Lee Anderson (Ashfield) (Con) I thank the House for allowing me to
have this important Adjournment debate on a subject that is close
to my heart and those of my constituents and my family. When the
welfare state was introduced in 1949, just a few years after the
second world war, probably over 90% of disabled people in this
country had a job—they went to work. There were a number of reasons
for that. I think it was mainly because we were short of labour
after the war—a...Request free trial
(Ashfield) (Con)
I thank the House for allowing me to have this important
Adjournment debate on a subject that is close to my heart and
those of my constituents and my family. When the welfare state
was introduced in 1949, just a few years after the second world
war, probably over 90% of disabled people in this country had a
job—they went to work. There were a number of reasons for that. I
think it was mainly because we were short of labour after the
war—a lot of men did not come back—and there was a need for
people to rebuild the country, so lots of people had to go into
the workplace. But there was also a lot of support in place for
people to go to work under the new welfare state system.
We have some similar challenges right now. We have probably got
over a million vacancies, and we have lots of people out there
who are quite prepared to do the work but need a little bit of
extra support in getting the skills and doing the job from day to
day. Nowadays—the Minister may correct me later—the proportion of
disabled people in the workplace is probably about 60% to 65%.
That is a lot less than back in the 1940s, so maybe we could
learn some lessons from the past.
We can talk about physical disabilities because we can see them.
We can see people who are injured—those who have got a bad back
or a bad leg—and all sorts of physical disabilities. Governments
and employers have come on a long way in the past 20 or 30 years
to make reasonable adjustments in the workplace to ensure that
people can do a decent day’s work, have a decent job and play a
part. In this debate, I want to concentrate on people with
learning difficulties.
Whenever I talk about stuff like this, I always think about this
young lady in Ashfield. Her name is Jossie. She is seven, and
this month—I think on 17 December—she will be eight. Jossie has
Down’s syndrome. Jossie is not alone—she will not be alone,
because probably 900,000 people of working age in this country
have learning difficulties. Jossie’s mum tells me that although
great strides have been made in our educational system throughout
the years, there are still a lot of problems and barriers when it
comes to transitioning from education to the workplace. She says
that more needs to be done.
(Strangford) (DUP)
I congratulate the hon. Gentleman on bringing this matter
forward. I spoke to him before the debate. He is right that there
are 870,000 working-age adults with a learning disability in the
UK. Only 26.7% of them are in the workforce, so less than a third
are in paid work. There is often a stigma whereby those suffering
from certain types of disabilities feel that they are not capable
of applying for certain jobs. Does he agree—I am sure he will say
yes—that more can be done in schools to instil in young people
with disabilities that their future career choices are not
limited just because they have a disability? That could be taught
through work experience opportunities. In other words, give them
a chance to do better—we can do that.
I thank the hon. Member—my friend—for that. He makes, as usual,
an intelligent contribution, and I totally agree. I am a strong
believer that everybody in this country, regardless of disability
or background, is good at something and that they can make a
contribution to this great country of ours and to society. They
can go to work, or they can work from home—they can do
something.
Historically, far too many people with learning difficulties have
had a label given to them. I have seen—a lot of people in this
place have probably seen this—people who have been called
“stupid”, “thick” or “not worthy”, or it has been said, “They
can’t have a job like the rest of us. They can’t communicate
properly.” That is just wrong. Like I said before, everybody can
make a contribution. Everybody can do something and have a stake
in society.
Jossie’s mum Steph told me that the most important thing for
young people with learning difficulties is that each person be
individually assessed to ensure that the right opportunities are
provided in accordance with their abilities, and she is right.
She said that it is important to get the balance right, not to
under or overestimate a person’s capabilities and to make sure
that the right opportunities are available. That is right; we
should ensure that the right opportunities are available,
especially for young people, to make the transition from
education to the workplace. There has to be more support for
those people. People with a learning disability have a right to
work and to have a stake in society. They have a right to equal
pay, opportunities, career progression and support at work.
