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Debate on the registration charge for social workers

Posted: 13 April 2004 | Subscribe Online


We asked:- Is it reasonable that everyone has to pay the same registration fee regardless of their salary?

Here are some of the comments we received:-

“On the whole we have not registered in our authority following advice from our union and we are awaiting the outcome of negotiations with our employers about paying the registration fees.

Personally I feel they should be paid by the employer, as they are benefiting from registration more than individual workers.

I attended one of the workshops and heard nothing that would improve things for employees, so am reluctant to pay the fees myself. To me it seems like a pay cut.”

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S Lewis


“Yes, it’s not much to pay. Anyone able to register is able to earn a reasonable salary. Those who are not working need to decide whether it is of enough value to part with £30.  Continued professional development will cost much more than this and will be a bigger issue for most of us.”

Ray


“I think there should be a sliding scale of fees dependent on position and salary”

Jenny


“Whilst I agree with the principle of registration, I do no believe individual social workers should meet this cost. I think it should be paid for by employers as I understand this is what happens in nursing, teaching and other professional bodies.”

Alexis


“No, it is not fair that everyone has to pay the same registration fee and that is not right in my view.”

Simon Sanders
Southwark Social Services
(personal capacity)


“I feel that paying for registration is something I expected would happen as part of the regulatory process the social work profession is experiencing.

I do think that this would be an ideal opportunity for employers to offer to pay the fees initially to make things easier for employees. But I feel positive about registration as a way of policing social work, although employers also need to be informing the GSCC about bad practice.”

Martin

“I am about to get registered with a social work professional association, which most likely will be GSCC. I believe it would be fair and reasonable to charge each member a percentage of her/his income.”

Harald Stölting
(future UK social worker)


“I will hopefully qualify in 2006 but feel that ideally the registration fee with the GSCC should be paid by the employer. 
 
I will have debts of £10,000 plus as a result of studying and will be on a starting salary at the bottom of scale, so if the employer is unwilling to pay I feel that there should be variable fees relevant to 'related' circumstances i.e. salary and amount of associated debt (which is required in order to qualify as a social work in the first place).”
 
Debbie Young
Bournemouth University Student

“The whole idea of registration is the professional version of vanity publishing. Some people have the misguided idea that registration will make us seem like 'proper professionals' like doctors or nurses, but I have news for them. It won’t.

Doctors and lawyers have highly lucrative monopolies to protect, many work for themselves. But most social care workers are low paid employees. We are much more likely to end up like nurses or radiographers paying well over £100 a year for registration. And for what? To increase the public's confidence? The public neither knows nor cares about registration. To protect the public? Surely that is the point of all the expensive police checks?

As for qualifications, we pay enough to awarding bodies; shouldn't they be able to verify our qualifications? Registration is a nineteenth century solution to a twenty-first century problem. Just say no.”

Andrew Bolger 

“It's probably not fair, considering how much some practitioners are paid.

I am a single parent and qualified in as a social worker in 1999. As a mature student, I'm still trying to pay back the loan it cost to fund the two years I was away from paid employment. Whereas some students were fortunate enough to be funded by a local authority, I was only able to get a mortgage last year.

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As my wages are not very high at this stage, I would prefer to pay the least amount for registration as possible. I stopped paying my nurses’ registration fee to save money last year, especially as I was no longer working in that profession, only to find I now have to pay another. So it may help many workers for registration to be means-tested.”

Susan

“It is certainly not reasonable for everyone to pay the same.

I moved out of Hampshire where I was paid £7.07 per hour while trying to complete my DipSW part-time.

I'm now working in Ceridigion in Wales as a support worker for a large mental health charity earning £5.40 per hour and don't finish my DipSW until June 2005. People think the cost of living is cheaper in Wales. Believe me it's not.

I'm not here to complain about the pros and cons of living in different parts of the country, but I certainly can't see why I, earning such a low income, should pay the same membership fees as someone earning thousands per annum!”

Phil
Ceredigion


“As a social worker employed by a local authority, I feel it should be the authorities’ role to pay the registration fee whilst a worker is employed by them.

After all, they are the ones who will benefit from having a very good, knowledgeable work-force, as the positive side of registration is that we will all have to practice at a higher standard.”
 
Colin Saunders

“I am currently studying the first year of the new BSc Social Work degree and have been asked to pay £10 registration fee in September 2004.
 
I am aware this is a reduced charge, however, I don't think it is appropriate for students to pay to register.  Until we qualify, we cannot practice as a social worker and it seems ridiculous that we are given a bursary by the GSCC and then have to pay some money back to register with them!
 
I don't agree with the principle of having to pay to register anyway. This is a service to the public and the administration costs should come out of a public money pot - it's not as though the social work profession is one where huge salaries are commanded!
 
If the charge is to be made, however, then it should be on a sliding scale according to income, and students - until they are able to practice - should be excluded from the charge.”

Dawn

“I see no reason why everyone should not pay the same amount to belong to the organisation that is trying to establish standards for our profession.

Other professions, such as teachers, have a flat rate for registration and the question is, what value do you put on what GSCC are trying to do on your behalf? Is it of less value to the lower paid? Workers' representatives could try negotiating to see whether employers would pay the registration on their employees' behalf. But that would undermine the value for the individual.”

Anonymous

“Payment for registration should be on a sliding scale and local authorities should pay for the social workers they employ.”

Rona 

“Forget a sliding scale. I don’t think anybody should have to pay to register!”

Paul Ritter
Approved Social Worker
Hampshire Social Services

 

 



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