Technical and Further Education Bill Consideration of Lords
amendments Mr Speaker I must draw the House’s attention to
the fact that financial privilege is engaged by Lords amendment 1.
I also remind the House that certain of the motions relating to the
Lords amendments will be certified as relating exclusively to
England or to England and Wales, as set out on the selection paper.
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Technical and Further Education Bill
Consideration of Lords amendments
-
Mr Speaker
I must draw the House’s attention to the fact that
financial privilege is engaged by Lords amendment 1. I also
remind the House that certain of the motions relating to
the Lords amendments will be certified as relating
exclusively to England or to England and Wales, as set out
on the selection paper. If the House divides on any
certified motion, a double majority will be required for
the motion to be passed.
After Clause 1
Financial Support for Students Undertaking Apprenticeships
2.47 pm
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The Minister for Apprenticeships and Skills (Robert
Halfon)
I beg to move, That this House disagrees with Lords
amendment 1.
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Mr Speaker
With this it will be convenient to discuss the following:
Lords amendment 6, Government motion to disagree, and
Government amendment (a) in lieu.
Lords amendments 2 to 5 and 7 to 18.
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This Bill was introduced to transform the prestige and
culture of technical education, providing young people with
the skills that they, and our country, need. It provides
necessary protection for students should colleges get into
financial difficulty, and ensures that the most
disadvantaged are able to climb the ladder of opportunity.
It left this House after thoughtful scrutiny and, after
similar diligence in the other place, I am delighted that
it returns for consideration here today.
I ask hon. Members to support the Government on all
amendments made to the Bill in the other place except
amendments 1 and 6, where we have tabled an amendment in
lieu. Amendment 1 impinges on the financial privilege of
this House. I urge the House to disagree to that amendment
and will ask the Reasons Committee to ascribe financial
privilege as the reason.
The amendment, costing more than £200 million per year by
financial year 2020-21, would mean that the parents of
apprentices aged under 20 would continue to be eligible for
child benefit for those young people as if they were in
approved education and training. It is an issue in which I
have a great interest. Apprenticeships provide a ladder of
opportunity, and we should seek to remove obstacles to
social mobility wherever we can.
A young person’s first full-time job is a big change for
them and for their family, and it marks a move into
financial independence that should be celebrated. I know
that the adjustment can be challenging for the young person
learning how to manage a starting wage and new outgoings
and for parents who may experience a fall in income from
the benefits they previously received for that dependent
child. One of the core principles of an apprenticeship is
that it is a job, and it is treated accordingly in the
benefit system. It is a job that offers high-quality
training and that widens opportunities. Moreover, more than
90% of apprentices continue into another job on completion.
Most apprentices are paid above the minimum wage. The 2016
apprenticeship pay survey showed that the average wage for
all level 2 and 3 apprentices was £6.70.
-
(Luton North)
(Lab)
Although what the Minister is saying is correct, in that
those apprentices will be paid, taking child benefit away
from low-income families will be a disincentive for them to
take up apprenticeships. Those families will be pressed to
stay in education so that they can continue to get child
benefit. Is that not the case?
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The crucial point is that the vast majority of level 2 and
3 apprentices are paid more than £6.30 an hour, and 90% of
them go on to jobs or additional education afterwards.
The apprenticeship programme already supports low-income
groups. The funding system gives targeted support to the
participation of care leavers, and this year we are making
£60 million available to training providers to support
take-up by individuals from disadvantaged areas. We are
committed to ensuring that high-quality apprenticeships are
as accessible as possible to people from all backgrounds.
We will take forward the Maynard recommendations for people
with learning difficulties and our participation target for
black and minority ethnic groups.
With regard to the amendment’s suggestion of a bursary for
care leavers, I understand that some young people have
greater challenges to overcome. That is why we are
providing £1,000 to employers and training providers when
they take on care leavers who are under 25. We will also
pay 100% of the cost of training for small employers who
employ care leavers. There is scope for apprenticeships to
benefit social mobility even more. We are working across
Government to use the apprenticeship programme to extend
opportunities.
I am grateful to for tabling Lords
amendment 6, which introduces a new clause into the Bill to
require Ofsted to take into account the quality of the
careers offer when conducting standard inspections of
further education colleges. I welcome the work that Ofsted
has already done to sharpen its approach. Matters relating
to careers provision feature in all the graded judgments
made by Ofsted when inspecting FE and skills providers.
Destination data—published in 16 to 18 performance tables
for the first time this year—are also becoming an
established part of college accountability. Those are
important steps.
