by Adam Cowper-Smith
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9 April 2021
Some people who a year ago were termed as keyworkers are now being slowly rebranded as unskilled labour The very people, the cleaners who have been relied on to keep the country going during the coronavirus (Covid-19) pandemic, are being slowly but surely degraded to unskilled labour. The thing is that a lot of these keyworkers have been displaced from their previous occupations and have taken cleaning jobs because they needed an income when furloughed schemes expired, job losses and redundancies occurred. At the same time large swathes of labour that while in the EU took advantage of the freedom of movement legislation to work in the UK, subsequently returned to their countries of origin as the pandemic took hold, their incomes were threatened and Brexit drew close. The question is now, what will happen when these same key workers resume their former careers or stay in their countries of origin, where opportunities for them have improved to the point where there's no need for them to come to the UK? Logic says that there will be a shortage of people willing to fill those vacancies left by the current keyworking workforce. These people are often referred to as unskilled workers, however as has come to be accepted when it suits political agendas, these cleaners or should I say cleaning operatives have and always do provide an extremely necessary and valuable service. This by the way really gets me going, most of these unskilled workers are actually highly skilled cleaning operatives and depending on the task that they're employed to perform, they are trained to correctly clean anything from the desk in your office, right through to the artifact right at the top of the building you work in. Or the glass that you stare out of while pondering a problem at work. Implementing the correct technique for cleaning is what sets them apart from the stigmatic stereotypical image of Mr/Mrs Mopp that permeates the industry. How will the shortage of available people to perform these tasks be fulfilled? Recruiting the right people to undertake cleaning services is, and has been an ongoing very time consuming and costly problem for the industry The reduced labour pool is set to become an even more challenging problem to overcome. What then can be done to overcome this shortfall? Where previously people were needed to push a vacuum cleaner around, use a scrubber drying machine to polish floors, now robotized machinery is being brought into the marketplace that can actually do a lot of that work while the the operatives that are there are performing other more intricate duties. On top of that historic methods of cleaning, for example wiping large areas as desks down with cloths, productivity can be considerably improved, simply by introduction of more innovative techniques. So, instead of using a cloth use a microfiber mop designed specifically for cleaning smaller surfaces from desks through to walls, mirrors, glazing, doors. Anything that's got a flat surface that needs cleaning regularly, can be cleaned and all this without necessarily the use of chemicals, because the technology is there now to remove the need for the vast majority of chemicals Now you might think that, that's a bit of a concern considering the pandemic that we've just gone through but actually mechanical cleaning, so cleaning with a cloth or a mop removes in most cases up to 99 percent of dirt and pathogens from the surface. If it's done properly, the disinfectants and detergents remove the remaining up to one thousandth of a percent. Mow I'm not saying that, that's not an important amount but when you consider that the vast majority of surfaces in a working environment, in offices and those sort of complexes aren't actually touched by people, you don't need to disinfect them. So, it can be that machinery can replace some of the workforce, the use of different types of equipment and materials can improve the productivity and that is going to be the way forward for the industry. It's going to take time it's going to take expertise and it's going to take people like me (Adam Cowper-Smith) that know the equipment and the industry sufficiently well to be able to source what's needed to improve the productivity of workforces, so that services can be delivered without the interruption of shortage of labour force.