Tag Archives: Living Wage

Penrose Care head promotes Living Wage in social care at the House of Lords

Belsize Village, London – On March 10, 2015, Penrose Care managing director, Robert Stephenson-Padron, remarked at a Citizens UK / Living Wage Foundation event at the House of Lords on “Promoting the Living Wage in Challenging Sectors.” The event was hosted by Baroness Jan Royall.

“My work at Penrose Care has proven to me that paying the living wage is a credible message to our employees that we care about them as human beings, and I would encourage all employers who can, to pay the Living Wage,” said Mr. Stephenson-Padron, whose full remarks can be found here.

Penrose Care, as the UK’s pioneer of ethics in home care, is persistently committed to promoting ethics in social care which the company has demonstrated leads to high quality care.

ENDS

Media Contact

Penrose Care

Robert Stephenson-Padron

robert.padron@penrosecare.co.uk

0207 435 2644

Citizens UK / Living Wage Foundation

Gillian Owen

gillian.owen@citizensuk.org.uk

07876 246150

About Penrose Care

Penrose Care is an ethical provider of home care services London, United Kingdom to adults with disabilities and elderly persons, including those with dementia.  The company operates upon a fundamental belief that to promote a caring workforce, the organisation itself must be caring. As the pioneer of ethics in home care in the UK, Penrose Care in 2012 became one of the first four providers in the country to become an Accredited Living Wage Employer and in 2013 the first independent sector provider to be compliant with Citizens UK’s landmark Social Care Charter.

Penrose Care’s ethical approach promotes higher quality social care workers and low staff turnover which in turn results in excellent care. Penrose Care is headquartered in Belsize Village, north London and was founded by Robert Stephenson-Padron, a healthcare research analyst, and Dr. Matthew Knight, a hospital physician.

2015-03-10 (Stephenson-Padron, Robert Penrose Care) House of Lords quote photo

Quote photo on Living Wage of Robert Stephenson-Padron from remarks at the House of Lords.

 

2015-03-10 (Penrose Care) Robert Stephenson-Padron speaking House of Lords

Robert Stephenson-Padron speaking about promoting the Living Wage in home care at the House of Lords (March 10, 2015)

Promoting the Living Wage in Home Care: Remarks at the House of Lords

Below is a transcript of remarks by Robert Stephenson-Padron delivered at the Citizens UK / Living Wage Foundation event “Promoting the Living Wage in Challenging Sectors” on March 10, 2015 at the House of Lords. The event was hosted by Baroness Jan Royall

My name is Robert Stephenson-Padron, managing director of home care provider Penrose Care. The Living Wage is important to me because in care, I believe that promote a caring workforce the organisation itself must be caring.

To be caring – at its foundation – Penrose Care put in place various ethical initiatives of which the Living Wage is the corner stone, as well as other elements contained in Citizens UK’s landmark Social care Charter: sufficient training, continuity, no short visits, and community engagement.

What have the results been? The results have been a care company which attracts people with a genuine vocation to care, rather than people who have no choice.

Having people in your workforce who genuinely want to care is so important because if you’re a person whose only contact throughout the day is your care worker, it makes a huge difference if that person actually wants to see you.

The ethical care Penrose Care is delivering has also led to business success – which is a testament that doing the right thing can make good business sense. Penrose Care is growing, our customers are ever more satisfied, and our staff morale is always high – it makes it a pleasure to run the organisation.

My work at Penrose Care has proven to me that paying the living wage is a credible message to our employees that we care about them as human beings, and I would encourage all employers who can, to pay the Living Wage.

Robert Stephenson-Padron is the managing director of London-based home care provider Penrose Care that supports the elderly and disabled with social care needs in their own homes. Mr. Stephenson-Padron was named “The Most Outstanding Leader in the Care Sector in the UK” in the 2014 UK Housing Over 50s Housing Awards.

2015-03-10 (Stephenson-Padron, Robert Penrose Care) House of Lords quote photo

Quote photo on Living Wage of Robert Stephenson-Padron from remarks at the House of Lords.

2015-03-10 (Penrose Care) Robert Stephenson-Padron speaking House of Lords

Robert Stephenson-Padron speaking about promoting the Living Wage in home care at the House of Lords (March 10, 2015)

2015-03-10 (Penrose Care) Robert Stephenson-Padron with Baroness Royall

Penrose Care Managing Director Robert Stephenson-Padron with Baroness Jan Royall at the House of Lords (March 10, 2015)

2015-03-10 (Penrose Care) Robert Stephenson-Padron with Living Wage Foundation House of Lords

Penrose Care Managing Director with activists from Citizens UK and the Living Wage Foundation at the House of Lords (March 10, 2015)

New report highlights benefits of the Living Wage in home care

Belsize Village, London – A new report reinforcing the business case for employers to adopt the Living Wage was published on Wednesday, 21 January 2015, at a launch event held at KPMG Glasgow. The report includes evidence from six UK business including London-based Penrose Care, which is one of a small number of home care providers in the UK that has demonstrated the courage and leadership to be an Accredited Living Wage Employer.