I pay tribute to the good work that is already being done
throughout the FE sector to prepare students for the
workplace. Ofsted’s annual report for 2015-16 cites the
excellent work of Derby College, which has set up employer
academies so that learners benefit throughout their course
from a range of activities, including workplace visits,
talks from specialist speakers, masterclasses and
enterprise activities. However, Ofsted noted in the same
report that the quality of information, advice and guidance
in FE providers can vary and does not always meet the full
range of students’ needs. That is why I want us to take
this opportunity to go further.
Lords amendment 6 signals our determination to ensure that
every FE student has access to good-quality, dedicated
careers advice, which I know this House supports. That is
vital if we are to tackle the skills gap and ensure that we
make opportunities accessible to everyone. We have proposed
some drafting changes to the amendment to ensure that it
achieves its intended effect. The amendment makes it clear
that in its inspection report Ofsted must comment on the
quality of a college’s careers provision. I urge hon.
Members to accept the amendment. FE colleges are engines of
social mobility, and this is our chance to ensure that
students from all backgrounds can access the support they
need to get on the ladder of opportunity and to benefit
from the best skills education and training.
I will now turn to the amendments that the Government are
asking the House to accept without any further amendment.
The Government support Lords amendment 2, which requires
schools to give education and training providers the
opportunity to talk directly to pupils about the approved
technical education qualifications and apprenticeships they
offer. I would like to place on the record my significant
gratitude to for
tabling the amendment, and for his unstinting support for
the Government’s technical education reforms. As I have
explained, high-quality careers advice is the first rung on
the ladder of opportunity and will play a key part in
realising our ambition for high-quality skills education
and training. The amendment will strengthen the Bill by
ensuring that young people hear much more consistently
about the merits of technical education routes and
recognise them as worthy career paths. I urge the House to
agree to it. I hope that never again when I go around the
country will I meet an apprentice who was refused access to
the school they were taught in to talk about
apprenticeships.
-
(Gateshead) (Lab)
I actually welcome that proposal. We have heard lots of
evidence that schools are not allowing FE colleges and
apprenticeship providers to access their students and to
tell them what the options are post-16. That, of course, is
because of the “bums on seats” funding regime for post-16
studies in schools. How are we going to get around the
deep-seated culture in schools that prevents careers
advisers and others from providing that independent,
impartial advice to young people in schools?
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The hon. Gentleman speaks a lot of sense on this issue.
Every time I meet an apprentice, wherever I am in the
country, I ask them, “Did your school encourage you to do
an apprenticeship?” Nine times out of 10, they say that
their school taught them nothing about apprenticeships and
skills. We have already changed careers advice so that
schools have to offer advice that includes apprenticeships
and skills. I believe that Lords amendment 2 will make a
huge difference, because technical bodies, apprenticeship
bodies and university technical colleges will be able to go
into schools, and schools will publish policy guidance on
this.
I agree that a huge part of this is about cultural change.
That is why my right hon. Friend the Secretary of State
always talks about parity of esteem. Until we ensure that
we have parity of esteem between skills and technical
education and going to university—that is also a wonderful
thing to do—we will not achieve the cultural change that
the hon. Gentleman talks about.
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There is a problem with that, because training providers
themselves have a vested interest—just as much as the
schools do—in securing those students for their courses or
apprenticeships. Is it not true that we need a much more
robust process for the provision of impartial advice and
guidance that does not include anyone’s vested interests?
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We are looking at careers guidance in the long term, and at
how we can make it more independent and skills-focused. I
think that the work of the Careers and Enterprise Company
in getting more people to do work experience, along with
the money we are investing in these things, will help, but
there are no easy answers. There are some great private
providers, FE colleges and university technical colleges
that I would love to see going into schools. However, I
think that this is an important step forward to change the
culture and ensure that pupils have the access to learn
about apprenticeships and the technical education and
skills that they need.
Lords amendment 3 introduces a new clause specifically
providing for regulations to be made about the delivery of
documents about an insolvent FE body to the registrar, and
how those documents are kept and accessed by the public.
Essentially, the new clause allows for the proper
management of the paperwork of an insolvency procedure for
an FE body.
I am pleased that the Government were able to accept
amendment 4 in the other place, which deleted the words “if
possible” from clause 25(2). The original drafting of
subsection (2) was intended to offer reassurance to
creditors and the education administrator that the
education administration would not continue indefinitely
while we waited for the education administrator to achieve
the impossible. Instead, it caused concern, both in this
House and in the other place, that student protection was
in some way lessened. That was not our intention. Having
sought the confirmation of lawyers that there was no change
to our policy objectives, we were content to delete the
words in order to address those concerns.
