Jobcentres face being overloaded by pandemic employment crisis warns The Salvation Army
The Salvation Army is warning that there could be one work coach
for hundreds of employment seekers as the newly unemployed try and
access employment help. Before the pandemic
jobcentres saw up to 130 job seekers per coach1 but with
unemployment hitting 2,096,603 million in April2 the church
and charity is warning that job centres could become hopelessly
swamped. Back in 2019 at a time of maximum employment the
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The Salvation Army is warning that
there could be one work coach for hundreds of employment seekers
as the newly unemployed try and access employment
help.
Before the pandemic jobcentres saw up
to 130 job seekers per coach1 but with
unemployment hitting 2,096,603 million in April2 the
church and charity is warning that job centres could become
hopelessly swamped.
Back in 2019 at a time of maximum
employment the National Audit Office found there was a risk to
service levels as pressure on jobcentres increased due to the
roll-out of Universal Credit and work coach’s caseload expected
then to increase to over 2801.
Work coaches are essential to helping
long term unemployed people back into work and are especially
important to support people having to retrain or rethink their
approach to job hunting as traditional industries close or
change.
Rebecca Keating, Director of
Employment Services at The Salvation Army, said:
“Not only is the pandemic reshaping
how and where we work but it is pushing us into recession.
Jobcentres will find themselves with a new group of people faced
with having to retrain, enter new industries or even just apply
for a job for the first time in years.
“We know through one-to-one support,
provided by The Salvation Army’s Employment Plus service,
building up an individual relationship with a coach is how people
who are long-term unemployed find work.
“Asking a work coach to have that
personal knowledge of hundreds of people means that inevitably
the harder to employ will end up at the bottom of the pile in
favour those who are easier to help. Long-term unemployed people
could be left with no help back into work and will feel the
impact of the pandemic on their lives for many years to
come,”
To address this The Salvation Army
wants to see:
Rebecca continued: “The number of
entry level jobs is also reducing meaning there are fewer
opportunities for people to start out in work, something which is
particularly hitting people who have been out of a job for a long
time.
Rebecca Keating, Director of
Employment Plus for The Salvation Army addressed the
Government’s Work and Pensions Committee by video link3 and warned
members that, those who were furthest from getting a job and with
multiple barriers to employment could be disproportionately
affected.
She told the committee: “We are very
concerned that they [long-term unemployed] were already taking a
lot of time and a lot of support to get them
employable….
“And with all these new job seekers
coming into the labour search market that these particularly
vulnerable people – youth unemploy[ed] but [also] people who are
experiencing homelessness, physical ill health, mental ill
health, poverty and regional disadvantage - we are very concerned
that a big impact will be them going to the back of the
queue.”
Those at risk of being left behind
are people like Peter4 who had been
out of work for some time before coming to The Salvation Army’s
Employment Plus service, which offers tailored help to get people
job-ready. After some intensive one-to-one support, he’s started
a job as a key worker in a supermarket, stacking shelves. Kathryn
Devine who works for Employment Plus said: “I’m thrilled to have
helped Peter* as I know he will be brilliant. A
big part of my role is working with people one to one, providing
individualised support with whatever our clients need, the
majority of people we support need help filling in forms or
accessing benefits online.”
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Notes
to Editors
1 National
Audit Office, Report by the Comptroller and Auditor General
Department for Work & Pensions, Supporting disabled people to
work, 2017–2019 28 published in March 2019 accessible heredetails “Each work coach’s caseload is expected
to increase from around 130 currently to 280 as jobcentres take
on more Universal Credit claimants. With this, the number of
claimants per work coach in the intensive work search group (who
require the most time with work coaches) is expected to increase
from 96 to 133 (an increase of 39%).
4 Name changed to protect privacy. About The Salvation Army’s Employment Plus service: Employment Plus operates in over 650 locations: in churches, community centres and lifehouses (supported housing for homeless people) within The Salvation Army. Support staff and volunteers work alongside jobseekers to understand their needs and goals, and tailor a service to fit the needs of each person. It also provides training opportunities to support them in moving into work. |