2015-01-21 (Living wage study launch) 02 - Robert Stephenson-Padron John Swinney

Penrose Care MD Robert Stephenson-Padron & Scottish Deputy First Minister John Swinney

The report highlights clear evidence demonstrating how UK employers paying the Living Wage benefit from improved staff morale, retention and productivity – resulting in long-term business benefits.

The knowledge exchange project, carried out by the University of Strathclyde and the Living Wage Foundation – and commissioned by Barclays – uses case studies demonstrating business benefits and examples of how to mitigate associated costs.

Key findings include:

  • Implementing the LW encourages businesses to re-evaluate their approaches to staffing and payment [or similar] in the UK, leading to more effective and efficient working patterns in the long term
  • Implementing the Living Wage encourages businesses to re-evaluate their business model, leading to more effective and efficient working patterns in the long term
  • Increased skills development among existing staff
  • Increased staff performance and job satisfaction
  • Increased staff retention
  • Long-term reputational benefits for Living Wage employers

The study included evidence from five major accredited Living Wage employers, covering more than 327,000 staff, and a member of the Living Wage Foundation’s Service Provider Recognition programme.

Penrose Care co-founder and non-executive director, Dr. Matthew Knight:

“For me, paying the Living Wage is part of a mentality of treating our employees with respect and dignity. When we started Penrose Care we wanted to provide compassionate and human care to our clients- being a Living Wage employer has helped us attract and retain high quality and motivated staff which has been the foundation upon which we have built our service. I’d say to anyone in doubt about whether they should adopt the Living Wage- Go For It!”

Professional services firm and Living Wage employer, KPMG, hosted a breakfast briefing in their Glasgow office to discuss the findings in the report today (Wednesday 21 January).

Mike Kelly, Chairman of the Living Wage Foundation and Director of Living Wage at KPMG, said:

“While the report accepts initial costs of implementing the Living Wage can be an issue for companies, it clearly demonstrates the business benefits of becoming a Living Wage employer and provides working examples of how businesses can mitigate those additional costs.”

Deputy First Minister John Swinney MSP, who attended the launch, said:

“Tackling low pay is a key priority of the Scottish Government and we fully support the living wage campaign. Just this week the First Minister visited Scotland’s 100th Living Wage accredited company which demonstrates we are making real progress on this agenda.”

“We recognise the real difference the Living Wage makes to the people of Scotland which is why we are the first Scottish Government ever to pay the living wage to all employees.”

“The knowledge exchange project, carried out by the University of Strathclyde and the Living Wage Foundation – and commissioned by Barclays –gives evidence of the business benefits of paying the Living Wage. It isn’t simply good for individuals, it is also good for companies. It helps to increase staff retention, reduce absenteeism and enhance businesses reputation.”

Dr Andrea Coulson, Senior Lecturer of Accounting at the University of Strathclyde and primary author of the report, said:

“Reducing in-work poverty is a serious challenge for business and there is no doubt that paying a Living Wage and improving employee working conditions is an important step in the right direction.

“The report highlights detailed case study evidence of how costs of adopting the Living Wage are being mitigated and value created for employers, their employees and on-site contract staff.”

Since rolling out the Living Wage to all full-time staff and suppliers, including on-site contractors, KPMG has seen an increase in employee motivation, higher employee retention, and reduced absenteeism. This in turn has resulted in lower recruitment costs, more opportunities for staff development and the opportunity for KPMG to mitigate costs by broadening responsibilities of current staff. The firm has also seen improvements in bottom line performance in both financial and non-financial indicators such as employee engagement and overall customer satisfaction levels.

Jenny Stewart, Head of Infrastructure and Government at KPMG, said:

“KPMG has been firmly committed to the Living Wage principle for many years. We have been paying the Living Wage to our own staff since 2006 and ensuring it is paid by sub-contractors since 2007. We have seen the benefits”

“Facilities Management staff satisfaction levels are higher than before and as a result the business has become more efficient. During the first year of implementation, turnover in our cleaning staff dropped from 44% to 27%. Absenteeism has also since dropped by 10%. Our suppliers are also benefiting from being associated with Living Wage and are now experiencing greater numbers of applicants to fill vacancies then previously.”

Other case studies featured in the Living Wage report include Barclays, Aviva, Penrose Care, Enhance Office Cleaning and SSE.

Dominic Johnson, Employee Relations Director at Barclays, commented:

“Not only is paying people who work on our behalf a wage that supports a decent standard of living a responsible thing to do, there are also clear business, societal and economic benefits to doing so.

“We are pleased to support this knowledge exchange project conducted by the University of Strathclyde and the Living Wage Foundation which investigates further the qualitative and quantitative benefits to businesses of paying the Living Wage, and hope that the Living Wage continues to gain increased support from the business community.”

