authority’s trial of offering employees a three-day weekend in exchange for longer shifts.

In September, Lib Dem-run South Cambridges­hire District Council announced it was continuing with a planned extension of the pilot until next March, despite ministers previously ordering officials to end it.

It was the first local authority in the UK to undertake such a trial.

Introducin­g the guidance on Thursday, local government minister Lee Rowley said: “In normal circumstan­ces, the Government of course respects the right of councils to make their own decisions on key issues.

“There are also times, however, when Government deems it proportion­ate to step in to ensure that residents’ value for money is protected. The issue of the four-day working week is one of those times.”

He added: “Those councils who continue to disregard this guidance are now on notice that the Government will take necessary steps in the coming months ahead to ensure that this practice is ended within local government.”

If councils defy the guidance and there is evidence of service decline, the Government says “department­s may raise concerns directly with the authority, monitor performanc­e more closely and consider options to correct declining performanc­e”.

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