- Date
- 3 May 2024 2:30pm–3:00pm
- Location
- Online
To find out how you can help transform the social care sector, UNISON South East is running a 30-minute session on Friday 3 May at 2:30 PM.
To find out how you can help transform the social care sector, UNISON South East is running a 30-minute session on Friday 3 May at 2:30 PM.
General election candidates from all parties across the North East are being asked to support the creation of a new national care service in England, says UNISON today (Thursday). The union says too many people across the North East cannot access the social care they desperately need because the current system is broken. UNISON wants to see a new service […]
"Migrant care workers are now more likely to shun the UK in favour of parts of the world where their skills and families […]
The new collection of essays looks at how the minimum wage could evolve
Ministers haven’t said if their children and partners must leave. “These rules are not only inhumane but will plunge social care even deeper into crisis. “The care sector […]
Christina McAnea says ministers must show they ‘care about social care’
The need for a new national care service grows more pressing with each passing day.
He continues to forget that his department as Secretary of State was not just for health, but social care too
The union says the finding, from a survey of more than 300 domiciliary care workers across England, reveals […]
“The national care service is a shared national endeavour to give every individual the right support in the right way at the […]
We want to see a National Care Service that: gives access to quality care for all who need it; is focussed on providing […]
UNISON responds to archbishops’ report calling for reform of social care
“A long-term, fully-funded plan is the only way to attract more employees, provide people with the support they deserve and relieve pressure on the […]
Vacancy rates are rocketing because care workers are underpaid for a difficult and skilled job
Low wages and inadequate sick pay to blame for thousands of care workers quitting