South Tyneside & Sunderland NHSFT continues with free staff parking

South Tyneside and Sunderland NHS Foundation Trust, which runs Sunderland Royal Hospital, has said it will continue offering free staff parking for now “despite the end of the Government subsidy”.

Free car parking for NHS hospital workers was brought in at the start of the Covid-19 pandemic in a bid to ease mounting pressure on workers.

Following the government’s decision to reverse the move in the wake of falling case rates, union bosses have urged hospital leaders in the North East to hold off bringing the fees back.

Clare Williams, northern regional secretary at UNISON, told the Sunderland ECHO:

“Bringing back costly parking charges won't help the NHS hang on to staff in in the current job market.

"This move will add hundreds of pounds to the cost pressures already facing health staff and reduce morale even further.

“Those already on the brink of leaving the NHS may well see this as the final straw and head for the exit, just as the service needs experienced staff the most."

The union has written to hospital trusts across the North East, calling for staff parking charges to be scrapped “permanently”.

It also claims stretched finances have seen more than a third of staff seek financial support from family or friends in the last year, while more than two fifths have taken on extra work “to make ends meet”.

Kath Griffin, the trust’s executive director of human resources and organisational development, added: “We are very aware the rising cost of living is having an impact on our staff and are looking at a number of ways to further support them, alongside some of the current measures we have in place, such as subsidised food in our restaurants."