As the hon. Member for Strangford () said, more than 870,000 working-age adults in the UK
have a learning disability, but less than a third—26.7%—are in
paid work. That is the lowest employment rate for any health
condition or disability. Many people with a learning disability
want to go to work. On a weekly basis, I see people who want that
extra bit of support to go into the workplace. Mencap, a charity
I support, does some great work in this area. One of its surveys
found that 86% of unemployed people with a learning disability
wanted a paid job. That is a staggering number of people. They do
not want to stay at home and do nothing; they want to make a
contribution.
Some 45% of respondents who did not have a paid job cited worry
about their benefits as a barrier to getting one. I completely
understand that. Some 35% of respondents who did not have a paid
job cited lack of support to look for work as a barrier. Some 23%
of those without a paid job who would like one identified
inaccessible application forms as preventing them from getting
work. It is terrible that people with disabilities who want to go
to work find barriers in the way. Hopefully, the Minister can
address that in his speech.
Sir (South Swindon) (Con)
I am listening with great interest to my hon. Friend’s speech. He
is right to talk about the barriers, which include interview
processes and retaining people with disabilities. Does he agree
that common-sense changes to interview procedures, such as
practical, show-and-tell interviews rather than an inquisitorial
ordeal, would suit the talents of people with learning
disabilities far better than the old-fashioned, conventional
ways, which are real barriers to fulfilling their potential?
My right hon. and learned Friend is spot on. People of any age
with learning difficulties face barriers. When we interview
people, we should not always treat people equally; we should
treat them fairly. What might be a fair interview for one person
is not always fair for another.
We have some great initiatives in this country. I do not agree
with the idea peddled by certain groups and some politicians that
people with any disabilities will be forced into a certain group
and forced into paid employment, or have their benefits
sanctioned or income reduced. That is scaremongering and
political point scoring. We need to rise above that, because this
is about encouraging people with disabilities to be in the
workplace. Work is not a punishment; it gives us all a stake in
society and is a good thing. On the whole in this country, people
might not enjoy their job so much some days, but they enjoy
getting up in the morning, going to work and having the routine.
Why should people with disabilities be any different? Why should
we treat them differently?
(Upper Bann) (DUP)
The hon. Member is making a powerful contribution. In my
constituency, we have a number of good examples of companies and
organisations that have embraced the spirit of employing those
with disabilities. Café IncredABLE is a social enterprise that is
leading the way in facilitating training, employment and
meaningful daytime activity for individuals with a learning
difficulty or autism. Given the benefit that social enterprises
bring to the lives of those who participate in them, does the
hon. Member agree that the Government should further support them
so that more can be rolled out across our constituencies?
The hon. Lady makes a valid point. There is always more that
Governments and local authorities can do, and thank goodness for
the charity sector. Charities that support people with learning
disabilities do great work.
We have a project called Rumbles in Nottinghamshire that runs two
cafés, one outside my constituency and one in Ashfield on Sutton
Lawn. It has been running for about 15, 16 or maybe 17 years and
was set up to help people with learning disabilities. There are a
couple of paid staff who train young people with special
educational needs or learning difficulties in cooking, cleaning,
doing the washing, serving people and operating the till. Those
are great skills for young people with learning difficulties. It
gets them out of the house, and gives their parents and families
some respite. They get out and learn new skills and mix with
people, making new friends. It is absolutely brilliant that we
have these initiatives locally.
However, we have a slight problem and the Minister might be able
to help me with it, because he came to visit the café earlier
this year. This service, which is a lifeline to people and their
families, faces the axe. This brilliant facility is facing
closure after about 17 years in operation. The charity was paying
the council a peppercorn rent of just a few hundred quid a year,
I believe it was, but the council decided that it is such a good
business it wants to put the rent up to £7,000 a year and it also
expects the charity to maintain the public toilets next door at a
cost of £10,000 a year. The charity has agreed to pay the £7,000
and it has some extra support to do that, but that is still not
good enough for the local authority. The local authority does not
realise that if this place closes and goes into the private
sector, the young people with learning disabilities will have
nowhere else to go. If this place goes, they cannot do their
training and their work or meet their friends. I hope the
Minister might be able to help and steer me in the right
direction on how to convince our local authority to keep this
lifeline open.
(Mansfield) (Con)
My hon. Friend makes a really good point. Rumbles café—there are
several across Nottinghamshire—does fantastic work with young
people with learning disabilities, getting them into the
workplace and supporting them. Does he agree that it is slightly
strange that Ashfield District Council says that the closure of
the café and kicking them out of the building is about the money,
when only a few years ago the councillors spent five or six times
as much to give themselves extra cabinet jobs and put it in their
own pockets?
