UK Government Offering Extra Support to Staff and Firms During Winter Months
ADVERTORIAL: UK Government Chancellor Rishi Sunak has announced extra measures to support workers and businesses throughout winter, including a furlough scheme extension paying 80 per cent of staff wages.
The UK Government has pledged billions of pounds more to help workers and businesses throughout winter.
The furlough scheme, extended across the UK until the end of March, pays 80 per cent of wages up to ÂŁ2,500 a month. The Coronavirus Job Retention Scheme subsidises the wages of people who cannot do their jobs because their workplace is closed or there is no longer enough work. As part of the revised scheme â lasting until March 31, to be reviewed at the end of January â anyone made redundant on or after September 23 2020 may be able to be rehired and returned to furlough. The Chancellor also announced billions of pounds of further support, including more money for self-employed workers.
The Self-Employment Income Support Scheme support will be increased, with the third grant covering November to January calculated at 80 per cent of average trading profits, up to a maximum of ÂŁ7,500. Guaranteed funding for the UKâs devolved administrations has been raised by ÂŁ2 billion to ÂŁ16 billion.
More details at www.gov.uk
The UK Government also announced:
- VAT deferral payments spread until March
- Bounce Back Loans top-ups
- Extension to home-ownersâ mortgage payment holiday Cash grants of up to ÂŁ3,000 per month for closed businesses
- Up to ÂŁ500 million council funding to support local public health response
- Extending government-backed loan schemes and Future Fund to January
This article is part of a paid for Partnership with the UK Government
HELP PACKAGE âIS A LIFELINEâ
The UK Governmentâs new help package provides a âlifelineâ according to an English recruitment firmâs MD.
âIt will certainly ease pressure as we head towards Christmas and into the new year,â said KD Recruitmentâs Kelly Dunn, continuing to use Coronavirus Job Retention Scheme.
âThese lifelines are vital to help businesses. Knowing a companyâs biggest outgoing (payroll) is paid by the government will allow businesses to focus on their plans for 2021 and how to bounce back better. These extensions will mean the difference between businesses closing for good or now being able to look to the future and surviving this pandemic.â
EXTENSION âTO PROTECT JOBSâ
Owners of a Northern Ireland baby product manufacturer, already benefitting from the UK Governmentâs Coronavirus Job Retention Scheme and grants, hailed the latest measures as âpositiveâ.
âMore security for many until March,â said Sinead Murphy, who owns Newtownards-based Shnuggle with husband Adam.
The firm furloughed five staff from a 16-strong team. âWe took everything we could get our hands on really,â continued Sinead.
âFor those who have the means to survive until spring, this extension will give some peace of mind, meaning they can protect jobs and hopefully begin to rebuild their businesses in the near future.â
âRATES BREAK HUGES FOR USâ
Scottish trampoline park bosses are jumping for joy at the UK Governmentâs announcement of continued Coronavirus Job Retention Scheme support.
âThe furlough scheme has been great,â confirmed Julie Mackenzie, owner of Skyline Trampoline Park, Inverurie, Aberdeenshire, âand the business rates break was huge for us.â
She explained: âThat is a ÂŁ7,400 a month bill for us, which we wonât pay till the end of January.â
Also welcomed is VAT deferral payment plan spread until March. âI feel optimistic,â added Julie, whose business reopened to enjoy an October half-term boost, and is now able to furlough six of 25 workers while offering other staff more work.
âWE WONâT LET ANYONE GOâ
The continued Coronavirus Job Retention Scheme support has put a spring in the step of a Welsh sock manufacturers boasting VIP clientele.
âIt will make a big difference because we are traditionally quieter in the spring.
âGetting this furlough money means we donât have to let anyone go,â said Chris Jones, owner of Corgi luxury sock store, in Ammanford, South Wales.
âOtherwise weâd lose skills. We canât afford to lose anybody,â continued the business boss whose skilled workforce numbers 60, and whose customers include Prince Charles and actor Daniel Radcliffe. Also applying for a Business Resilience Grant, he added: âI feel really positive.â