Youth (Services and Provisions) Motion for leave to bring in a Bill
(Standing Order No. 23) 12.55 pm Lloyd Russell-Moyle
(Brighton, Kemptown) (Lab/Co-op) I beg to move, That leave
be given to...Request free trial
Motion for leave to bring in a Bill (Standing Order No. 23)
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I beg to move,
That leave be given to bring in a Bill to require the
Secretary of State to promote and secure youth
services and provision of a requisite standard; to
impose a duty on local authorities to provide youth
services and establish local youth service
partnerships with youth participation; and for
connected purposes.
There is no doubt that youth services improve the
life chances of individual young people, taking them
beyond the constraints of the contours of their
neighbourhoods and offering them new experiences of
everything from the arts to outdoor adventures. Young
people gain from those experiences. Youth work
supports but does not replace formal education. It
enhances the readiness for learning in the classroom
and learning in life, but it does not only help young
people in the classroom; it also helps them to
develop the skills and attitudes that are needed for
the employment about which the Prime Minister was so
boastful today, and, of course, for general adult
life, by giving them a chance to learn to relate
better to each other and to different adults in a
safe and challenging environment. They are enhanced,
and our communities are enhanced.
Despite all that, however, a 2016 study showed that
600 youth centres had closed around the country,
3,500 youth workers had lost their jobs, and 140,000
places for young people had been lost. We should bear
it in mind that those figures are two years old, and
the cuts have only continued. Research carried out
this year by the House of Commons Library has shown
what the cuts have meant in terms of funding. In 2010
we spent £1.2 billion on youth work, youth services
and related youth activity; last year we spent £358
million, which amounts to a 68% cash-terms cut.
I do not know what service or provision would survive
that, and the youth sector certainly has not. Many
parts of our country now have no youth service at
all. Young people simply seek somewhere to go,
something to do and someone to speak to. That is the
simplest of mottos, but it sums up what youth work is
about. Youth workers can prevent young people from
undertaking harmful behaviour, and give them advice
so that they can make informed decisions. So starkly
is all this being felt that young people aged between
16 and 24 are now the highest demographic age group
for feeling lonely. One in 10 say that they always or
often feel lonely, which is a disgrace. When young
people do reach out for help, in my city alone, they
can face 12 months to see a professional while their
mental health continues to spiral downwards.
However, the problem is not just mental health, but
crime as well. Young people who are devoid of
positive influences can fall foul of negative ones.
The Office for National Statistics has found that
knife crime has increased by 22% in a year. We have
also heard that the Ministry of Justice is cutting
youth offending budgets in real terms this year—and
so the misery goes on.
Our news media, and some of us in the Chamber, often
characterise young people as the problem. The
language used to describe some of the problems that
they face is a constant reinforcement of that,
referring to “youth gangs” and “young offenders”. The
empowerment of young people as actors for positive
change is constantly diminished in the narrative that
they are a problem to be contained, to be ignored, or
to be dealt with. Well, I think we are the problem.
Youth work has a positive impact on young people’s
lives, and what have we done? We have cut, and cut,
and cut again, and then we blame young people when
things fall apart. Our young people are not the
problem—our inability to support and listen to them
is.
I say proudly that I worked in my local youth service
for many years and at the National Youth Agency, and
I am proud to say that I was also a voluntary group
leader in my local youth group, the Woodcraft Folk,
and its national chair. Of course, before that, I was
a young person involved in the Youth Parliament and
British Youth Council.
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Thank you. These three roles—young person, voluntary
youth leader and professional youth worker—are
distinct, but so often they are confused. In times of
cuts, voluntary youth organisations are now having to
step into professional statutory youth services, with
volunteers overworked and frankly under-qualified for
the technical detail. Young people have to organise
their own activities without the previous support of
the voluntary youth leaders who are so busy picking
up the pieces. My Bill seeks to clarify the position
following the guidelines set out by the Council of
Europe and give registered youth workers a footing in
law.
Most parents and members of the public will be
surprised that the role of youth worker has no
professional standards, as there are, say, for
teachers, and anyone can profess to be a youth
worker. My Bill seeks to redress that while
celebrating the important role of voluntary youth
leaders in our voluntary youth sector. Youth workers
are all too often dismissed. They work long hours in
difficult circumstances, often without a “thank you”.
For my part, I would like to place on record a
sincere thank you to the youth workers who have come
to Parliament today to help to lobby for this Bill
and for the importance of youth work generally. Thank
you for staying back late and having a chat with that
young person going through crisis. Thank you for
organising those weekend trips or sports activities.
Thank you for applying for those grants to give your
young people the opportunities that they would never
have had. Youth workers’ work is important and that
is why they need support, but their support needs
resource.
Some may say that councils already have the power to
provide resources and to choose to fund youth
services, but we know that in times of tight budgets,
councils up and down the country are unable to spend
what they would like and focus only on statutory
provision. The Education and Inspections Act 2006
places a duty on local authorities to secure access
to provision, but there are no definitions in that
Act of what access to provision would look like, and
the Government and councils have largely ignored it.
There is little guidance on securing access. There is
no requirement to develop plans or monitor the
sufficiency of these services. There is no redress if
councils fail in this duty and importantly, there is
no funding to make sure that it happens.
My Bill rectifies that. It requires each authority to
establish a youth services board with young people,
parents, professionals and councillors—just like a
school governing body—that will assess and plan the
provision in that area. My Bill requires the plans to
be submitted to the Secretary of State to nominate a
body to review those plans. Many bodies exist: the
National Youth Agency, for example, hosts much of the
standard setting and the joint negotiating bodies for
youth work already, but since 2011, it has received
no Government funding and has had no statutory
underpinning for its work. So bad has the situation
got that the all-party group on youth affairs, which
I chair, is launching an inquiry into youth services
across the country, seeking out good examples and
challenges. We have asked MPs to join us and we hope
to develop a parliamentary scheme for MPs to visit
youth clubs and youth centres around the country
during recess. While that cross-party work goes on
separately from the Bill, I hope that it too will
raise the plight of youth services in our
country.
It was the UK that first established clubs such as
the YMCA and the Scouts and which pioneered a
voluntary youth work sector. The UK, first in
Coventry and then in councils around the country,
established municipal youth clubs and showed the
world how youth services could be run, but these
gains have all been whittled or even swept away along
with the futures of our young people. This is to our
shame. A country where every young person has
somewhere to go, someone to speak to and something to
do is surely not too much to ask.
Question put and agreed to.
Ordered,
That Lloyd Russell-Moyle, , , , , , , , , and present the
Bill.
Lloyd Russell-Moyle accordingly presented the
Bill.
Bill read the First time; to be read a Second time on
Friday 26 October, and to be printed (Bill 221).
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