My hon. Friend is quite right—I forgot about this—that just a few
years back, this same bunch of councillors created five extra
cabinet positions when they first got elected, at a cost of about
£60,000 and then created a political officer position at a cost
of another £30,000. That is £80,000 or £90,000 there, so their
maths do not stack up. In fact, their maths do stack up when it
comes to giving themselves hefty pay rises, so maybe they should
take a long, hard look in the mirror. I thank my hon. Friend for
that intervention.
Rumbles café has helped literally hundreds of people across
Ashfield over the years. I want to give a special mention to a
lady called Helen Storer. She is 60 years old, bless her, and she
lives in Selston. She has special educational needs—she says
herself that she has her own difficulties—but she lives
independently, on her own. She relies on the support of good
neighbours and good friends in the community—it is a cracking
community—and she worked at Rumbles. She volunteered there,
learned new skills and made friends. She learned how to cook and
other life skills, such as how to do housework and stuff like
that, and she absolutely loved the place. It brought her on leaps
and bounds.
Places like this are a lifeline. It should not be about making
huge amounts of money. We should put people before profit in
these sorts of situations. Look—it does make money, but it goes
back into the caff to help support people to learn those new
skills to live independent lives. It has no shareholders, just
honest hard-working folk who are doing the best for people with
special educational needs in the community.
I have said it before, and sometimes I get a little bit of
opposition to trying to get people into work, especially disabled
people. It is not cruel to get disabled people back into work.
Most people, as we know from Mencap’s own figures, want to work
and want to get into the workplace. It is up to us as a
responsible society to try to give the support they need to get
in the workplace and have a stake in society. I often think about
little Jossie and her mum and dad, and the challenges they face.
When parents have a little girl of six or seven who has got her
difficulties, they are always thinking, “What’s going to happen
to that little girl when she leaves school?” They want that
little girl to have lots of opportunities. They want her to live
independently and to be able to make some of her own decisions
and just do the simple things in life—to go out and shop, run the
house, budget, have friends and have a social life. That is so
important. Not everybody like Jossie can live an independent
life, but a lot can, and it is important that as a society we
support these people.
We are very good at giving benefits away in this country to
people, and rightly so—people need that financial support. With
rent and council tax support, personal independence payment or
disability living allowance, employment and support allowance and
other bits and bobs, a single person with learning difficulties
can maybe get up to 25 grand a year through the benefits system.
I always say that if we can pay somebody on benefits 25 grand a
year for being sat at home, surely we can pay them that for going
to work, whether the support is from a charity, a
Government-funded agency or whatever.
I am going to close on that. Once again, Mr Deputy Speaker, thank
you for allowing me to speak tonight. This is a subject close to
my heart, and I know from my right hon. and learned Friend the
Member for South Swindon (Sir ) that it is close to his
heart as well. I look forward to seeing what the Minister has to
say.
10.31pm
The Minister for Disabled People, Health and Work ()
I thank my hon. Friend the Member for Ashfield () for securing this important
debate and for speaking with such great passion. He very much
shares my determination to do better in this area to help and
support more disabled people into work and unlock all that
potential that we know exists.
In 2017, the Government set the goal of seeing a million more
disabled people in employment between 2017 and 2027. I am proud
to say that, by the first quarter of 2022, the number of disabled
people in employment had increased by 1.3 million, which means
that the goal was met after only five years. By the first quarter
of 2023, disability employment had risen by 1.6 million in total
since the goal was announced, but we are aware that this progress
has not been even. Those early successes must be a catalyst for
further change. We know that most learning-disabled people want
to have a job, and evidence shows that they bring many positive
benefits to their employers. That is something I hear time and
again, as I go round the country meeting employers and meeting
disabled people experiencing the benefits of work.
But we also know that less than three in 10 working-age people
with severe and specific learning disabilities are currently in
employment. That means that more than seven in 10 of this group
are still unable to access the independence and sense of
fulfilment that employment can bring, and that many employers are
not benefiting from the enthusiasm, skills and commitment that
they can bring to their workplaces. We are therefore working hard
in Government, as an enabler and with others, to support
learning- disabled people to secure, sustain and succeed in
employment.
