Civil servants offered counselling for no-deal Brexit stress

Defra building Image copyright Getty Images

British civil servants were offered specialised support to deal with the strain of preparing for a no-deal Brexit, the BBC has learned.

The Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (Defra) spent £40,000 on counselling services in London, York and Bristol.

The surgeries were primarily for those working on "emergency preparedness in case of a no deal scenario".

The government said the well-being of its staff was "always a priority".

The three-month contract, which was awarded to Gloucester-based employee assistance firm Care First, was brought to the BBC's attention by the data firm Tussell.

It was designed to bolster Defra's in-house mental health services while the department made changes to its support programmes, and ended on 31 January.

A Defra spokesperson told the BBC that the department was committed to the mental health, safety and well-being of its employees, and had "a range of services on offer to support staff's mental health".

A spokeswoman for the Charity for Civil Servants, which has been offering a "Brexit well-being kit" to government employees, told the BBC that it was responding to "the impact that current pressures are having on the mental health and well-being of civil servants".

Image copyright Getty Images
Image caption Michael Gove's department has awarded several Brexit-related contracts

Last year, the Civil Service announced it had trained 2,200 staff to be "Mental Health First Aiders".

With responsibility for food and water, animal movements and waste strategies, Defra is one of the Whitehall departments with the largest no-deal Brexit workload.

More than 1,300 employees have been recruited to assist with its contingency preparations.

In February, analysis by Tussell found that Defra had awarded 19 Brexit-related contracts to professional services firms - the highest number among government departments.

One agreement, worth £15,000, was awarded to help the department to assess "the impact of Brexit on the milling wheat and malting barley supply chain".

In January, Environment Secretary Michael Gove, who is in charge of Defra, warned that farmers and food producers would face "considerable turbulence" if the UK left the EU without a deal.

He told the Oxford Farming Conference it was a "grim and inescapable fact" there would be tariffs on exports and new sanitary and other border checks.


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