Welsh Government to make it illegal to ignore Covid-19 self-isolation order
The Welsh Government will impose a legal requirement for people to self-isolate if told to do so by NHS Wales Test Trace Protect service, they announced today.
The regulations will also be strengthened to make it an offence to knowingly provide false information to the NHS Wales Test Trace Protect service.
However, people on low incomes will also be able to apply to receive a £500 payment if they have tested positive for coronavirus or they are asked to self-isolate.
A new top-up payment is also being introduced for the social care workforce in Wales, to increase statutory sick pay to their normal wages if they have to take time off because they have coronavirus or are self-isolating.
Up to £32m is being made available by the Welsh Government for the two schemes to support people and “remove the financial barriers faced by people needing to self-isolate”.
“The pandemic has had a huge impact on everyone and we have asked people to sacrifice so much this year, including during this latest firebreak,” the First Minister Mark Drakeford said.
“We are committed to doing everything we can to support people and protect people’s health and wellbeing.
“Asking people to self-isolate is an important way to break the transmission of the virus but for many people it can mean the loss of income.
“We all have a responsibility to protect our own health and our loved ones’ too but we know just how difficult that can be when faced with a choice between staying at home and not being able being able to feed your family or going to work.
“These new support schemes are targeted towards people on low incomes and are designed to relieve some of the financial pressures people face if they are asked to self-isolate.”
‘Top up’
A £500 fixed payment will be available to people who are asked to self-isolate because they have tested positive for coronavirus or because they have been identified as a close contact by the NHS Wales Test Trace Protect service.
The payment is available to people on a low income who are unable to work from home and would lose income as a result of self-isolating. To be eligible, people must be self-isolating and in receipt of Universal Credit or another specified benefit.
People will be able to apply for the payments via their local authority website and they will be backdated to October 23.
The Statutory Sick Pay Enhancement scheme for social care staff working in care homes, domiciliary care and as personal assistants will start on 1 November and will run until 31 March 2021.
The scheme will top up statutory sick pay to eligible care workers’ full pay if they need to take time off with suspected or confirmed coronavirus or if they are self-isolating because someone in their household has coronavirus or they have been told to by the NHS Wales Test Trace Protect service.
“If you are told to self-isolate, working from home is not an option for everyone, making this an even more stressful period for people. Some people can feel under pressure to go to work, just to pay the bills,” Julie James, Minister for Housing and Local Government, said.
“The £500 self-isolation payment and the SSP enhancement scheme will help us protect the vulnerable and give people the financial security they need to stay-at-home and break the cycle of transmission.
“There will be some people who do not meet the criteria for the £500 payment but who will suffer financial hardship as a result of being asked to self-isolate. This is why we have introduced a discretionary element to the self-isolation payment, which will be available to a wider group of people.
“Financial support is already available to people through the Emergency Assistance Payment coronavirus hardship element of the Discretionary Assistance Fund.”
These two schemes will form an important part of the national support and measures which will be introduced after the firebreak, the Welsh Government said.
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