We are continuing to improve the general support available to
learning-disabled claimants when they attend the jobcentre.
Additional work coach support provides disabled people and those
with health conditions with increased one-to-one personalised
support from their work coach to help them move towards and into
work. That support is already available in two thirds of
jobcentres in England, Scotland, and Wales. It will be available
nationally in 2024. We have strengthened our disability
employment adviser role, delivering direct support to claimants
who require additional work-related support and supporting all
work coaches to deliver tailored, personalised support to
claimants with a disability or health condition, including those
with a learning disability.
As well as this general support, we are providing a range of
special programmes that can help learning-disabled people to
access employment. They will have priority access to the work and
health programme in England and Wales. Intensive personalised
employment support provision has also been available in England
and Wales, providing highly personalised packages of specialist
employment support for disabled people and people with health
conditions to achieve sustained employment.
The local supported employment programme helps people with
learning difficulties and/or autism to find and retain work
through intensive one-to-one support and an evidence-based
approach to supported employment. Local supported employment aims
to develop a sustainable model by giving intensive one-to-one
support to those faced with significant barriers to work. We have
funded 23 lead local authorities to deliver local supported
employment in 28 local authority areas in England and Wales from
November 2022 until March 2025. Over that period, LSE will help
about 12,000 people to move into and stay in work. An average of
90 participants in each of the 28 local authority areas are set
to benefit from £7.4 million in grant funding and support which
will include the assignment of job coaches who can carry out
vocational profiling, engage employers and provide in-work
support to enable this group to enter and maintain employment in
the open labour market.
The spring Budget confirmed funding for a new employment
programme called universal support, which will use the proven
supported employment model to help inactive disabled people,
people with health conditions and those facing additional
barriers to employment into sustained work—doing more of what we
know succeeds in securing meaningful outcomes for people. One of
the aspects of the coverage of this issue that frustrates me the
most is the failure to recognise that it is as important to focus
on retention as it is to focus on job starts, and that both must
be seen in tandem. That is precisely what universal support will
help us to do. Eligible learning-disabled people will be able to
opt into receiving up to 12 months of “place and train” support
helping them to move quickly into suitable work, followed by
wraparound support to help them to sustain that employment in the
longer term. I am pleased to confirm that following the
announcement in the latest autumn statement, we are expanding the
universal support scheme to enable it to provide support for
100,000 people a year once it has been fully rolled out, an
increase on the 50,000 places a year announced in the spring
Budget.
We know that many learning-disabled people will require workplace
adjustments to secure and retain employment, and the Access to
Work scheme can undoubtedly help with the extra costs of working,
beyond those involved in standard workplace adjustments. Access
to Work contributes to the disability-related extra costs of
working faced by disabled people and those with a health
condition in the workplace that are beyond the costs of standard
reasonable adjustments, and includes the provision of support
workers, specialist aids and equipment, and help with travel to
and from work. As part of the scheme, we are testing an
“adjustments passport” in a variety of settings to establish
whether it can reduce the need for assessments when the
requirements remain the same and need to be “passported” around
to help a person enter into a role and then make progress within
it, as well as making conversations with employers easier.
We recently launched an Access to Work adjustments planner, which
will be rolled out to all universities and higher education
colleges. The planner collects key information about a student’s
adjustment needs which can be easily shared with prospective
employers. Trial results show that disabled students using the
planner are more confident about entering employment. We are also
testing Access to Work Plus, a new employer offer that can offer
additional support to employers who are willing to think
differently about their vacancies and consider whether they can
adapt, shape or flex a job to enable a disabled person to retain,
return to or move into employment. That is relevant to my hon.
Friend’s point about the key support that needs to be available
to aid people’s transition into work, and available at various
points in their lives when they want to enter the workplace or
increase their educational opportunities, and to maximise those
life chances.
