Protect vulnerable people but also low paid staff and
services
The STUC welcomed the additional protection for children
and vulnerable adults in the new Protecting Vulnerable People
Bill but warned that the costs of registration must not
fall on employees, especially the low paid, and on the unwaged.
With over 400,000 workers to be registered plus 250,000
voluntary workers, registration was going to be a major
issue.
Supporting a motion from the Chartered Society of Physiotherapy,
UNISON’s Stephen Smellie said that it was right that service
users can be confident that the people employed to support
them are properly checked and vetted.
However, the risk of duplication of investigation by various
regulatory bodies and employers, the additional cost imposed
on low paid workers and the lack of a clear right to an
open hearing could actually “make our members more vulnerable
in the future.”
Calling on employers to bear the cost of registration,
Stephen said, “Anything that makes working in the caring
sector more difficult and puts more costs onto low paid
workers will make it more difficult to recruit and retain
the quality workforce we need.
“This will then impact negatively on the quality of services
we are able to provide to the very vulnerable groups the
legislation is designed to protect.”
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