Shadow Minister for North Wales Mark
Isherwood has expressed
concern over the £22.7 million support package announced recently by the Welsh Government for local authorities to help adult social care
providers meet the additional costs associated with the pandemic.
Although it is
now August, this funding covers the period from July 1st, and
leading figures in the care sector have claimed it discriminates against care
providers in North Wales in favour of those in the south of the country.
Mr Isherwood has been calling for more support for care homes in North
Wales since June and has challenged the Health Minister over the matter on a
number of occasions during virtual Plenary meetings of the Welsh Parliament in
recent months.
Therefore, whilst welcoming the additional support package, he is
disappointed that care home providers in North Wales will receive substantially
less than those in South Wales.
He said: “Once again, care home providers in the North are the poor relations.
"As
Mario Kreft MBE, the
Chair of Care Forum Wales has stated: 'Funding is allocated via local councils
and health boards which means we essentially have 29 variations on a theme
which is an absolute nonsense. The vast majority of care home residents are
publicly funded and providers have been forced to dance to the varying tunes of
local councils for a generation. The absurdity of the situation was recently
highlighted by the Cheapskate Awards handed out by Care Forum Wales which
illustrated the unfair post code lottery plaguing the sector in Wales.'
“Five North Wales Local Authorities were
presented with Cheapskate Awards for paying amongst the lowest care home fees
in Wales amid the coronavirus crisis, with an inbuilt North-South divide.
“Sadly, care homes in North Wales are being
left behind when it comes to funding, despite calls from myself, other
politicians and the sector, for North Wales to be treated fairly.
“As Care Forum Wales have said, the overwhelming priority now must be
‘to devise a national action plan to implement long-term structural change to
mend a system that’s broken and fragmented’.”
Mr Isherwood added: “Aside from the unfairness of the system,
Care Forum Wales have also warned that this additional funding will serve only
as a ‘temporary sticking plaster’.
"The Health Minister has said he will review
the situation in September, but the majority of care home providers cannot
wait until then. They
need action now from the Minister to balance the system and alleviate as far as
possible the likely impacts of any second wave of Covid-19 infections, and the
routine seasonal flus and other pressures that the latter part of the year will
bring, so that care homes and nursing homes can support NHS Wales through this
coming winter.”