Lords amendment 5 replaced the original clause in the Bill
with a new version in order to fully apply, rather than
replicate, the Company Directors Disqualification Act 1986
to further education bodies in England and Wales. The new
version of clause 40—formerly clause 37 —still allows the
court to disqualify any governors whom it finds liable of
wrongdoing from being governors, and now also from being
company directors in any part of the UK. It fully prevents
disqualified individuals from being able to repeat the
mistakes they have made in a different way, potentially at
the expense of another FE institution. We have amended the
clause to close a potential loophole in the Bill and more
fully protect learners at FE institutions from the
potential actions of any governor who acts recklessly.
3.00 pm
The existing CDDA regime is effective as a finely balanced
deterrent for company directors. It is rare that directors are
found liable, and its existence in insolvency legislation does
not inhibit people from choosing to become company directors, but
helps to prevent poor financial management. The presence of the
CDDA regime causes company directors to reflect carefully on
their financial decisions and the potential consequences of
acting wrongfully in relation to creditors. We want to ensure the
same deterrent effect for college governors. Governors might not
appreciate the full consequence of disqualification if they are
still able to act as company directors and could set up a company
to run a college. They might be prepared to operate with a
greater degree of risk. The amendment ensures that governors of
FE bodies are on a par with governors of academies, to whom the
CDDA also fully applies.
Lords amendment 7 to clause 47, formerly clause 43, inserts an
additional provision, in so far as it relates to section 426 of
the Insolvency Act 1986, to the parts of the Bill that extend to
all parts of the UK. That does not change the application of the
FE insolvency regime only to FE bodies in England and Wales. It
ensures co-operation, if necessary, between the courts of the
different parts of the United Kingdom in matters regarding
insolvent FE bodies. We expect cases where co-operation is needed
to be very rare.
I turn to Government amendments 8 to 10. The Bill as introduced
allows the Institute for Apprenticeships to share data with
Ofsted, Ofqual and the Office for Students, and vice versa. The
amendments will enable the Secretary of State to extend the
information-sharing gateway to other persons not stated in the
Bill. The provision is necessary because the bodies with which
the institute will co-operate and share information are expected
to change over time. The amendments ensure that the institute can
function effectively.
Lords amendments 11 to 18 were prompted by the helpful
discussions we had in this House. It was clear then that we
shared a common concern to ensure that care leavers receive
appropriate help and support should their college become
insolvent. Opposition Members, including the shadow Minister, the
hon. Member for Blackpool South (Gordon Marsden), were very clear
that care leavers are particularly vulnerable. I agree, which is
why I undertook to reflect on how we might best support such
individuals. I am pleased that we were able to table these
amendments to schedules 3 and 4, requiring the education
administrator to send a copy of their proposals to the director
of children’s services at the relevant local authority. That will
ensure that the director of children’s services is formally
notified of a college insolvency and can take appropriate action
to provide support for any of their care leavers affected by the
proposals.
I ask hon. Members to support the Government on these amendments.
-
(Blackpool South)
(Lab)
I am grateful to the Minister for his considered exposition
of the Government’s position, particularly regarding the
amendments, with which we are not in dispute. I shall say
something about Lords amendment 2 after turning to Lords
amendment 1. We welcome the Government’s changes,
particularly those to the technical parts of the Bill. The
devil is in the detail, and we do not always get these
things right first time around. I am grateful to the
Government for reflecting on that.
I particularly take on board what the Minister said about
care leavers and local authorities. Without straying
outside the narrow confines of today’s discussions, may I
say that I hope that the recent debates in the House on the
Children and Social Work Bill, in which my hon. Friend the
Member for South Shields (Mrs Lewell-Buck) played a strong,
positive and constructive part, have been a useful focus
for the Minister and his Department in tabling the
amendments that he has spoken to today. I am grateful to
him for that.
I am also grateful for the widened information sharing in
schedule 1. As the Minister knows, I have described the
present structure as a bit of an alphabet soup. To strain
the analogy, I hope that this change will enable us to fish
some of the letters out of the soup and make them work
together a little easier than they would otherwise have
done.
As the Minister says, the issue in Lords amendment 1could
be regarded as one of financial privilege. I accept that he
has great interest in matters of financial support and the
rest of it. I hope that he understands that I have never,
in any shape or form, and in any of the Committee sittings
in which we have debated, disavowed his good intentions and
commitment to issues of equality. But, of course, warm
words of themselves do not necessarily carry through the
projects that we all want to see. When he says that most
apprenticeships have benefits, one has to ask about the
fate of people who do not get those benefits. He says that
this proposal will cost £200 million but, as he said, we
are already committing £60 million to training providers,
so I am not sure that that is a strong or powerful
argument.
