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Protection of Shopworkers

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Retail Randoms

Retail Randoms

LEGISLATION: USDAW

Landmark retailer protection law comes into force in Scotland

Union urges shopworkers to report incidents to ensure the new legislation can have an effect.

Retail workers in Scotland are now better protected as the new Protection of Workers (Retail and Age-restricted Goods and Services) Act 2021 has come into force. The law makes assaulting or abusing retail staff a standalone offence, with tougher sentences for perpetrators.

Paul Gerrard, Co-op’s Director of Campaigns and Public Affairs, said: “We applaud the new legislation in Scotland. Co-op has long supported the new bill; it sends a loud and clear message that criminal behaviour – violence and abuse against shopworkers – will not be tolerated.”

Retail trade union Usdaw is now urging shopworkers to report incidents to ensure the legislation can have an effect on ever-increasing incidents.

For this new legislation to have a real impact, we need to make sure staff report incidents of violence, threats or abuse to their manager. Tracy Gilbert, Usdaw

Tracy Gilbert, Usdaw’s Scottish Regional Secretary, said: “For this new legislation to have a real impact, we need to make sure staff report incidents of violence, threats or abuse to their manager. We are aware that some retail workers may feel it won’t make a difference, but my message to shopworkers is absolutely clear: report it to sort it.

“We are working with the Scottish government, police and retailers to promote the new law. We want criminals to understand that assaulting and abusing shopworkers is unacceptable and will land them with a stiffer sentence. Our hope is that this new legislation will result in retail staff getting the respect they deserve.”

Usdaw’s Freedom from Fear campaign week runs until 29 August, highlighting the violence, threats and abuse retail workers experience daily, with statistics from its annual survey. Preliminary results from nearly 2,000 UK retail staff show that in the last 12 months: 92% have experienced verbal abuse, 70% were threatened by a customer, 14% were assaulted, and one in five victims have never reported an incident to their employer.

General Secretary Paddy Lillis added: “It has been a terrible year for our members, with over 90% of shopworkers suffering abuse, more than two-thirds threatened and one in seven assaulted. We are saying loud and clear that enough is enough, abuse should never be part of the job. We continue to campaign for the UK government to follow MSPs’ lead by extending similar protections to retail staff in England, Wales and Northern Ireland. Retail staff across the UK have a crucial role in our communities and that role must be valued and respected, they deserve the protection of the law.”

The British Retail Consortium is also calling on the UK Government to implement the same legislation in England and Wales. The Police, Crime, Sentencing and Courts Bill will go to the Lords with its second reading on 14 September and the BRC is calling on peers to use this and the following debates as an opportunity to give retail staff the protection they deserve.

Helen Dickinson, Chief Executive of the British Retail Consortium, said: “Retail workers in Dundee are now better protected than those in Doncaster. It is incomprehensible that despite Holyrood’s decisive action, the UK government has so far failed to provide the same protections to shop workers in the rest of the UK.

It is incomprehensible that despite Holyrood’s decisive action, the UK government has so far failed to provide the same protections to shop workers in the rest of the UK. Helen Dickinson, BRC

“Given retail workers are required by law to ask customers for age verification, it is only just that they should be protected by law when this leads to violence and abuse. Retail workers have done an incredible job supporting us throughout this pandemic; they should not have to go to work fearing for their safety. We have campaigned long and hard for retail workers to receive better protections through a standalone offence, and we will not stop until our asks are met.”

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