During their transition to employment, learning-disabled young
people can benefit from supported internships, which are aimed at
those with a learning disability or autism who have an education,
health and care plan. Supported Internships usually last for 12
months, contributing to the long-term career goals of young
people and matching their capabilities. Alongside their time with
an employer, supported interns receive support from a specialist
job coach and complete a personalised study programme delivered
by the school or college, which includes the chance to study for
relevant qualifications, if appropriate, and to receive English
and maths tuition at an appropriate level. While the Department
for Education leads on this in England, the Department for Work
and Pensions provides support for Access to Work where needed and
I would be happy to ask colleagues in the Department for
Education to provide further details to my hon. Friend about the
opportunities that supported internships can provide.
Separately, the autism employment review, led by my right hon.
and learned Friend the Member for South Swindon (Sir ), has been receiving
evidence this year about the barriers preventing autistic people
from starting, staying and succeeding in employment and how those
barriers can be overcome. Although the review focuses
specifically on autistic people, many of the adjustments and
initiatives that will benefit them will also benefit a wider
group of people including learning-disabled people and people
with other disabilities. I am hugely grateful to him for all his
efforts.
Sir
I am grateful to the Minister and the departmental officials who
are here for their close work on the independent review. I am
glad that he has made the point that, although we focus on
autism, the wider point about neurodiversity must not escape us.
As the evidence has emerged, the concept of a more universal
approach to the way in which employers interview people generally
seems to be the real answer, when dealing not just with people
who are diagnosed but with those who perhaps do not even realise
they might have a condition or issue that has not been diagnosed
or acknowledged.
My right hon. and learned Friend raises an important point and I
look forward to receiving the final recommendations from the
review, which will help to inform the forward decisions that we
take as a Department. I would be keen to pick up with him on that
specific point separately from this evening. I also want to thank
every Disability Confident employer out there for the enormous
contribution that they make and for their commitment to
supporting the important goals that we have been debating this
evening.
I am aware that my hon. Friend the Member for Ashfield has a
particular and very praiseworthy interest in helping people with
Down’s syndrome to succeed in work and in life. He referred to
Jossie, an inspirational young lady with Down’s syndrome in his
constituency. He also referred to the great work being done by
the Rumbles charity in his constituency, and it was an honour for
me to visit Rumbles with him earlier in the year to see its
magnificent work for myself and to meet Gina and Tamar and the
energetic team at Rumbles who bring so much to that community and
help to provide so much opportunity. I wish them every success in
their work.
I am keen to help this group and I have been speaking to the
Down’s Syndrome Association about its WorkFit programme. On
Wednesday, I will visit its site to visit two of its WorkFit
candidates who will share with me their experiences of the
workplace and how they were supported to find and maintain their
jobs. As my hon. Friend points out, the key to the success of the
WorkFit programme is a bespoke person-centred approach for each
candidate and bespoke advice, resources and training for each
employer taking part.
As we develop and roll out our new programmes, we will be keeping
this need for a personalised approach very much in mind,
because—touching on the points made by the hon. Members for Upper
Bann () and for Strangford ()—that provision is so helpful to people in beginning
to provide those early opportunities, precisely as Rumbles does
and as the Step and Stone Bakery in Bristol does, which I have
also had the privilege of visiting. I met the inspirational women
who run it, Jane Kippax and Jane Chong. I also visited Tapestry
by Props Brewery in Bristol, run by the enthusiastic chief
executive officer of that organisation, Colin Fletcher, and his
team. And only last week, I visited the Fair Shot Café in Covent
Garden, run by its founder and CEO, Bianca Tavella. These are
amazing organisations providing early opportunities for people to
develop their skills, and that is a model I want to look at to
see what more we can do to help to support them. All those
organisations and many others across the country can be
enormously proud of the contribution they make to supporting
employment opportunities.
My message to the Ashfield Independents who run the local
authority in my hon. Friend’s area would be that they ought to
look at this issue in the round. The support that services such
as these can provide is an invaluable resource, not just for
improving the life chances and opportunities of the individuals
who work in those cafés but for doing right by the taxpayer and
helping to minimise costs elsewhere in the round. I hope that
they will find a common-sense solution to support that brilliant
provision for the years to come. I just could not be clearer:
these opportunities are life-changing. Work has such a positive
benefit for people in so many respects, and those opportunities
should be extended to all who wish to have them. That is our
clear mission as a Government and I am grateful to Members across
the House for their support in that endeavour.
Question put and agreed to.
|