Home Office staff still working from home despite record illegal small boat crossings
HOME Office pen-pushers battling Britain’s illegal migrant crisis are still working from home.
This is despite a record 38,000 people arriving in small boats so far this year.
The asylum system costs £2.4billion per year — including a daily £5.6million housing bill.
But that has not stopped recruiters at the underfire government department offering hybrid roles — part in office and part at home.
The Home Office — headed up by re-appointed Suella Braverman — is advertising £40,000-a-year jobs for WFH staff to tackle the immigrant backlog.
Borders and Enforcement teams in Leeds, Glasgow and Croydon are advertising “hybrid” posts.
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David Spencer at the Centre for Crime Prevention said: “You have to question whether those working from home have access to the resources to make quick and informed decisions.
“The relaxed approach hardly sends a message to voters that an issue that matters deeply is being taken seriously.”
A Home Office spokeswoman said: “Flexible and hybrid working within the civil service is not new; it has been common practice for some time.”