Guernsey Press

St John Ambulance preparing to make more than 250 staff redundant

The charity offers workplace training, first aid cover and supports the emergency services.

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St John Ambulance is preparing to make more than 250 staff redundant as the charity loses £1.4 million a week in revenue due to the coronavirus pandemic.

According to a confidential internal document seen by the PA news agency, the leading first aid charity is preparing to make around 255 staff redundant.

The charity confirmed it may need to make around 250 people redundant as its income-generating work has largely been halted due to Covid-19.

As well as offering workplace training, St John Ambulance provides first aid cover at thousands of public events and supports the emergency services.

Several hundred members have offered their services to the NHS Nightingale hospital in east London during the pandemic.

The redundancies will not affect the charity’s volunteers or their ability to support hospitals and ambulance services.

“The forecast for the return of workplace training has some unknowns but it is likely to be late-2021 before we get anywhere near the volumes of 2019.

“Public events, which include spectators, are now unlikely to return until 2021 with several sporting organisations saying that they think spectators should be excluded until a vaccine for Covid-19 is widely available.”

St John Ambulance confirmed it currently predicts a net loss of £25 million in 2020 and £20 million in 2021.

The charity document said the 255 figure was approximate and notwithstanding measures to reduce the impact including the Government’s Job Retention Scheme, freezing recruitment and retraining some employees.

Around half of its staff have been furloughed.

The redundancies are expected to take place between August this year and March 2021, with most occurring by the end of the year.

The majority will be in the workplace first aid training part of the organisation, the charity told PA.

Chief executive Martin Houghton-Brown said: “St John Ambulance is playing an important role in supporting hospitals and ambulance services with the national fight against Covid-19.

“However, we are a charity and have seen major sources of income dry up over recent months.

“This means that we need to reduce costs substantially, which might see around 250 people being made redundant in order to secure our survival and continue serving communities in future.

“We have benefited from government support as well as the furlough scheme but it is clear that we need to act sooner rather than later to protect our charity.

“We are consulting our employees and engaging with them in the process of finding the most appropriate solutions to reducing our costs.

“We want to ensure that those affected are dealt with fairly and transparently, and will seek to minimise the impact of this as much as we can.”

In March, Mr Houghton-Brown told MPs the charity had funds to last until the summer, but without Government support it would be forced to resort to borrowing to aid the NHS with a potential second wave.

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