NSW Government urged to protect all workers equally

The union representing NSW public sector workers, is urging the NSW government to deliver vaccine leave for workers as the state’s sluggish vaccine rollout has left disability support workers, child protection officers, and school support staff under vaccinated and exposed.

The Public Service Association (PSA), says that work commitments should never get in the way of any NSW public sector worker being vaccinated against Covid-19.

“NSW needs a clear-cut plan that prioritises all frontline public sector workers, so those who want to be vaccinated can just go and get it,” says PSA’s General Secretary Stewart Little.

The union says a range of frontline public sector workers have been overlooked, including child protection case workers who visit the homes of vulnerable families; disability workers who support people in group accommodation; 10s of thousands of school support staff, who work in classrooms to support students and teachers, as well as in school administration; and Service NSW workers, who interact directly with the public.

“It’s hugely frustrating to see other groups, such as council workers, accessing Covid-19 vaccines while workers who are dealing with our state’s most vulnerable are still unclear on how or when they will be able to protect themselves, their families, and those they work with.

“The Premier could offer staff ‘vax leave’ with the stroke of a pen, via a Premier’s Circular. The government could deliver vaccine hubs directly to worksites so that people who can’t easily leave work could be immunised.

“The NSW Government is the largest employer in Australia – but there is no coordinated plan for how it will see its workforce vaccinated. Instead the advice from the government has been for workers to talk to their manager – that’s not a plan, that’s just adding confusion and further delays to our already stalling vaccine rollout,” says Mr Little.