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Justin Welby in front of BBC
Welby’s new year message will be broadcast on BBC One at 12.55pm on Sunday. Photograph: Tayfun Salcı/ZUMA Press Wire/Rex/Shutterstock
Welby’s new year message will be broadcast on BBC One at 12.55pm on Sunday. Photograph: Tayfun Salcı/ZUMA Press Wire/Rex/Shutterstock

Archbishop of Canterbury to urge UK government to fix ‘broken’ care system

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Justin Welby will highlight importance of supporting care workers and unpaid carers in new year message on BBC

The archbishop of Canterbury will urge the government to take action to fix the country’s “broken” social care system in his new year address.

In a message broadcast on Sunday afternoon, Justin Welby will say care homes are struggling to deal with rising bills while trying to find and retain the staff they need to keep going.

The country – including the government – needs to “rise to the challenge” of repairing the present system, he will say.

His intervention comes as he prepares to publish a “significant report” on social care with the archbishop of York, Stephen Cottrell.

“We know our care system is broken, but it doesn’t have to be. We can rise to the challenge of fixing it. That means action from all of us: you, me, families, communities, government,” he will say.

Welby is to stress the importance of ensuring care workers are properly valued by society.

“Why work as a carer when you might get paid more in less demanding jobs? Caring’s certainly not easy. Good carers are wonderful people to be valued,” he will say.

His report, due out in a few weeks, will offer a “hopeful vision of our society”.

“One where no one is held back, overlooked or treated as a burden – where families and unpaid carers get support too,” he will say.

“Caring goes to the heart of what it means to be human. It is hard, but it can also be the most life-giving thing we ever do. It comes back to that essential lesson: we need each other.”

A government spokesperson said ministers had prioritised social care in last month’s autumn statement, making available up to £7.5bn in support over the next two years.

“This will allow more people to access high-quality care and help address some of the challenges in the sector – including waiting lists, low fee rates, and workforce pressures,” the spokesperson said.

“The government remains committed to delivering adult social care charging reform and supporting those who need it, which is why we are giving local authorities additional time to prepare and providing more funding to help with their immediate pressures.”

Welby’s new year message will be broadcast on BBC One at 12.55pm on Sunday.

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