Public trust is key as country returns to work – The Yorkshire Post says

TODAY heralds a day of trepidation for a great many families as they prepare to return to work – or school – for the first time in many months.
Passenger numbers at Leeds Station have dropped markedly during the lockdown - but will people heed the Government's message to return to work today?Passenger numbers at Leeds Station have dropped markedly during the lockdown - but will people heed the Government's message to return to work today?
Passenger numbers at Leeds Station have dropped markedly during the lockdown - but will people heed the Government's message to return to work today?

It’s not the ‘return to normal’ portrayed by the Government. It’s a tentative step into the unknown as living and working with Covid-19 becomes the ‘new normal’.

And it’s why our first appeal is a societal message rather than a political one – look out for family, friends and neighbours on such a difficult day and offer them your support and counsel. They will be eternally grateful because they, too, are as perplexed as everyone else about the now endless mixed messages – and U-turns – from the Government on just about every aspect of Covid-19.

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In turn, it is this issue of trust – or mistrust – which explains the reluctance of many to head back to the office or those groups of people wilfully disregarding official guidance on social distancing and so on. There has been a breakdown in the Government’s communications, one that can be traced back to Boris Johnson’s chief aide Dominic Cummings and his own defiance of the lockdown, and it cannot be ignored as Parliament, too, resumes following its own summer recess.

Families are due to return to work - and school - this week for the first time since the lockdown.Families are due to return to work - and school - this week for the first time since the lockdown.
Families are due to return to work - and school - this week for the first time since the lockdown.

This country will be better placed to withstand the deepest recession in history, and react to sporadic outbreaks of the virus, if the advice and guidance to the country at large is far clearer than it has been in recent weeks.

But it also requires Boris Johnson to empower public health leaders like Professor Chris Whitty, Sir Martin Vallance and their close colleagues rather than appearing to sideline them because of Downing Street’s desire to prioritise the appointment of a TV spin doctor to host televised press conferences. It is another move which is unlikely to restore that most elusive commodity of all – trust – if Ministers are to be assured of the level of public compliance witnessed in the first phase of this crisis.

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So, please - if you can - pay for our work. Just £5 per month is the starting point. If you think that which we are trying to achieve is worth more, you can pay us what you think we are worth. By doing so, you will be investing in something that is becoming increasingly rare. Independent journalism that cares less about right and left and more about right and wrong. Journalism you can trust.

Thank you

James Mitchinson

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