Retail giants and the DWP
The KBW initiative is expected to tell companies to intervene earlier to ‘support’ struggling workers, especially when their mental health is affected. Part of this would be the use of so-called “workplace practitioners” with absolutely no medical training, who act as go-betweens for employers and GPs. They’re intended to provide ‘support’ before a GP might sign the worker off.
KBW will also recommend a greater degree of communication between employers and the government. This is meant to help inform policymaking by allowing the government to spot trends in economic inactivity earlier on. Similarly, KBW will also include a code of practice for how employers should support workers with disabilities and health conditions.
The shitshow looms
If you think that the DWP, an ex-retail CEO and Tesco teaming up to ‘Keep Britain Working’ will be a massive ableist, anti-worker shitshow, you’d be completely fucking right.
Work can be tough. It’s meant to be tough. Sometimes you’re meant to find it hard. You’re not meant to ace everything or get everything right. And so there are times when it’s challenging. […]
And of course, when you don’t have a system in place to support you, and you go to see your GP and you say, ‘I’m really anxious and I’m really stressed out at work,’ then what the GP may often say is, ‘Well, we better give you a fit note to sign you off work.’
He also characterised disabled people who were out of work as a “burden on the state”:
The number of people who are suffering from ill health or disability is rising fast. That creates a burden on the state. It creates a burden on companies, and it creates a big burden on the individuals. The impact of that is a very serious problem, but also a very fixable one.
We’re all looking for the ones who started this
Regarding the KBW review, a government spokesperson said:
We’re reforming the system, so it helps people get back to health and back to work by shifting our focus from welfare to work, skills, and opportunities.
The Keep Britain Working review will help us and employers better support sick or disabled people even more, and we will consider the recommendations once it is complete.
Likewise, Mayfield stated that there is:
a lot of opportunity for employers to be active around the whole area of a prevention to a much greater extent than is possible for the NHS to do alone.
Bosses absolutely should be doing more to make sure that their workers don’t get burned out to the point that they need a fucking doctor to sign them off. But lets be real, expecting employers like Tesco to be part of the solution is absolutely ridiculous. They’re the ones who created the problem in the bloody first place.
Hmm, why are all the workers broken?
So, unless the ‘Keep Britain Working’ initiative proposes better pay, better conditions, and better protections for workers, we’ll know it for exactly what it is. They’re not looking to make life better for workers. They’re finding new ways to deny that there’s a problem in the first place.
Featured image via the Canary













