The Transferability of Professional Qualifications

Part of 2. Questions to the Counsel General and Brexit Minister – in the Senedd at 3:00 pm on 16 January 2019.

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Photo of Huw Irranca-Davies Huw Irranca-Davies Labour 3:00, 16 January 2019

I think the Minister's response is of some reassurance, but there is still work to be done, of course. But can I also ask the Minister to give us an update on the settled status pilots for health and for social workers as well and whether the UK Government has shown any unexpected last-minute flexibility towards the issue of the settlement of family members of those workers, as requested by the former Cabinet Secretary, now Minister, for health? What professional, quite simply, would choose to come and work and make this country their own if they're told, 'You're welcome, but not your family'? And, on that important matter of family—and, being proudly part of a large family that includes a couple of generations of Italian-Welsh immigrants who came here from poor parts of Italy, this doesn't affect us directly, but would the Minister care to reflect on the indignity that is now being heaped on people who've lived and worked and paid taxes here all of their working lives now being asked to leap hurdles to prove that they are worthy of staying? When I read stories like that of a 90-year-old Italian Bradford lady who came here from an impoverished part of Italy in the aftermath of the second world war who now has Alzheimer's and is now being fingerprinted in order to prove her identity, I wonder what level of shame, what level of indignity, the UK as a country and the UK Government in particular is now stooping to.