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Society needs to value care work

Posted: 15 January 2004 | Subscribe Online


Social workers should be paid more. So should their managers and their senior practitioners. And so should occupational therapists and their managers too. It is an outrage that the people who do the most difficult and demanding jobs imaginable are paid less than advertising executives or investment bankers. If a top-of-the-scale social worker can earn the same running a small aromatherapy business or in landscape gardening (two real examples) it is not surprising that so many people are giving up the job in middle age.
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In London, it has been the case for too long that social workers and occupational therapists have been paid so little that they cannot afford a mortgage. So in addition to doing a difficult job they often have a long commute in from cheaper areas. It is a scandal that the most important workers in our society were not sufficiently valued, even by local authorities, until market forces came into play. I know local authorities can't really afford it, but I am glad that market forces are at last ensuring that social work and social care is leapfrogging its way up the pay ladder.

And local authorities are using different methods to appeal to staff. Some places are trying temporary pay rises such as golden hellos and retention bonuses or performance-related pay. But we at Tower Hamlets prefer to pay higher permanent salaries and plan to stay at the top of the pay league for as long as we can afford. Social workers need to know that they are valued all the time, not just when a local authority is in the middle of a recruitment crisis. And why discriminate between social workers who work with children and the rest? Those who work with disabled and older people must be equally valued.
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After all, social workers are the first to be criticised by the media. The armchair pundits, and the newspaper editors who employ them, vilify social work and social care every time they get an opportunity. They ignore these workers' essential contribution to a decent, civilised society the rest of the time. When did you last read that our system of child protection is the second most successful in the world?

The critics should try a couple of months facing the reality of inner city social work. They would find out how highly skilled, caring, intelligent and decisive you have to be and how stressful, but also rewarding, each day can be. They would not do these jobs for this money. But our people do. So come on - pay up.

Ian Wilson is social services director at Tower Hamlets.


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