A MAN who has been verbally abused in Warrington for having Tourette’s syndrome at work backs a change in the law to protect shopworkers from attacks as they increase seven per cent each year.

Tom Atherton, of Grappenhall, works at Primark in the Golden Square and has been abused a number of times.

“It makes me feel horrible and angry because there is not a lot that can be done about it,” Tom, 23, said.

“It would be brilliant to see a change in the law. Obviously, them people are getting justice but I think there should be better laws and rules in the shops you go in, where if people are being verbally abusive they get banned.”

Tom’s experiences have been based around sending people to the back of queues for pushing in and even just twitching, as a result of his Tourette’s.

“They started yelling at me, I’ve got Tourette's and my body just started going really bad. I let them in and one of them turned around and said ‘have you seen the state of you, you need to get yourself looked at’,” the former Lymm High School and Priestley College student said.

“I’ve been behind the tills and my twitches have been bad, people have turned around and said ‘are you even fit enough to be working in this place?’

And independent retailers pressed MPs to support an amendment to the Police, Crime, Sentencing and Courts Bill at a debate in the House of Commons last week.

Stuart Reddish, National President of the Federation of Independent Retailers (NFRN), has written to all MPs in Westminster asking them to back amendment NC31, which will give new and important legal protections to those working in the retail sector who are victims of verbal or physical abuse.

Mr Reddish said: “As the representatives of the owners of over 15,000 news and convenience stores across the UK, the NFRN would ask you to support the amendment.

“The British Retail Consortium’s most recent crime survey shows a 7% year-on-year increase in incidents of violence and abuse in 2019 – a shocking total of 455 cases each day.

“Recent research by retailers shows that the rate of incidents has risen even further during the coronavirus pandemic, as our members have worked hard to support their local communities and provide a shopping environment that is safe for customers and staff alike.

“No-one should face verbal or physical abuse just for going to work, but this has, for too long, been the reality of working in the retail sector,” he continued.

“I would therefore ask you to stand with those who work so hard to serve their local communities, oppose threats and violence against retail workers and to support amendment NC31.”

The proposals in the amendment will give retailers in the rest of the UK the same kind of protection that has already been passed by the Scottish parliament, and are in line with the recommendations of the Select Committee on Home Affairs in its recent report on the issue.