Union claims civil servants are being forced to resort to food banks
Union claims civil servants are being forced to resort to food banks and payday loans as they struggle to pay for petrol, nappies and medicine in cost of living crisis
- A leading trade union has said civil servants are now relying on food banks
- The Public and Commercial Services Union is delivering the dossier to ministers
- The 156-page dossier is being sent to Work and Pensions Secretary Chloe Smith
- The union said its members were being plunged into ‘depths of poverty’
- The dossier compiles many cost-of-living crisis stories from DWP employees
A leading trade union has claimed civil servants are being forced to resort to food banks and payday loans as they struggle to pay for petrol, nappies and medicine amid the cost of living crisis.
The Public and Commercial Services Union (PCS) is delivering a dossier to ministers, revealing the ‘depths of poverty’ being suffered by the Government’s own employees.
The union said civil servants are now relying on foodbanks for the first time in their lives.
The 156-page dossier is being sent to Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) Secretary Chloe Smith, along with increased calls for a pay rise to help workers cope with the cost-of-living crisis.
Civil servants have said they are being forced to resort to food banks and payday loans as they struggle to pay for petrol, nappies and medicine amid the cost of living crisis (file photo)
In a letter to the minister, the union said: ‘Our members have been plunged into ever-increasing depths of poverty.
‘They should not have to rely on food banks to feed their children or be forced to make the choice of either working from home because the journey into work is too expensive, or working in the cold under blankets because the cost of heating is too expensive.’
The dossier was compiled after the PCS asked members working for the DWP what the cost-of-living crisis meant to them.
PCS general secretary Mark Serwotka said: ‘These testimonies are a damaging indictment of the cruel effects of years of austerity and pay restraint imposed on our members.
‘They are heart-breaking stories from government employees who have become the working poor.
‘Struggling to pay for petrol, struggling to pay train fares, struggling to buy food, nappies and medication. Worn down by never being able to afford small treats.
‘We call on Chloe Smith to study these testimonies carefully and to reopen negotiations on pay.’
The PCS is currently balloting more than 150,000 civil servants working in 214 Government departments for strike action over pay, pensions, jobs and redundancy payments.
PCS members’ plights: How civil servants are struggling to heat and eat
– I don’t sleep worrying about the cost of energy, food and wanting to live a full life in the years I have left.
– I have to rely on my mother-in-law to plug the gap and buy things the kids need, like shoes.
– To work five days out of seven and not feel able to light my flat or have a hot shower is the unimaginable reality in which I have found myself.
– I’m worried sick about how I’m going to afford heating and food this winter. I live on my own and my wage does not cover all my bills. I already cut down as much as I can. I don’t know what I’m going to do.
– As a family of four, we are unable to afford a social life anymore and are staying home the majority of time.
– I am barely scraping by, usually relying on my parents to help us out.
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