Increased pay is vital to recruit more care workers with looming 20,000 shortfall
Carmarthenshire Council and health board funding formulas are based on low pay for staff
Increasing the pay of social care workers in Carmarthenshire so that they earn more than shelf stackers in discount supermarkets is vital to solve the massive recruitment crisis in the sector.
The call from Mario Kreft MBE, the chair of Care Forum Wales, came after a campaign was launched to attract another 20,000 social care workers in Wales over the next 10 years.
Mr Kreft said the nub of the problem was that the funding formulas of local councils and health boards were predicated on paying low wages to staff and the âminimal differentialsâ for taking on extra responsibilities – and that had to change.
He welcomed the WeCare.Wales campaign unveiled by Social Care Wales but warned that more money needed to be found to ensure that care staff could be paid a âdecent wageâ.
At the moment, he said, the funding formulas of local councils and health boards were predicated on paying low wages to staff.
The number of elderly people over the age of 80 is predicted to increase by 44% in Wales by 2030 and there are currently about 113,000 people in the social care sector.
The ageing population in Wales and relatively older workforce are two factors for the increasing demand for care workers in people’s own homes, workers in residential care and more nurses.
Mr Kreft stated: âI can certainly say that this is the most challenging time that social care providers have faced in trying to recruit sufficient workers to actually do the job.
âThis campaign comes absolutely at the right time because weâve got to do something urgently.
Mr Kreft continued: âThe elephant in the room is that you can be paid more for stacking shelves in a discount supermarket than for being a care worker.
âThis campaign does help as we have to raise the awareness of the value of people. We have heard recently that the Welsh Government have put in their economic action plan on how important social care is to our economy. But weâre not seeing that translated to the elephant in the room which is, how much are we going to pay these people!
âIf youâre in North East Wales, for example, where youâve virtually got full employment from a statistical point of view, youâve got so many opportunities.
âI looked on a couple of websites last night knowing I was looking at some discount supermarkets that are headquartered in mainland Europe, and you look at what theyâre offering. So, if youâre going to put more pressure on sector, more pressure is put on the workers.
âWhat youâre actually seeing is people voting with their feet, and Care Forum Wales is conducting its own research over these next weeks.
âWe believe that the registration process being brought in 12 months is actually a good thing though in the long term, itâs actually going to exacerbate the situation because there are so many people talking about leaving this sector, this is because it’s such hard work and weâve got to do more to value these people clearly.â
According to Mr Kreft, the issue of how to fund social care as the âchallenge of the ageâ and a proposed social care tax was not the complete answer.
He added: âThrowing extra money generated by a new tax into the existing pot is not going to solve it. We donât want more of the same â we need a new vision for the future with properly integrated services.
âWeâve actually got to radically reform the way we deliver services and how we integrate services in Wales. Without that reform, we would be throwing good money after bad.
âWhat youâve currently got is two systems that are inter-related. Youâve got the NHS which is free at the point of delivery and youâve got means tested social care which predominately comes through local authorities.
âNow, there are only three ways we can actually raise finance and support for these services – private money, itâs insurance or itâs tax and I think what we really need in Wales is an intelligently-structured combination of all three, a long-term plan that has cross-party support because this issue is not going to go away.
âWe are going to see, as the professor stated, a massive increase in the cohort of the population of over 85s.
âWe havenât got the capacity in the system to cope at present. Homes are closing. Hospitals are full and many family carers are over-stretched. It needs integration and a complete radical approach as to how we tackle this.
âWeâve really got to think these things through and we need an integrated system.
âTo their great credit Welsh Government has recently recognised social care as one of the four foundations of the economy, one which pumps ÂŁ2.2 billion per year into the Welsh economy.
âPreviously, weâve only seen social care in Wales as a cost. What we have to do is see it as a value. This is where the independent sector can play an even more important role.
âSocial care workers in Wales deserve a better deal. The deal theyâve got is not good enough to sustain the numbers that weâre going to need in the future.
âLocal authorities and health boards in Wales actually predicate that more than half of the staff in a care home are on the National Living Wage.
âWhen you get a qualified highly-skilled care practitioner, they have to be able to sustain a standard of living commensurate with the level of responsibility they have. These people have been overlooked.
âHow we fund social care is a massive issue. We now need to have a big national conversation and this report has made an important contribution to that debate.â
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