Penman slams “ignorant and nasty” Mail piece on ‘workshy Whitehall’
FDA General Secretary Dave Penman has responded angrily to an article in the Daily Mail, which refers to “workshy” civil servants who are “wrecking the economy” by not returning to their places of work.
Penman points out that the “ignorant and nasty diatribe… conveniently ignores the City of London and Canary Wharf, bastions of private sector efficiency where greater numbers are working effectively from home”.
The Mail article accuses civil servants of not showing “the Blitz spirt” and “using the virus as an excuse to work from home indefinitely”, stating that they need to “stop hiding on their sofas and return to their desks”.
Penman told BBC News that “to suggest that civil servants are workshy is grossly offensive and insulting, and completely ignores the fact that our civil service has been performing incredibly effectively during this pandemic. Designing and implementing the furlough scheme and processing a six-fold increase in universal credit claims – all while transforming into a home-based organisation overnight – is a perfect example of the blitz spirit, despite what detractors might say.
“Public servants, who have never worked harder than over the last few months, deserve better than these petty, lazy attacks. Their job is to provide vital public services, not provide customers to sandwich shops,” Penman added.
“The world of work was already changing and COVID-19 has simply accelerated that change. The government must recognise that more and more people are now able to work effectively from home and allow the civil service to manage this transition.”
Related News
-
Education Minister Paul Givan must provide clarity over Israel visit – FDA NI National Officer Robert Murtagh
The FDA’s National Officer for Northern Ireland Robert Murtagh has called on Minister of Education Paul Givan to urgently clarify the use of departmental resources for a recent trip to Israel.
-
No.10 briefings against Cabinet Secretary Chris Wormald “stink of political cowardice”, Penman says
FDA General Secretary Dave Penman has condemned briefings from No.10 sources that Cabinet Secretary Chris Wormald had lost the confidence of senior figures in Downing Street and would likely be replaced by January next year.
-
“Significant gaps” in current Northern Ireland standards regime, says Murtagh
FDA National Officer for Northern Ireland Robert Murtagh has called for a strengthened standards regime in Northern Ireland government.