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(Dover) (Con)
Will the hon. Gentleman give way?
-
I will give way in a little while. I want to make some
progress on the main issue before giving way to the hon.
Gentleman.
I am proud of the fact that the noble Lords considered the
matter addressed in amendment 1, which I support, in
considerable detail. In doing so, they revealed how much
further the Government needed to go and, in my view, still
need to go. In February, The Times Educational Supplement
published an eloquent chart that spelled out in graphic
detail the current gap in support between students and
apprentices. It showed that apprentices have no access to
care to learn grants, and that their families have no
access to universal credit and council tax credit. Most
trenchant and relevant when it comes to amendment 1, they
have no access to child benefit.
Amendment 1 would enable families eligible for child
benefit to receive it for children aged under 20 who are
undertaking apprenticeships. The Opposition understand, as
I am sure Government Members do, that it is not simply
about the benefit itself, but the doors that that benefit
opens to other benefits.
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I have listened carefully to the hon. Gentleman’s argument,
which seems to involve a spending commitment of £200
million. How would he pay for that?
-
First, we do not recognise that figure of £200 million.
Secondly, as I have said, the Government are already
committing £60 million to training providers, so I really
do not know why the hon. Gentleman is raising the issue of
£200 million, which would be aggregated over a period of
time.
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Will the hon. Gentleman give way?
-
No, I will not give way again. The hon. Gentleman has had
one go. I want to make progress.
The amendment calls for the Secretary of State to use
regulations to make provision to ensure that apprentices
are regarded as being involved in approved education or
training. The Government’s apprenticeships programme has
seen the introduction of the Institute for Apprenticeships
and the apprenticeship levy this month, while setting the
target of 3 million apprenticeships by 2020. However, many
commentators have continued to raise real question marks
about the potential quality of those new apprenticeships.
It is really important that in reducing the growing skills
gap in this country apprentices are not given a raw deal.
My noble Friend spelled this out
vividly in the House of Lords when he said:
“Why should families suffer as we seek to train young
people desperately needed to fill the skills gaps that I
mentioned earlier?”—[Official Report, House of Lords, 27
March 2017; Vol. 782, c. 361.]
We simply ask that question.
I am well aware—we discussed this in Committee in this
place and it was also discussed in the other place—that
apprenticeships are not currently classed as approved
educational training by the Department for Work and
Pensions. That is one of the reasons we have raised this
issue so many times. The Minister needs to reflect on the
situation of apprentices who live with parents and whose
families could lose out by more than £1,000 a year through
not being able to access child benefit, and could lose more
than £3,200 a year under universal credit. If the
Government want to reach this target, it cannot be in
anyone’s interest for doors to be closed to young people
keen to take up and embark on an apprenticeship.
The predecessor Government—perhaps this has not been heard
so much under this Government—were very fond of the concept
of “nudge” to achieve results, but, as I have said on other
occasions, people can be nudged away from things as well as
towards them. In some circumstances, parents may prevent
young people from taking up apprenticeships because the
economic consequences for the family of loss of benefit
payments in various forms could be considerable. Their
lordships made this point in their debate on 27 February.
noted that
“only 10% of apprenticeships are taken up by young people
on free school meals”,
adding that
“the loss of child benefit”
was
“a significant penalty.”—[Official Report, House of Lords,
27 February 2017; Vol. 779, c. GC99.]
spoke very strongly
when she said, echoing the Minister, that there needs to be
genuine parity if the Government want to fulfil a holistic
vision.
As I have said, the exclusions printed in The Times
Educational Supplement justify the anger and disappointment
of the National Union of Students and apprenticeship
organisations, which feel that they are being treated like
second-class citizens. I accept that, as the Minister said,
some apprentices are being paid well above the minimum
rate, but research has shown that some apprentices earn as
little as £3.50 an hour.
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Since the hon. Gentleman is talking about financial matters
again, will he return to my earlier intervention when he
said that he did recognise the figure of £200 million? How
much would his policy cost?
-
As I say, those issues would be taken forward over a
five-year period. The £200 million figure that the Minister
quoted has not been recognised, and I do not intend to
engage with it any further because no further detail has
been given to us on this point.
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rose—
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No, I am sorry, but I am not going to give way again. The
hon. Gentleman has had two shouts and he is out.
[Interruption.] I am going to continue, so he can stop
chuntering.
This will inevitably have a negative effect on the family
income in circumstances where the household budget is not
covered by the earnings in an apprentice’s salary, given
that the apprentice minimum wage is barely over £3 an hour.