2015-01-21 (Living wage study launch) 03 Barclays Strathclyde Penrose Care KPMG

Left to Right: Dominic Johnson, Employee Relations Director, Barclays PLC; Philippa Birtwell, Head of Reputation Risk Management, Barclays Bank PLC; James Bonner, Independent Researcher & study co-author; Dr Andrea Coulson, University of Stathclyde & study co-author; Robert Stephenson-Padron, Managing Director, Penrose Care; Cllr Norma Austin Hart, City of Edinburgh Council; Tom Henderson, Welfare Reform and Regional Manager, North, Scottish Business in the Community; Michael Kelly, Head of CSR of KPMG UK and Chairman of the Living Wage Foundation

 

Link to the Living Wage study by the University of Strathclyde: Living wage report

ENDS

Media Contact

Penrose Care

Robert Stephenson-Padron

robert.padron@penrosecare.co.uk

0207 435 2644

University of Strathclyde

Dr. Andrea B. Coulson

a.b.coulson@strath.ac.uk

0141 548 3179

About Penrose Care

Penrose Care is an ethical provider of home care services London, United Kingdom to adults with disabilities and elderly persons, including those with dementia. The company operates upon a fundamental belief that to promote a caring workforce, the organisation itself must be caring. As the pioneer of ethics in home care in the UK, Penrose Care in 2012 became one of the first four providers in the country to become an Accredited Living Wage Employer and in 2013 the first independent sector provider to be compliant with Citizens UK’s landmark Social Care Charter.

Penrose Care’s ethical approach promotes higher quality social care workers and low staff turnover which in turn results in excellent care. Penrose Care is headquartered in Belsize Village, north London and was founded by Robert Stephenson-Padron, a healthcare research analyst, and Dr. Matthew Knight, a hospital physician.

Penrose Care continues to lead on ethics in home care – implements Living Wage rate increase immediately

Penrose Care continues to lead on ethics in home care – implements Living Wage rate increase immediately

Belsize Village, Hampstead, London, UK: Home care provider Penrose Care has implemented immediately the increase in the London Living Wage rate announced by Mayor of London Boris Johnson this morning at Google UK Headquarters. The new London Living Wage rate is £9.15/hour from £8.80/hour.[1]

Penrose Care managing director, Robert Stephenson-Padron said:

“The Living Wage Foundation’s guidance is to phase in increases in the Living Wage over 6 months, but Penrose Care planned for the increase, and therefore – keeping with past practice at the firm – we have implemented the increase starting this morning.”

In October 2012, Penrose Care became one of the first four home care providers in the UK to become an Accredited Living Wage Employer out of then-nearly 6,000 providers. Uniquely however, Penrose Care also pays its workers for travel time between visits.

In comparison, the National Audit Office in March 2014 released a report finding that 160,000 to 220,000 direct care workers in the UK are paid below the national minimum wage “due to deductions for uniforms or due to travel time between visits”.[2] The current national minimum wage is £6.50/hour for persons 21 and over.[3]

“In a sector mired by scandal over the minimum wage, our Living Wage commitment is a credible message internally and externally of Penrose Care’s commitment to ethics. It has been at the heart of our caring culture which results in us attracting top-tier care workers, retaining them, and delivering support to elderly and disabled persons that generates consistent excellent client feedback,” said Mr. Stephenson-Padron. “Implementing an increase in the London Living Wage at Penrose Care is not without challenges, but those challenges are worth surmounting for doing the right thing for our workers.”

Penrose Care employees already on a wage rate higher than the London Living Wage will have their pay reviewed this month.

Employers choose to pay the Living Wage on a voluntary basis. The Living Wage enjoys cross party support, with public backing from the Prime Minister and the Leader of the Opposition. Today there are over 1,000 Accredited Living Wage Employers in the United Kingdom, more than double last year’s figure of 432.

[1] New 2015 Living Wage Rates Announced (Living Wage Foundation: 3 Nov 2014), available here: http://www.livingwage.org.uk/news/new-2015-living-wage-rates-announced

[2] Adult social care in England: overview (National Audit Office: 13 Mar 2014), pg42, available here: http://www.nao.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2015/03/Adult-social-care-in-England-overview.pdf

[3] National minimum wage rates (Gov.UK, accessed 03 Nov 2014), available here: https://www.gov.uk/national-minimum-wage-rates

ENDS

Media Contact

Penrose Care

Robert Stephenson-Padron

robert.padron@penrosecare.co.uk

0207 435 2644

Living Wage Foundation

Emma Kosmin

emma.kosmin@livingwage.org.uk

0207 043 9882

Mayor of London Boris Johnson London Living Wage increase

London Mayor Boris Johnson announces the new London Living Wage

About Penrose Care

Penrose Care is an ethical provider of home care services London, United Kingdom to adults with disabilities and elderly persons, including those with dementia. The company operates upon a fundamental belief that to promote a caring workforce, the organisation itself must be caring. As the pioneer of ethics in home care in the UK, Penrose Care in 2012 became one of the first four providers in the country to become an Accredited Living Wage Employer and in 2013 the first independent sector provider to be compliant with Citizens UK’s landmark Social Care Charter.

Penrose Care’s ethical approach promotes higher quality social care workers and low staff turnover which in turn results in excellent care. Penrose Care is headquartered in Belsize Village, north London and was founded by Robert Stephenson-Padron, a healthcare research analyst, and Dr. Matthew Knight, a hospital physician.