Unions warn of ‘winter of chaos’ without urgent
action to curb Covid
Joint statement calls for mandatory mask-wearing and
attacks government’s ‘laissez-faire approach’
Heather
Stewart Political editor
Fri 22 Oct
2021 19.00 BST
Trade union
leaders representing 3 million frontline workers have warned that the
government risks “another winter of chaos” if urgent action is not taken to
curb the spread of Covid, including mandatory mask-wearing in shops and on
public transport.
In a joint
statement, unions including Usdaw, Unison, Unite, the GMB and Aslef attacked
the government’s “laissez-faire approach to managing the pandemic” after the
prime minister insisted it was not yet time to impose fresh restrictions.
“We all
want to beat Covid once for all and to avoid further lockdowns. But without
decisive action now, we risk sleepwalking into another winter of chaos,” the
union leaders said, in a joint statement also signed by the TUC general
secretary, Frances O’Grady.
The
intervention from the unions came as:
Sage said
moving early to tackle rising Covid infections could help avoid harsher measures
later on.
Regional
health chiefs broke with government policy to ask the public to wear masks and
work from home.
Official
figures showed that one in 55 people in England had Covid-19 in the week ending
16 October, a level last seen in mid-January.
The unions’
members work in retail, transport, healthcare and other sectors where working
from home is all but impossible.
“With
hundreds of Covid outbreaks at workplaces being reported to health authorities
each week, events feel ominously reminiscent of last winter,” they said. “The
government must act now to reduce the spread of Covid. Failure to do so will
risk public health, frontline services and the economy.”
Their plea
chimed with warnings in documents released by the Sage committee of experts,
published on Friday, that early intervention is more effective than delayed
action, as cases rise – though they stopped short of calling for immediate
action.
“In the
event of increasing case rates, earlier intervention would reduce the need for
more stringent, disruptive and longer-lasting measures,” minutes of a Sage
meeting held on 14 October record.
That echoed
previous comments from the government’s chief scientific adviser, Sir Patrick
Vallance, that it should “go hard and go early” in curtailing the spread of the
virus.
Ministers
said in September they would implement a “plan B”, including the return of
mandatory mask-wearing in public places and the reintroduction of working from
home guidance, if the NHS risked coming under unsustainable pressure.
New
recorded infections dipped slightly to 49,298 on Friday. Over the past seven
days, 947 people have died within 28 days of a positive Covid test, up 16% on a
week earlier.
Boris
Johnson, visiting a vaccine centre in London, said: “The numbers that we’re
seeing at the moment are fully in line with what we expected in the autumn and
winter plan.” He added that there was “absolutely nothing to indicate” that
another lockdown might be necessary.
The Sage
documents suggested that working from home guidance could be the most effective
element of the plan.
According
to a document from the Sage subgroups Spi-M, Spi-B and the EMG, “reintroduction
of working from home guidance, for those who can, may have the largest impact
on transmission out of the potential plan B measures”.
While the
government is insistent that the pressures faced by the NHS are sustainable, at
local level, a growing number of directors of public health (DPH) have begun
urging local people to take steps including wearing masks and working from
home.
The
Guardian has learned of at least a dozen areas where this is the case. Alice
Wiseman, the DPH for Gateshead, said: “Given the concerning rise in case
numbers and the considerable pressures that we’re already seeing on NHS
services, now is the time for us all to do whatever we can to avoid reaching
crisis point. Taking basic precautions now, like wearing face masks, working
from home where possible and keeping indoor spaces well ventilated, could help
us to avoid returning to more disruptive restrictions.
“So
although mandatory measures are not yet being introduced, I’d urge all of our
communities to pull together and take these simple but effective steps now.”
The health
secretary, Sajid Javid, reminded the public earlier this week of guidance
recommending mask-wearing in crowded indoor spaces, but ministers have
continued to insist that it remains a matter of personal choice, and
Conservative MPs at Westminster rarely wear them.
As well as
mandatory mask-wearing, the union leaders’ statement called for employers to be
reminded of their duty to carry out workplace risk assessments to show how they
are avoiding the spread of Covid; and for enhanced statutory sick pay to
prevent people being forced back to work because they cannot afford to
self-isolate.
Their plea
comes after the NHS Confederation and British Medical Association (BMA) sounded
the alarm on behalf of NHS leaders and doctors earlier this week about the
challenges facing the health service.
Both bodies
urged the government to implement “plan B” immediately. As well as mask-wearing
and working from home, plan B includes introducing vaccine passports for venues
such as nightclubs – a policy that would require a vote in parliament, and is
deeply unpopular with Tory MPs.
Labour has
not yet called for plan B to be triggered – though it was against the ending of
mandatory mask-wearing in the summer. Instead, the shadow health secretary, Jon
Ashworth, has highlighted the shaky rollout of vaccine boosters and jabs for
12-15-year-olds – part of the government’s plan A.
While they
are not ruling out fresh restrictions, ministers are hoping next week’s
half-term will act as a natural firebreak for the virus, given how prevalent it
is among school-age children. The latest ONS infection survey showed that 8% of
11-16-year-olds had Covid in the week ending 16 October – far higher than any other
age group.
The
government has also kicked off a marketing campaign, with adverts to be shown
in prime TV slots, to nudge the public to get their Covid boosters and flu jabs
as winter approaches.
Ministers
are considering asking the independent Joint Committee on Vaccination and
Immunisation to shorten the gap between the second and booster doses of vaccine
– though some government advisers believe that would make little difference.
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