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New statement of changes to Immigration Rules adds care workers to the Shortage Occupation List

Summary

As announced in December, Immigration Rules changed to help tackle shortages in care sector

By EIN
Date of Publication:

A short new statement of changes to the Immigration Rules has been published today to add care workers to the Shortage Occupation List, as was originally announced just after Christmas (see our earlier article here).

Immigration stampImage credit: UK GovernmentThe six-page statement (HC 1019) is available here and the accompanying explanatory memorandum is here.

The explanatory memorandum sums up the purpose of the changes in a single sentence: "The changes being made add care workers to the Shortage Occupation List, and make the role eligible for the Skilled Worker route, disapplying the usual requirement that a role must be skilled to at least Regulated Qualification Framework (RQF) level 3."

It adds that the changes are aimed at helping to alleviate current pressures on the health and social care system as a result of Covid-19.

The changes will be implemented on 15 February 2022.

In a written statement announcing the changes, Kevin Foster MP, the Parliamentary Under Secretary of State for Safe and Legal Migration, told the Commons:

"My Rt Hon friend the Home Secretary is today laying before the House a Statement of Changes in Immigration Rules.

"The Migration Advisory Committee (MAC) is undertaking a review into the impact of the ending of free movement on the social care sector. Whilst the MAC are not publishing their full report until the end of April 2022, they felt they had sufficient evidence with which to make a recommendation in their Annual Report to add care workers to the Health and Care visa and the Shortage Occupation List. Their recommendation was made in the context of increased demand for adult social services, increasing vacancies and issues with staff retention. They have re-asserted their position of the underlying cause of recruitment and retention problems being mainly due to pay, terms and conditions, and lack of progression in the sector. This is now coupled with pay in other competing sectors (such as catering, retail and cleaning) catching up to the adult social care sector, due to the rise in the National Living Wage.

"In light of the clear evidence which the MAC have presented and the important role the sector is playing in face of the exceptional situation during the pandemic, the Government announced on 24th December we were agreeing to their recommendation. As recommended by the Migration Advisory Committee, the salary threshold will be in line with the rest of the Shortage Occupation List – with a reduced minimum salary threshold of £20,480 in place (compared with a general threshold of £25,600 for non-shortage occupations) and applicants will need to meet all of the other requirements, such as having a job offer from an approved Home Office sponsor and meeting English language requirements.

"Taken together with the wider package of support measures for the adult social care workforce announced since September – including the £462.5m to help local authorities and care providers retain and recruit staff over winter, on top of the £500m for workforce training, qualifications and well-being announced as part of the Health and Social Care Levy, they will help us ensure sustainability and success for our long-term vision for this sector.

"As the MAC does not believe immigration can solve all, or even most, of the problems associated with social care recruitment, but can help to alleviate difficulties in the short term, we are therefore creating an initial 12-month application window whereby workers can apply for visas in this occupation. During this time, successful applicants will have all the same rights, benefits and obligations as other Health & Care visa holders – including the right to bring dependents and to settle permanently in the UK. This decision will be reviewed by Government later this year to determine the success of this change in relation to wider changes in the sector to attract and retain staff, the position with regard to the impact of the pandemic and whether it remains appropriate for this occupation to remain on the Shortage Occupation List.

"This does not signal a departure from the RQF 3 threshold and the Points-Based System more broadly, which the MAC agrees strike the right balance between access to international talent and resident labour. Employers must continue to invest in training, opportunities and wages for the resident workforce to ensure the UK's hard-working care workers get the type of rewarding packages they deserve and which are common in other sectors."