The National Society of Apprentices made that point in its
submission to the Committee, saying:
“It seems inconsistent that apprentices are continually
excluded from definitions of ‘approved’ learners, when
apprenticeships are increasingly assuming their place in
the government’s holistic view of education and skills”.
If apprenticeships are to be seen as a top-tier option,
then the benefits should be top tier too. University
students receive assistance from a range of sources, from
accessing finance to discounted rates on council tax.
Apprentices currently do not receive many of those
benefits. Their lordships believe, and we agree, that the
system must be changed so that both groups are treated
equally.
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I thank the hon. Gentleman for the way in which he is
approaching these amendments. He mentioned that some
apprentices were paid more than the apprentice minimum
wage. Is he aware that 82% of apprentices are paid at or
above the appropriate level of the national minimum wage or
national living wage?
3.15 pm
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Those figures come from the Minister’s Department, and I am
not going to dispute them on this occasion. We are trying
to set, in legislation, provisions that will be valid for
five, 10 or 15 years. It seems far more appropriate to have
a principle under which everybody has equal access. We can
trade figures all day about whether this is acceptable or
whether it is 10%, 15%, 20% or 25% of apprentices who are
not in this position. I do not believe that we should go
down this route, and Members of the House of Lords agreed
when they passed this amendment.
Shakira Martin, the NUS vice-president for FE, says:
“If apprenticeships are going to be the silver bullet to
create a high-skilled economy for the future, the
government has to go further than rhetoric and genuinely
support apprentices financially to succeed.”
In support of this amendment, the Learning and Work
Institute has said:
“There are currently participation penalties for low income
and disadvantaged young people who take an apprenticeship
compared to an academic pathway. This amendment would help
towards treating apprentices and students in further and
higher education equally in the support and benefits
system.”
The Government’s decision to exclude apprenticeships from
the category of approved education or training will serve
as a deterrent to young people, particularly those from
disadvantaged backgrounds. Together with that, and without
any change to the category that apprentices are placed in
by the DWP—FE has to accept that, as things stand at the
moment—the Government are providing a severe financial
disincentive for young people to enter into an
apprenticeship as opposed to other routes of education. The
National Society of Apprentices agrees.
In the other place, the Minister’s colleague, , said that
there would be discussions about this issue with colleagues
in the Department for Work and Pensions, but that did not
happen. The Minister has told me on previous occasions that
this needed to be addressed and discussed with other
Departments, but that has not happened. This is a
Government who are long on rhetoric but short on delivery,
and it is young people and their families who are
suffering. The Government are now blocking a modest
proposal from the House of the Lords to begin to remedy
their inability to do joined-up government.
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The hon. Gentleman will know that, as I have mentioned
before, we are carrying out a social mobility review of a
whole range of issues, from benefits to incentives to
providers and employers, to get more apprentices from
disadvantaged backgrounds. It is entirely wrong to say that
we are not doing so, as a significant amount of work is
going into these areas.
-
I am grateful to the Minister. The broader perspective of
social mobility is a perfectly reasonable way of going
forward. However, to be honest, particularly at a time such
as today when we are moving to a general election, I think
that most people would be interested in some movement—some
jam now rather than a promise of jam possibly in future
from the social mobility study. I will come on to talk
about other areas where, I am afraid, the Government have
moved at, to put it at its kindest, a reasonably glacial
pace. That is one of the reasons I am not terribly
impressed by the Minister’s argument, although, as I say, I
understand and appreciate his commitment to trying to do
something.
I want to speak in support of the second part of the
amendment, which talks about opening benefits to care
leavers by opening up access to a bursary that has
traditionally been available only to university students.
Young people in local authority care who move into higher
education can apply for a one-off bursary of £2,000 from
their local authority, and the amendment would enable care
leavers who take up apprenticeships to access the same
financial support.
I remind the Minister of what the Children’s Society has
said. Every year, around 11,000 young people aged 16 or
over leave the care of their local authority and begin the
difficult transition out of care and into adulthood—to be
fair to him, he recognised that in his opening remarks—and
my hon. Friend the Member for South Shields tabled an
amendment to the Children and Social Work Bill to provide
such a local offer to care leavers. The Government have a
golden opportunity to follow up on that by focusing on
support that could be provided by the DWP. I am at a loss
to understand why the Government are ignoring this
possibility. They could make provision from the
apprenticeship levy for local authorities to administer a
£2,000 grant to all care leavers.
When care leavers move into independent living they often
begin to manage their own budget fully for the first time,
and that move may take place earlier for them than for
others in their peer group. Remember that a care leaver in
year one of an apprenticeship may be, and often is, earning
as little as £3.40 an hour before being able to transition
to a higher wage in the second year. Evidence from their
services and research has revealed how challenging care
leavers may find it to manage that budget, because of a
lack of financial support and education. As a result, young
carers frequently fall into debt and financial difficulty.
