One of the country’s largest unions wants an urgent remote meeting with HSE officials to push for childcare arrangements for essential health and welfare staff.
Fórsa has raised the issue on a daily basis with the HSE, the health department and Department of Public Expenditure and Reform (DPER) since schools and crèches closed on March 12.
Since then, many workers across the economy have become better able to manage childcare because they are working remotely – or have suffered lay-offs.
However, the lack of a facility remains a problem for single parents and families where both adults are essential workers in the health sector or elsewhere.
With more than 80,000 members, Fórsa is the largest public service union in Ireland, and second largest trade union in the state.
The union has been told that two departments – children and youth affairs and the Department of the Taoiseach – are working on proposals, but Fórsa official Catherine Keogh said it is unacceptable that the problem has not been resolved three weeks into the crisis.
“At this stage the Government has implemented, and legislated for, countless radical measures to deal with the coronavirus crisis. And they have had incredible levels of support and cooperation from health staff and other workers, who understand that we are in an emergency.
But childcare for essential staff was the first thing we looked for, and it’s the last thing to be done.
“In the context of everything that’s happened, it surely can’t be so difficult to get this facility in place for workers who, in tens of thousands of cases, are putting themselves at risk for the greater good,” she said.
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