Inbound Traveller Advice Update 6th January 2022

People travelling to Scotland from abroad who are fully vaccinated or under the age of 18 will no longer need to take pre-departure Covid tests, and no longer be required to self-isolate on arrival until they’ve received a negative result, from 4am on Friday (7 January).

Travellers in this group will still need to take a test on or before day 2 after arriving in the UK – which can be a lateral flow device rather than a PCR test from Sunday.

Anyone who tests positive on their lateral flow test will need to isolate and take a free confirmatory PCR test.

In addition, vaccine certificates for a further 16 countries and territories have been approved to allow quarantine-free travel to Scotland from 4am on 10 January. The red list of highest risk countries will remain unchanged with no countries currently on the list.

Self-Isolation Rules, Right to Work & SSP Rebate Scheme

Changes to self-isolation rules

Nicola Sturgeon has announced that those self-isolating with coronavirus can end their isolation period after 7 days, providing they don’t have a fever and record 2 negative lateral flow tests (no earlier than day 6 and a second test at least 24 hours later).   There are specific requirements so please read the full guidance available at Coronavirus (COVID-19): Self-isolation guidance for individuals with possible coronavirus infection | NHS inform (note that gov.scot info on self-isolation now signposts to NHS Inform).    Please note, if an employee was told to self-isolate prior to 6 January, they should continue to follow the advice given at that time.

Additionally, throughout the UK, asymptomatic individuals who return a positive lateral flow will no longer have to confirm their result with a PCR test.

Digital right to work checks made permanent

Digital right to work (RTW) checks were introduced on a temporary basis to alleviate the practical difficulties associated with completing physical checks whilst working remotely during the Coronavirus pandemic. It has now been announced that a permanent system of digital RTW checks will be put into place from 6 April 2022.

The cost of the digital right-to-work checks are set to be funded by employers, with an individual check costing between £1.45 and £70, according to the Home Office. In addition, the costs will only be applied to documents from UK nationals, while the existing free online service can still be used for applications from overseas.

Details published of the re-opened SSP Rebate Scheme

On 21 December 2021, the UK Government re-opened the Coronavirus SSP Rebate Scheme

The Scheme covers the cost of up to two weeks’ SSP per employee for Covid-related absences to employers with fewer than 250 employees.

Making a claim

This two-week limit will be reset so an employer will be able to claim up to two weeks per employee regardless of whether they have claimed under the previous scheme for that same employee.

The portal will be live from mid-January 2022, but employers can backdate claims for any Covid-related absences beginning on or after 21 December 2021. Whilst this is described as a temporary scheme in government guidance, no end date has been confirmed for when this scheme will close.

The previous scheme

The existing portal closed on 31 December 2021 for any absences prior to 30 September 2021. Employers will not be able to claim for the period from 1 October – 20 December 2021 inclusive as there was no scheme in operation during that time.

Record keeping

Employers must keep the following records for three years from the date they receive payment for their claim:

  • The dates the employee was off sick
  • Which of those days were qualifying days
  • The reason they said they were off work due to Covid (e.g. positive test/isolation instruction)
  • The employee’s National Insurance number​​​​

Further guidance to be published

Under the previous SSP Rebate scheme, the waiting days were suspended for Covid-related absences to enable employers to pay SSP from the first qualifying day of sickness.  It is anticipated that this rule will continue when the scheme re-opens in January 2022, but further guidance is awaited on this point.

First Minister’s Update 5th January 2022

In a virtual sitting of the Scottish Parliament, the First Minister Nicola Sturgeon provided a Covid-19 update covering the following:

  • Setting out the latest statistics, the First Minister stated that 16,103 positive cases were reported yesterday, 1,223 were in hospital with Covid, 42 were in intensive care, and there were a further 5 deaths, taking the total number of deaths under the daily definition to 9,872. The FM added that, due to the omicron variant, tomorrow’s figures would likely show that Scotland would pass 1m reported Covid cases.
  • She confirmed that there would be no additional measures introduced by the Scottish Government but that existing measures, such as 1m social distancing in hospitality, limitations on event numbers and closure in nightclubs, would likely remain in place until 17 January. In addition, while this is not legally binding, the Scottish Government would continue to advise the public to limit contact with people in other households as far as possible – and to limit the number of households in any indoor gathering to a maximum of 3.
  • She confirmed that the Scottish Government is working on a new strategic framework, expected to be published “within the next few weeks”, on new measures to manage Covid-19 which are “more proportionate and sustainable and less restrictive.”
  • The FM unveiled two changes to self-isolation rules, mirroring the approach taken in other parts of the UK, which would come into effect from midnight: (1) the self-isolation period for Covid cases would be cut from 10 days to 7, if people record two negative tests and have no symptoms; and (2) for close contacts of positive cases, the requirement to self-isolate will end and be replaced by a requirement to take a lateral flow test every day for 7 days.
  • Following on from her announcement last week on business support, the FM noted an allocation of a further £55m. This would include up to £28m to taxi and private hire drivers and operators, £19m supporting services such as beauticians and hairdressers, £5m for sport, and an additional £3m for tourism.