With England and Wales’s coronavirus contact tracing app rolling out, here we explain how to get hold of it and how to use it:
View email online
 
 
     
   
     
  Sep 24, 2020  
     
 

Good evening,


It was inevitable that the furlough scheme, which helped to protect the jobs and salaries of millions of people during the first months of the coronavirus outbreak, could not go on indefinitely.
 
And as the deadline of October 31 drew nearer, pressure was being put on the Government to say how it would continue to help companies and workers.
 
Now the Chancellor has unveiled a new scheme to provide a portion of the wages of people whose jobs are still viable - but there is not the same demand for them as there was pre-Covid.
 
A similar programme has been in place in other European countries since the start of the pandemic.
 
It means that employees who can only work on shorter hours will still be paid two-thirds of the hours for the time they cannot work. This offers at least a modicum of hope for those whose jobs are precarious.
 
But this will not help everyone and so it is important that those people who are facing redundancy get a similar level of help - in particular to increase their skills with retraining to make them more likely to find a new post.
 
Thanks for reading and please drop me a line with your views at [email protected]
 
Gillian Parkinson
Editor
 
     
  How to use the coronavirus contact tracing app  
     
  With England and Wales’s coronavirus contact tracing app rolling out, here we explain how to get hold of it and how to use it:  
     
{$escapedtitle}
     
 
Article Image
One in five UK adults unlikely to get coronavirus vaccine, study suggests
 
A fifth of people in the UK say they are unlikely to get a coronavirus vaccine if one is approved, a study highlighting “concerning” levels of misinformation has found.
 
     
 
Article Image
The Living City: The inside story behind Preston's coronavirus lockdown
 
The Living City is a community project documenting the experiences of Preston people in lockdown, giving locals the chance to express what makes the city a good place to live, work, and play; what needs to change; and what living through the coronavirus pandemic has been like for them.
 
     
 
Article Image
£2,500 appeal launched to help Preston family stay together in Liverpool when newborn twin has heart surgery
 
A £2,500 JustGiving appeal has been launched to help fund a "home from home" for a month for a Preston family whose unborn twin boy will need heart surgery at Alder Hey Hospital soon after birth.
 
     
 
Article Image
This is when Penwortham and Bamber Bridge leisure centres are set to reopen
 
Penwortham and Bamber Bridge leisure centres are preparing to reopen after being closed for six months as a result of the coronavirus pandemic.
 
     
 
Article Image
There are now 14,595 confirmed cases in Lancashire - here is the full breakdown of case numbers for every area in the county
 
The number of people who have tested positive for Covid-19 in Lancashire is now 14,595.
 
     
     
     
   
     
     
     
   
 
Please note
Due to the unprecedented nature of the ongoing Coronavirus pandemic we have launched this new daily newsletter to keep you up to date with the latest official information and advice.

How to opt out of these emails
We are sending these daily Coronavirus email bulletins in addition to our daily newsletter emails.
If you would like to opt out of only these additional Public Interest emails, and continue to receive your regular daily newsletters, please click here.
 
   
 
You have received this email as you have an account on the Lancashire Evening Post, published by JPIMedia Publishing Ltd. To manage your individual newsletter preferences with us, please click here and log in to your account.
 
 
Alternatively you can update your email preferences to choose the types of emails you receive from JPIMedia Publishing Ltd, or unsubscribe from all future emails.

 
 
JPIMedia Publishing Ltd, a company registered in England and Wales with registered number 11499982, having its registered address at 1, King Street, London, England, EC2V 8AU, United Kingdom.

We will process your personal data in accordance with our privacy policy.