People will be required by law to self-isolate from 28 September, supported by payment of £500 for those on lower incomes who cannot work from home and have lost income as a result. New fines for those breaching self-isolation rules will start at £1,000 – bringing this in line with the penalty for breaking quarantine after international travel - but could increase to up to £10,000 for repeat offences and for the most egregious breaches, including for those preventing others from self-isolating.
For
example, this could include business owners who threaten self-isolating staff
with redundancy if they do not come to work, sending a clear message that this
will not be tolerated.
A
number of steps will be taken to make sure that people are complying with the
rules, these include:
· - NHS Test and Trace call handlers making regular contact with
those self-isolating, with the ability to escalate any suspicion of
non-compliance to Local Authorities and local police;
· - Using police resources to check compliance in highest incidence
areas and in high-risk groups, based on local intelligence;
· - Investigating and prosecuting high-profile and egregious cases
of non-compliance; and
· - Acting on instances where third parties have identified others
who have tested positive but are not self-isolating.
Recognising
that self-isolation is one of the most powerful tools for controlling the
transmission of Covid-19, this new Test and Trace Support payment of £500 will help that those on low incomes to self-isolate without worry about
their finances.
Just
under 4 million people who are in receipt of benefits in England will be
eligible for this payment, which will be available to those who are required to
self-isolate from 28 September.
Local
Authorities will be working to set up these self-isolation support schemes and
the Government expects them to be in place by 12 October. Those who start to
self-isolate from 28 September will receive backdated payments once the scheme
is set up in their Local Authority.
This
financial support comes as the government places a legal requirement on people
to self-isolate when instructed to by NHS Test and Trace and introduces tougher
fines for breaking the rules.
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