We use cookies to make your experience better. To comply with the new e-Privacy directive, we need to ask for your consent to set the cookies. Learn more.
The FIA writes to the Government on the current isolation rules for key workers
The FIA writes to the Government on the current isolation rules for key workers
We have recently written a letter to the government to relay our concerns that we have with the current process and the implications it is having on life safety in the UK.
Many of our and BSIA’s members have reached out to us in the last few days highlighting the detrimental impact that both the NHS COVID 19 app and Test and Trace is having on their ability to do their crucial work. We have recently written a letter to the government to relay our concerns that we have with the current process and the implications it is having on life safety in the UK. We will be sure to update you as soon as we hear back from the Government.

Below is a collection of information on if you need to isolate after being contacted by the NHS COVID-19 App and how critical services can apply to be exempt from isolation if they are working on a crucial project. The app has always been voluntary to download and any alerts are advisory. However, anyone contacted directly by NHS Test and Trace - either by phone, text or email - must self-isolate.
Critical services
Self-isolation remains an essential tool in our national efforts to reduce the spread of coronavirus. In the small number of situations where the self-isolation of close contacts would result in serious disruption to critical services, a limited number of named workers may be able to leave self-isolation under specific controls for the purpose of undertaking critical work only. This process is only intended to run until 16 August 2021, when fully vaccinated close contacts will be exempt from self-isolation. The government will continue to engage closely on this with employers over the summer Who this applies to This policy only applies to you if your employer has received a letter from a government department on which your name is listed. In this event you will be able to leave self-isolation to undertake critical work. In all other cases, you should continue to self-isolate as now. This policy applies to named workers in specifically approved workplaces who are fully vaccinated (defined as someone who is 14 days post-final dose) and who have been identified as close contacts. Permission to attend work is contingent on following certain controls, agreed by the Department of Health and Social Care, to mitigate the risk of increased infection. This is not a blanket exemption for all workers in a sector. The test that is applied when identifying if an individual could attend work is whether they work in critical elements of national infrastructure and whether their absence would be likely to lead to the loss or compromise of this infrastructure resulting in one or both of the following:- major detrimental impact on the availability, integrity or delivery of essential services – including those services whose integrity, if compromised, could result in significant loss of life or casualties
- significant impact on national security, national defence, or the functioning of the state
- the number of people who it is proposed would leave self-isolation
- the roles those individuals need to perform
- the impact failure to do this would have and when this impact is likely to materialise (for example, is it already an issue or likely to materialise in the coming days)