Date: Friday 1 May
2015
Make work fair for parents and give children decent childhoods,
say UNISON and Child Poverty Action Group
CPAG, Scotland’s most high profile child poverty charity,
and UNISON, Scotland’s biggest trade union have joined together
to call on political parties to lay out policies to tackle in-work
poverty.
The call comes as the two organisations release their report
Fair Work and Decent Childhoods – policies for those who
work to live lives free of poverty. They call for investment in
the social security system and say we must not allow a race to
the bottom on skills, pay and insecure work.
John Dickie, Director of the Child Poverty Action Group in Scotland
said ‘“The new UK government will inherit a child
poverty crisis with a shocking 59% of poor children in Scotland
living in working families. For the future of our children and
our economy we need urgent action to make work fair for parents
and allow them to give their children the decent childhoods they
deserve. That’s why as anti-poverty campaigners and trade
unionists we have united in setting out three key priorities for
the new government – decent pay, family friendly workplaces
and investment in in-work benefits.”
Dave Watson, UNISON Scottish organiser said ‘It is an utter
scandal that so many are low paid in Scotland. UNISON has to fight
in some sectors to get the minimum wage paid never mind the living
wage. We have joined with anti-poverty campaigners to call on
the next UK Government to tackle work insecurity, rebalance employment
rights, and support work life balance and high quality childcare.
Out evidence is parents overwhelmingly want to work they just
deserve fair pay and decent family friendly jobs’
The report calls on the next UK government to invest in both
public services and the social security system and to make sure
work is family friendly.
ENDS
CONTACT
John Dickie, Director CPAG in Scotland, 07795 340 618
Danny Phillips, UNISON communications, 07944 664 110
Notes to Editor
Fair Work and Decent Childhoods can be read on line here:
http://www.unison-scotland.org.uk/publicworks/decentchildhoods.pdf
UNISON and CPAG call on the next UK government to:
· Increase the national minimum wage, support the living
wage and boost family-friendly jobs
· Demonstrate its leadership and ambition by encouraging
more employers to pay the Living Wage
· The aim should be a National Minimum Wage at a Living
Wage level.
· Outlaw exploitative zero hours contracts, and short
hour contracts where they undermine parents ability to juggle
work and childcare responsibilities
· Employers should publish their pay and pay ratios
· A new era of corporate democracy based on a constructive
relationship between trade unions and employers in both the public
and private sector.
· Boost work incentives for parents in universal credit
· A universal credit work allowance for second earners,
and an improved allowance for single parents, allowing low income
families to keep more of their earnings,
· Invest in back to work support at local level that emphasises
the strong, positive relationships with advisers that are proven
to work.
· End employment tribunal fees which have shut so many
workers out from access to justice in the workplace.
· Cuts in health and safety provisions shoudl be reinstated
and enforcement strengthened.
· Develop an ambitious childcare strategy based around
a supply-side, universal model. High quality childcare, free at
the point of use. Parents need to changed workplaces with a year’s
paid maternity leave, extended paternal leave and improved flexible
working rights. For childcare staff we need fair pay, training,
preparation time and study leave and enhanced
· Think and talk in terms of ‘social security’
not ‘welfare’.
· Ensure child benefit is never rolled into universal
credit.
· Introduce a ‘triple lock’ for children’s
benefits so that benefits are uprated in line with earnings, prices
or 2.5 per cent, whichever is greater.
· Support a shift toward investment in housing supply
to ensure quality secure housing is affordable for working families
· Tackle the drivers of benefit spending. Low pay, high
housing costs and high childcare costs
Index
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