The Minister really needs to put himself in their shoes.
The Minister for Vulnerable Children and Families, the hon.
Member for Crewe and Nantwich (Edward Timpson), could tell
us all, from his own family’s perspective, how vulnerable
young people who come from disturbed and difficult family
backgrounds can be.
The question remains: why are the Government not prepared
to retain this amendment? Fine words are all very well, but
you may know, Madam Deputy Speaker, that according to the
old Tudor proverb, “Fine words butter no parsnips”. Just
what are the bureaucratic arguments for doing nothing to
support hard-working young people and their families—and,
even more so, those who do not have families to support
them—to fulfil their hopes of better times via an
apprenticeship? We talk about parity of esteem between HE
students and apprentices, but some of these young people,
because of their circumstances, struggle to have a strong
sense of self-esteem.
Why have the Government not moved on this? Once again, why
have the consultations with the DWP not taken place? Was
the Minister nobbled by No. 10 trusties or by those in his
own Department, in the same way as Department for Education
Ministers seem to have led us down the garden path of
reforms to GCSE resits only to slam the door shut? I say as
gently as I can to the Minister that if the Government do
not retain the amendment, people will know that the
Government’s rhetoric has been somewhat hollow, and
apprentices and their families will suffer.
I join the Minister in supporting amendment 2, which was
carried in the Lords, and I also want to talk about
amendment 6. The lack of parity of esteem for apprentices
starts at an early age, and, as my hon. Friend the Member
for Gateshead (Ian Mearns) illustrated in his useful and
constructive exchange with the Minister, the rhetoric on
careers advice still does not match the painful reality
that faces many young people.
The reality is that careers advice has been devastated over
the last Parliament and since 2010, certainly at a local
level, and young people who want to take a vocational and
apprenticeship route are in danger of being short-changed
again in their careers advice. Despite the work of the
Careers & Enterprise Company, which is still in its
infancy, support in schools remains poor. Careers
England—the trade body for careers advice and guidance—and
the Career Development Institute have confirmed to me
recently that in their view, nothing has greatly changed.
They estimate that only a third of schools can adequately
deliver careers advice. Taken alongside the shortage of
careers advisers and the fact that the remaining advisers
earn far less than they used to, it adds up to a very
difficult position.
That is one of the reasons why last November the co-chairs
of the Sub-Committee on Education, Skills and the Economy,
the hon. Member for Stroud (Neil Carmichael) and my hon.
Friend the Member for Hartlepool (Mr Wright), said that the
Government had been complacent over careers advice. They
said:
“The Government’s lack of action to address failings in
careers provision is unacceptable and its response to our
report smacks of complacency.”
I know that the Minister challenges that strongly, and I
know that he has put on record that the Government are
working towards a thorough careers strategy in that
respect. But we have to deal with the situation as it is
today, not with what it might be under a careers strategy
developed by whatever Government are around at the end of
the year.
In the survey conducted by the Industry Apprentice Council
last year, just 42% of respondents found out about
apprenticeships from school or college, and using one’s own
initiative remained by far the most common way for a young
person to discover apprenticeships. The council also said
that there needed to be a change in careers information,
advice and guidance because the proportion of respondents
who said that theirs had been very poor remained high
across the three surveys.
That is why the House of Lords has produced these two quite
detailed and comprehensive amendments; those overall issues
are not being addressed. Strong careers guidance is
critical to promoting apprenticeships in schools. If we are
to make a success of the institute, it is crucial that
young people are alerted early enough in their school life
to the importance and attraction of technical routes. That
is one of the things that amendment 2 from the other House,
which we supported, makes very clear.
If the Minister does not think that the Lords amendment on
careers advice is necessary, perhaps he would like to
explain just how and when the Government are going to get a
grip on the existing fractured landscape of careers advice
revealed by his own Department. Last month—it was not
bedtime reading, so I will not be surprised if hon. Members
have not read it—the Department for Education published a
research report, “An economic evaluation of the National
Careers Service”. The report was produced by London
Economics, which was originally commissioned by the former
Department for Business, Innovation and Skills to evaluate
the impact of the National Careers Service.
The National Careers Service has changed considerably
during the five years since it was introduced by the
Minister’s predecessor, the right hon. Member for South
Holland and The Deepings (Mr Hayes). I had the benefit of
discussions with him at the time, and he was very clear
when it started that the National Careers Service would
principally be for the over-24s. That process has changed.
