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Kate Forbes: National Care Service plans are ambitious but must be decentralised

The SNP leadership hopeful is proposing an increase to carers wages to £15 per hour to make the role more attractive.

Rebecca McCurdy
Wednesday 01 March 2023 10:23 EST
Scottish National Party leadership candidate Kate Forbes has discussed how she would change the controversial National Care Service proposals. (Jane Barlow/PA)
Scottish National Party leadership candidate Kate Forbes has discussed how she would change the controversial National Care Service proposals. (Jane Barlow/PA) (PA Wire)

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SNP leadership hopeful Kate Forbes has said she is “hugely supportive” of her party’s National Care Service (NCS) proposals, but pledged to decentralise the approach to support local services.

The controversial plans currently would take social care out of the hands of local authorities and place responsibility with regional care boards which are accountable to ministers.

It has received significant criticism from trade unions and local councils over a lack of clarity and fears of job losses.

We need to have a decentralised approach

Kate Forbes

But during a visit to Highland Home Carers in Inverness, which includes a national care training academy, Ms Forbes pledged to put carers at the heart of the strategy.

Her plans would see the minimum wage for carers increased to £15 per hour and includes training pathways for carers to expand their careers.

But Ms Forbes’ plans could be scuppered by the financial problems faced by the Scottish Government, with fellow leadership contender and Health Secretary Humza Yousaf telling a Holyrood committee in January that a rise to £15 per hour for care staff would cost “well over £1 billion”.

Scottish Labour deputy leader Jackie Baillie accused the Finance Secretary of showing a “brass neck” having previously not supported her party’s calls for raising the social care pay floor to £15.

She also expressed the need to move away from “getting sucked into additional bureaucracy”.

The Finance Secretary is one of three candidates vying for the top job to replace Nicola Sturgeon as First Minister.

She told the PA news agency: “I’m hugely supportive of the National Care Service. I think it is a big opportunity, particularly after Covid, to ensure that the care sector has fair work at its heart, actually delivers the care right across Scotland, reducing the postcode lottery that’s been identified.”

And the leadership candidate, who will take part in the party’s first hustings on Wednesday evening in Cumbernauld alongside Humza Yousaf and Ash Regan, said it is crucial to ensure the service works for all areas.

She said: “We need to have a decentralised approach. A model that works, for example, in Stornoway probably wont work in the middle of Glasgow.

“But we need to empower local teams to provide that care but that can all be done under the banner of a national care service. I think that will attract the confidence of the trade unions as well as the wider care sector.”

Improving the care sector will also help speed up the NHS recovery from the Covid-19 pandemic.

The NHS has been under significant pressure in the last year, with soaring A&E waiting times and rising delayed discharges.

Ms Forbes said: Delayed discharge is one of the costliest challenges facing the NHS right now and it boils down to whether or not there is care packages waiting for individuals who don’t need to be in hospital, which is why ensuring that the care sector offers rewarding careers, has fair work at its heart and ultimately is an attractive place for carers will do a lot to reduce that delayed discharges.

I think anything that disempowers and centralises power is not going to fix the problem

Kate Forbes

“That’s why when it comes to the finances, if we can save on the delayed discharge which is costing the NHS millions of pounds, unnecessarily, we can reinvest that into caring.”

Ms Forbes first hinted at a rethink of the NCS proposals during an online event with Reform Scotland on Tuesday.

She said: “I don’t think a scheme can be effectively delivered unless it has the confidence of the people that are either going to be implementing it, managing it, or forming how it’s run.”

She added that fixing the problems “may not require a National Care Service, it may require us to be a little bit more nimble and able to plug gaps in care, and I think anything that disempowers and centralises power is not going to fix the problem.”

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