Thousands of seafarers to receive fair pay as UK changes law on National Minimum Wage
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Seafarers will be guaranteed the National Minimum Wage thanks to
new legislation coming into force today, helping improve welfare
and protect British jobs, Maritime Minister Robert Courts announced
today. From today (1 October 2020) a change to the law will mean
seafarers will receive pay protection equal to every other sector.
Until now, maritime has been the only sector in the UK that does
not apply National Minimum Wage...Request free trial
Seafarers will be guaranteed the National Minimum Wage thanks
to new legislation coming into force today, helping improve
welfare and protect British jobs, Maritime Minister Robert Courts announced
today.
From today (1 October 2020) a change to the law will mean seafarers will receive pay protection equal to every other sector. Until now, maritime has been the only sector in the UK that does not apply National Minimum Wage protection for workers. This change means that more than 10,000 seafarers across the UK will no longer be undercut, and puts the UK ahead of any other EU state in its protection on pay. The move further enhances the UK’s maritime sector which is recognised as having some of the highest standards in the world.
British seafarers are recognised as some of the most highly skilled worldwide. Buoyed by the highest number of maritime training providers out of any country, mariners can train and qualify on apprenticeships or seafarer training courses at over 25 universities and colleges across the UK.
Today’s announcement builds on the UK government’s longstanding work to safeguard British maritime workers throughout the Covid-19 pandemic, and follows the successful repatriation of 13,000 seafarers from UK shores whose movement was restricted due to closed borders. To ensure their swift protection, the UK held the world’s first maritime summit with the UN and secured international recognition for seafarers as key workers to enable free movement and quicker repatriation for those struggling to get home as a result of the pandemic.
To ensure their swift repatriation, the Maritime Minister wrote to the International Maritime Organization (IMO), the International Labour Organization and the World Health Organization at the start of the outbreak on 23 March pressing that all states follow the UK’s work in repatriating workers regardless of their nationality or employment. To help support their wellbeing here in the UK, working in partnership with the Merchant Navy Welfare Board and Seafarers UK, the government is supporting seafarers in UK shores with mobile internet routers – MiFi units – on board ships where hundreds of seafarers are still waiting to return home giving them free internet access on board so that they can stay in contact with friends and family. Notes to editorsNotes to editors
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