I am not necessarily criticising that, but the process has
certainly migrated in an unplanned fashion. The National
Careers Service website says that anyone aged 13 and over
can have access to the data, and that adults aged 19 and
over can have access to one-to-one support. The problem is
that only 15% to 22% of the customers—again, I am taking
statistics from a report that the Government have
commissioned—were referred by Jobcentre Plus, while the
remainder were self-referring. Does that not speak volumes
about the lack of joined-up government between the
Department for Education and the Department for Work and
Pensions?
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In some respects, my hon. Friend is actually being generous
to the Government. I do not believe that the careers
service as it existed has been decimated; I believe it has
been laid waste by the Government’s policy since 2010. We
really need to get back to youngsters having independent
and impartial advice and guidance on their future career
available to them. Without such independence and
impartiality, we could unfortunately get back to having
those with vested interests giving advice to young people.
I remember the late referring to this
in the 1990s, when he said that much of the advice given to
young people about their future careers was akin to
pensions mis-selling because the service was packed with
vested interests.
3.30 pm
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My hon. Friend makes a very important and valuable point,
as he did earlier to the Minister, and we certainly need to
think very hard about those things.
As I have said, the National Careers Service process has
migrated substantially, which may not in itself be a bad
thing. I genuinely want to know from the Minister what
connectivity there is between the National Careers Service
and the Careers & Enterprise Company if the coverage
starts as early as age 13. I would really like to know what
the connectivity is in that process.
The very disappointing fact is that, as the impact report
says, researchers were
“unable to identify a positive impact of the National
Careers Service on employment or benefit dependency
outcomes”.
Arguably, those outcomes are its main purpose. This is
another example of why it is essential for the Government
to act on the careers strategy, and of why their failure so
far to do so makes Lords amendments 2 and 6 so important.
With the expansion of apprenticeships and the addition of
technical education to the institute, it will be even more
important for students and apprentices to have all the
information that they need to make informed decisions.
Young people who get the best careers advice in college or
schools are more likely to be able to seek out the better
apprenticeships. That is why I warmly welcome Lords
amendment 2, Lord Baker’s amendment, which had our support
and cross-party support. It would ensure that schools have
to provide access to advice about apprenticeships. Why does
that matter? It matters because, as my hon. Friend has
said, knowledge in general is power, and unbiased knowledge
is very important indeed. Incidentally, that is also why my
hon. Friend the Member for Scunthorpe (Nic Dakin)
introduced a ten-minute rule Bill to require schools to
give access to their premises to representatives of post-16
education institutions to enable them to provide pupils
with advice and guidance.
All of that is why Lords amendment 6 is also important. I
am encouraged by the fact that the new chief inspector,
Amanda Spielman, to whom I have spoken recently, is
sympathetic to Ofsted making a much stronger case for
ensuring that apprenticeships rate more highly in the
information provided in schools. Incidentally, the Lords
have already pointed out that that will require Ofsted to
have more resources; my noble Friend pointed that out on
Report on 27 March. If we do not get integration between
the Careers & Enterprise Company and the National
Careers Service, what we ask Ofsted to do will not work.
Just what is the Minister’s response to these arguments?
Why are the National Careers Service and the Careers &
Enterprise Company apparently working on different lines?
If he does not want to accept Lords amendment 6, what
guarantees can he give to this House or to noble Lords that
the necessary work will be done?
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(Southport) (LD)
I want to speak very briefly on the Government motion to
disagree with Lords amendment 6 and Government amendment
(a) in lieu, as much as anything else to probe what
amendment (a) will achieve. As a preface to that, let me
give an impression of what the noble sought to achieve with
Lords amendment 6. We have all acknowledged during the
course of the debate so far that careers advice is
incredibly variable and has been for some considerable
time. tried to set in place a
mechanism for monitoring careers advice so that we know
precisely how good or how bad, and how valuable or useless,
it actually is.
In Committee stage in the Lords, described careers
advice as always having been “pretty poor”. There was, of
course, an Ofsted report in 2013 that established that
three quarters of schools were not providing effective
advice or, as the hon. Member for Gateshead (Ian Mearns)
pointed out, impartial advice. It said that the guidance
given to schools was not sufficiently explicit, employers
were not engaging in many cases and the National Careers
Service was not effectively promoted. A key conclusion of
the Ofsted report was that schools’ advice should be
assessed when taking into account general school
leadership, or sector leadership in the case of further
education—Lords amendment 6 also applies to the FE sector.
I think that the Minister accepts all that, and I know that
he has produced a variation on Lords amendment 6. I would
like him to satisfy me and the House that it complies with
what the Lords intended in their amendment.
