FDA in the Home Office
FDA represents Home Office staff in grades HEO and above
The FDA provides workplace representation, legal assistance, career development and many other benefits to members working in the Home Office and its related public bodies and agencies.
We work collaboratively and in partnership to improve the professional and public standing of our members in the Home Office.
If you would like to find out more about the work of the FDA’s Home Office branch, or if you are an FDA member with an issue or concern you would like to raise with your local reps, please drop us a line at fdabranchofficers@homeoffice.gov.uk
Wynne Parry
National Officer
Wynne Parry is the FDA National Officer for the Home Office.
What the FDA can do for you
We are there when you need help at work
Whatever your workplace issue, we are here with one-to-one employment advice and representation to help resolve it.
We fight for your pay, pensions and working conditions
We campaign and negotiate with employers on behalf of our members to ensure they have the resources required both to do their jobs and have a life outside the workplace.
We support your career progression
Through our specialised masterclasses, conferences and online training, FDA Learn addresses a wide range of skills to help you progress in your career and maximise your potential.
Join the FDA today
By joining the FDA, you’ll be standing alongside more than 22,000 other members who believe that public services – and the people who deliver them – matter.
Latest news
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FDA responds to judicial review outcome
The FDA have now received the outcome of our judicial review regarding the Civil Service Code and the Safety of Rwanda Act.
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Penman calls on government to resolve conflict between civil servants’ legal obligations and ministerial instructions
The FDA has written to ministers to raise concerns that the government’s Safety of Rwanda (Asylum and Immigration) Bill places civil servants in a conflict between their professional and legal obligations and instructions from elected ministers.
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New guidance is asking “civil servants to break the law”, says FDA
Dave Penman criticises new government guidance on ECHR rulings that places civil servants between serving ministers and professional obligations.