13 November 2020
The Public Services Committee has published its first report, A critical juncture for public services: lessons from COVID-19. In the report−the first comprehensive analysis of how public services responded to COVID-19−the Committee discusses lessons to be learned from the pandemic and recommends a number of principles to transform public service delivery.
The Committee concluded that many public service providers and councils developed “remarkable innovations” to meet the COVID-19 challenge; decisions which before the pandemic took months were made in minutes. The inquiry heard from people who use public services every day, many of whom welcomed these developments.
However, the Committee identified weaknesses in public service delivery that give cause for concern:
The Committee was particularly concerned about public service provision during the pandemic for Black, Asian and Minority Ethnic and Gypsy, Roma and Traveller people, homeless people, and people with complex needs.
Baroness Armstrong of Hill Top, Chair, Public Services Committee, said:
“The Government, local authorities and other public service providers are not working together effectively to protect vulnerable children.
“Before COVID-19 many vulnerable children couldn’t get the public services they needed. With most unable to attend school because of the lockdown they had little support. Many more have become invisible after losing contact with public services during the pandemic”
Baroness Armstrong added:
“There should be no return to the pre-COVID-19 status quo.
“The fight against health inequality should be a priority for the Government. Black, Asian and Minority Ethnic people suffered disproportionately due to health inequalities and unequal access to services.
“The Government's own pandemic planning identified that social care would need significant support during the outbreak of a disease like COVID-19, yet social care was the poor relation to the NHS when it came to funding during lockdown. Discharging people from hospital into care settings without testing and with inadequate PPE led to the tragic loss of thousands of older and disabled people.”
In its conclusions, the Committee recommended adopting several key principles:
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