William Eichler 11 January 2022

Council staff asked to provide care services amid workforce crisis

Council staff asked to provide care services amid workforce crisis  image

Derbyshire County Council has asked its employees to help the local authority provide care services amid the UK-wide shortage of care staff.

The rapid spread of Omicron has meant that staff tasked with providing care services are being forced to self-isolate. This has led to shortages within a sector that is already struggling with staff employment and retention issues.

A spokesperson for Derbyshire County Council said that the council is doing its best to place its care staff where they are most needed, but warned ‘we still do not have enough people to provide the support and service that we need to.’

‘We are now asking for fully vaccinated and boosted council staff, from all our departments, to come forward to help support the older and vulnerable people living in our 23 residential care homes over the coming days and possibly few weeks,’ they said.

‘Staff who come forward to help in our care homes will provide valuable assistance to our professional care workers, so they can focus on the more specialist tasks such as personal care and medication. They will help to provide emotional support, engage residents in social activities and help with catering, domestic duties and laundry.’

Earlier this month, North Yorkshire County Council made a similar request. It urged staff working in non-critical services to volunteer for social care roles due to the pressures caused by the spread of Omicron.

Independent care providers have also called on the Government to create an 'emergency army' of volunteers to help solve the staffing crisis.

‘Councils and care providers are entering this period with existing staff shortages,’ a spokesperson for the Local Government Association (LGA) said.

‘A recent LGA survey indicated that around half of all councils had seen disruption to services due to lack of staff, with this being particularly acute in adult social care, children’s services and waste collection services.

‘While local authorities, working with their partners, will do their best to protect the delivery of vital services, it is possible that access to some services may be temporarily reduced.

‘As they have done since the start of the pandemic, councils are working with care homes to find ways to alleviate staffing shortages and to still be open for business while also following safe infection control practice. The LGA is working with national partners to support these local efforts.

‘We want to work with Government to address these issues to ensure councils and their care provider partners can be resilient in supporting their communities through this wave of the Omicron variant.’

The new Centre for Young Lives image

The new Centre for Young Lives

Anne Longfield CBE, the chair of the Commission on Young Lives, discusses the launch of the Centre for Young Lives this month.
SIGN UP
For your free daily news bulletin
Highways jobs

Head of Market Quality & Sustainability

Royal Borough of Greenwich
£67,290 - £70,710
Royal Greenwich Integrated Commissioning are looking for a skilled and experienced leader Greenwich, London (Greater)
Recuriter: Royal Borough of Greenwich

Programme Officer - WMF1088e

Westmorland and Furness Council
£35,745 - £36,648
The Capital Programme team is responsible for the core delivery of the Council’s c.£60m/year Capital Programme Cumbria / Countywide
Recuriter: Westmorland and Furness Council

Asylum Lead Officer - WMF1080e

Westmorland and Furness Council
£33,945 - £34,834
Westmorland and Furness Council is committed to supporting asylum seekers Barrow in Furness, Cumbria
Recuriter: Westmorland and Furness Council

Locality Officer Level 3 WMF1091e

Westmorland and Furness Council
£32,076 - £33,024
Westmorland and Furness Council is an ambitious authority. Kendal, Cumbria
Recuriter: Westmorland and Furness Council

Head of Commissioning Management

Derbyshire County Council
Grade 15 £59,559 - £65,327
At Derbyshire, we have been on a journey to transform the way we deliver highway services Derbyshire
Recuriter: Derbyshire County Council
Linkedin Banner

Partner Content

Circular highways is a necessity not an aspiration – and it’s within our grasp

Shell is helping power the journey towards a circular paving industry with Shell Bitumen LT R, a new product for roads that uses plastics destined for landfill as part of the additives to make the bitumen.

Support from Effective Energy Group for Local Authorities to Deliver £430m Sustainable Warmth Funded Energy Efficiency Projects

Effective Energy Group is now offering its support to the 40 Local Authorities who have received a share of the £430m to deliver their projects on the ground by surveying properties and installing measures.

Pay.UK – the next step in Bacs’ evolution

Dougie Belmore explains how one of the main interfaces between you and Bacs is about to change.