New guidance has been published for the retail sector setting out the steps they will need to take to meet social distancing and hygiene standards, he added.
It features three key tenets: increased handwashing and surface cleaning; encouraging homeworking wherever possible or otherwise making “every reasonable effort” to observe two metres’ social distancing; and mitigating risk where social distancing is not possible.
These measures could include using screens or barriers to separate people, rearranging offices or premises to promote back-to-back or side-to-side working, and breaking down workforces into smaller ‘fixed teams’ to reduce contact.
The guidance adds: “No one is obliged to work in an unsafe work environment.”
While the guidance has been developed with input from the UK’s devolved administrations in Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland, public health is a devolved issue so there may be additional considerations for agencies in Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland to consider before they are able to reopen.
Johnson stressed the government would have powers to enforce compliance, if necessary. Businesses will only be able to open once they have completed a risk assessment, in consultation with trade union representatives or workers, and are confident of being able to manage Covid-19 risks.