-
I thank the hon. Member for Southport (John Pugh) and the
shadow Minister for their speeches. I understand that the
hon. Member for Southport is stepping down. He is an
experienced Member of the House, and I send him every good
wish for the future.
To answer the hon. Gentleman we are essentially accepting
de facto Lords amendment 6, which was suggested by
. We have just made it
tighter for legal reasons and, in fact, stronger. Ofsted
will now be required to comment on college careers offers
in its reports. However, we accept the principle of Lords
amendment 6.
I set out earlier the Government’s position that the
majority of the Lords amendments serve to strengthen the
measures in the Bill and ensure their success in practice.
I urge hon. Members to accept all the amendments made in
the Lords, with the exception of Lords amendment 1. As I
explained earlier, that amendment is subject to financial
privilege and I ask Members to reject it on that basis,
while noting the work I have set out, which demonstrates
our commitment to finding the most effective ways to
address barriers and support the disadvantaged into
apprenticeships.
The shadow Minister said, in essence, that we should put
our money where our mouth is. It is worth remembering that
we have 900,000 apprentices at the moment, which is the
highest on record, and that 25% of apprentices come from
the poorest fifth of areas. The Careers & Enterprise
Company has more than 1,300 enterprise advisers going into
schools, and they are set to target something like 250,000
students in 75% of the career coldspots in the country. The
National Careers Service is there to give careers advice
and CV advice, and to provide personal contact either face
to face, over the telephone or on the internet. The bodies
have different roles.
I ask Members to accept our amendment in lieu of Lords
amendment 6, on which many noble Lords spoke. I spoke
earlier of the positive activity at Derby College. It is by
no means the only college taking active steps to provide
high-quality careers advice to students. I have seen
incredible work in my own college in Harlow and in
Gateshead in the north-east of England. We want to ensure
that all young people can access such support, and I ask
Members to support that ambition by accepting the amendment
in lieu.
-
I know that the Minister is determined and full of good
intentions, but good intentions do not provide sound
careers advice and guidance to young people who are in the
system now. We need to see more urgency from the Government
in backing up his decent intentions, to make sure that
young people get the impartial advice and guidance they so
deeply need as soon as possible.
-
Let me give the hon. Gentleman our intention. Given the
financial climate, £90 million is no small sum of money to
spend on careers, predominantly with the Careers &
Enterprise Company, which has enterprise advisers going
into schools. There is £20 million for mentoring services
in schools. As I mentioned, enterprise advisers are going
up and down the country to coldspots. The National Careers
Service alone is getting more than £75 million this year to
advise on careers. That is real financial backing for two
very important services.
-
I am listening to the Minister. I was a member of the
National Careers Service national association board prior
to the invention of Connexions. I seem to remember that the
national budget for careers at that time was something like
£130 million. That was more than 15 years ago. In the
current climate, the figures the Minister is talking about
are inadequate.
-
Given the financial climate, the £90 million to be spent
predominantly with the Careers & Enterprise Company and
the £77 million that is going to the National Careers
Service this year alone are sizeable sums of money. As I
have said, we are developing a careers strategy. Obviously
the election is occurring, but I hope very much that we
will see careers with much more of a skills focus, and do
much more work in schools on mentoring and on work
experience.
I have said that the Bill is a Ronseal Bill. It is very
much part of our reforms to create an apprenticeships and
skills nation and to give millions of young people the
ladder of opportunity to get the jobs, security and
prosperity that they need. It is a Bill to ensure that
technical education is held in the regard it deserves. In
the unlikely event of a college insolvency, students will
be protected. The measures in the Bill make vital changes
to support young people to build the essential skills that
our nation needs, and they provide the right support to
enable young people to climb that ladder. Many Members on
both sides of the House and in the other place have spoken
in support of that ambition, and I take this opportunity to
thank them for their ongoing commitment to the Bill and for
supporting all our young people to reach their potential.
Question put, That this House disagrees with Lords
amendment 1.
Division 197
19 April 2017 3.43 pm
The House divided:
Ayes: 298 Noes: 182 Ayes: 298 Noes: 182
Question accordingly agreed to.
Lords amendment 1 disagreed to.
Lords amendment 6 disagreed to.
Government amendment (a) made in lieu of Lords amendment 6.
Lords amendments 2 to 5 and 7 to 18 agreed to.
Ordered, That a Committee be appointed to draw up Reasons to be
assigned to the Lords for disagreeing to their amendment 1;
That , , , , and be members of the Committee;
That be the Chair of the
Committee;
That three be the quorum of the Committee.
That the Committee do withdraw immediately.—(Christopher
Pincher.)
Committee to withdraw immediately; reasons to be reported and
communicated to the Lords.
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