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Coronavirus: At-home civil servants 'showing Blitz spirit' | |
(32 minutes later) | |
Civil servants have demonstrated a "Blitz spirit" by keeping keeping public services going while working from home, a union leader has argued. | |
Dave Penman, of the First Division Association, said they had "never worked so hard". | Dave Penman, of the First Division Association, said they had "never worked so hard". |
His remarks follow a Daily Mail report suggesting fewer civil servants have turned up at Whitehall since official guidelines changed at the weekend. | His remarks follow a Daily Mail report suggesting fewer civil servants have turned up at Whitehall since official guidelines changed at the weekend. |
The government said it wanted to end a "default" towards working from home. | The government said it wanted to end a "default" towards working from home. |
Until 1 August, the guidance for England was that every employee in the public and private sectors able to work from home should do so. | Until 1 August, the guidance for England was that every employee in the public and private sectors able to work from home should do so. |
Since then the government has left it to employers to decide whether they need more people on the premises, safety permitting. | |
In July, the Home Office revealed that the passport application backlog was 400,000, blaming reduced staffing to allow for social distancing among staff. | |
The government has not provided specific return-to-office advice for civil servants separate to that for businesses and other organisations. | The government has not provided specific return-to-office advice for civil servants separate to that for businesses and other organisations. |
Mr Penman, whose union represents civil service managers, told the BBC that staff in Whitehall and elsewhere had been "performing incredibly effectively during this pandemic". | |
He added: "Designing and implementing the furlough scheme and processing a six-fold increase in Universal Credit claims - all while transforming into a home-based organisation overnight - is a perfect example of the Blitz spirit." | |
Mr Penman also said people were able to work "effectively" from home, adding: "Their job is to provide vital public services, not provide customers to sandwich shops." | |
Last month, the Financial Times reported that every Whitehall department - like private-sector employers - had been told to do its own Covid-19 risk assessment. | |
Most found they could return to 25% to 30% occupancy "without a threat to the health of staff", it added. | |
But Mark Serwotka, general secretary of the Public and Commercial Services Union, the UK's largest civil service union, accused ministers of "playing fast and loose with workers' safety". | |
He said: "No one should be returning to a workplace until it has been made safe to do so. Current scientific advice is that people should work from home where they can." | He said: "No one should be returning to a workplace until it has been made safe to do so. Current scientific advice is that people should work from home where they can." |
Mr Serwotka warned the change in return-to-work policy was "risking industrial unrest". | Mr Serwotka warned the change in return-to-work policy was "risking industrial unrest". |
A government spokesman said: "Civil servants have worked throughout the pandemic and have made significant, valuable contributions towards the national effort. | |
"We are consulting closely with employees on ending the default that civil servants should work from home and have ensured workplaces are Covid-secure so civil servants can return safely." | "We are consulting closely with employees on ending the default that civil servants should work from home and have ensured workplaces are Covid-secure so civil servants can return safely." |
Figures from the investment banking company Morgan Stanley suggest 34% of UK office workers are operating in their normal workplace. | |
This is less than half the proportion in France (83%), Italy (76%), Spain (73%) and Germany (70%), its survey of more than 4,000 people found. |
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