Coronavirus: Breaking self-isolation to be made illegal with fines of up to £10,000

A lump sum is being promised to some workers on low incomes, as firms forcing staff to come in are threatened with a £10,000 fine.

Ben and Isaac talk to their grandmother Sue through a window, as she and her husband Alan self-isolate due at their home in Knutsford, Cheshire.
Image: The law will affect anyone who tests positive or is told to isolate by Test and Trace
Why you can trust Sky News

People who may have coronavirus will be required to self-isolate by law - with those who refuse facing fines of up to £10,000 in England.

Ministers are toughening up their stance by making the current guidance a legal requirement in a bid to try to prevent a second spike of COVID-19 ballooning across the UK and a potential second national lockdown.

Just 20% of those reporting symptoms in England fully self-isolate at home for the required two weeks, the government's scientific advisers known as SAGE found at the end of August.

A person passes a completed coronavirus self test package through a car window to a reservist from the Royal Anglian Regiment at Harlow Football Club, Harlow, following the introduction of measures to bring England out of lockdown.
Image: Fines of between £1,000 and £10,000 will be issued for law-breakers

So Prime Minister Boris Johnson is changing the law from Monday 28 September to force anyone who gets a positive test or is contacted by the Test and Trace system and told they may have the virus to isolate.

Fines for breaches will start at £1,000 - but could rise to £10,000 for repeat offences and for the most egregious exceptions.

The penalties can also be dished out to those preventing others from self-isolating - such as bosses who threaten staff who cannot go to work because they are isolating with redundancy.

At the same time, a £500 lump sum is being offered to those who need to isolate and will lose money as a result of not working, are on benefits and cannot do their job from home.

More on Covid-19

The payments system may not be ready until 12 October, but the government is promising anyone eligible who has to isolate earlier will get backdated support.

It will be paid on top of statutory sick pay or any other benefit.

Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player

PM: 'Inevitable' second wave would happen

To make sure people who should be isolating are, Test and Trace call handlers will apparently make "regular contact" and report anyone who is failing to the local council and police.

Mr Johnson said the "best way we can fight this virus" is by "everyone following the rules and self-isolating if they're at risk of passing on coronavirus".

He added: "We need to do all we can to control the spread of this virus, to prevent the most vulnerable people from becoming infected, and to protect the NHS and save lives."

Coronavirus: What are the different types of COVID-19 tests?
Coronavirus: What are the different types of COVID-19 tests?

Anneliese Dodds, Labour's shadow chancellor, said the party had called "time and time again" for people who need to isolate to be given "proper financial support".

"We welcome this belated introduction of extra support, but it shouldn't have taken months for the penny to finally drop that people on low incomes needed more help," she added.

"And with only a fraction of workers eligible for this payment, government must work urgently to fill any gaps."

It follows the prime minister's warning a second wave of COVID-19 is "inevitable" and already "coming in".

The number of cases reported on Saturday was 4,422 - the highest daily rise in infections in over four months for the second day in a row.

Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player

'We need immediate action on test, track and trace'

Opposition politicians have said the government urgently needs to the address the issue of coronavirus tests being unavailable in hotspots, or people being told to travel hundreds of miles to get one.

Health Secretary Matt Hancock has admitted it may take weeks to solve.

It follows testing boss Baroness Dido Harding claiming no one could have predicted the big increase in demand for tests following the full-reopening of most schools.