Coronavirus
is affecting all our daily lives including our workplaces. We recognise the
very challenging position that many employers and workers are now facing. We
need a partnership, working in the national interest, to get through the next
few months - a partnership that involves the public sector, unions, businesses,
3rd sector organisations, and all workers and managers. We are hugely
appreciative of the many cases where this is already in place.
Applying Fair Work Principles through the
crisis
Scotland is rightly proud of its reputation as a leader on Fair Work and
remains committed to becoming a Fair Work nation. The health and wellbeing of
individuals, communities and the economy is our priority and in these
exceptional times, adopting a Fair Work approach is more important than ever.
Scotland’s success as an economy is built on a shared endeavour between
workers, unions and employers and this approach will help us get through the
current health and economic crisis. Government, unions and business
organisations must work together to reach, collectively, the right decisions for
protecting workers and public safety, and to help businesses to stay open, where
permitted under latest guidance, and keep people in employment.
There has been an unprecedented package of
support announced from both the Scottish and UK Governments to support
businesses. This support should help many employers preserve their business,
maintain jobs and pay their workers throughout this crisis. Information on this
support is available through findbusinesssupport.gov.scot. We
urge all businesses to make use of this.
Employers
should consult the latest guidance on the operation of public services and
non-essential businesses. With the
closure of schools and other childcare centres now in place to help delay the
spread of the virus we need to make sure that key workers performing essential
tasks (and for whom no other safe and viable childcare including home working
is available) have childcare support to enable them to carry on working.
We have high expectations of how fair work
principles should be applied during the current crisis. This means an approach
where workers,
trade unions and employers work together constructively to reach the right decisions on all workplace issues that arise
throughout this crisis. The dimensions of fair work as defined by the Fair Work
Convention: effective voice; security; respect; opportunity and fulfilment,
applied to the current context, offer a framework for taking these decisions.