Showing posts with label unemployed. Show all posts
Showing posts with label unemployed. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 2, 2005

Encouragement is the key to social-services-to-work programs

Corporate Welfare! I think we should start with Ingeus Company. Telling us what we already know for $$$$!

The Federal Government begins an intensive round of strategies on how to force more Australians off welfare [social-services] and into work the focus is on whether the changes should apply to some of the people receiving the disability support pension.

But before they start manipulating and disrupting the disabled you only have to look at work for the dole for $10.00, one way the HoWARd government has managed to get unemployed people off the Newstart benefit? And I suppose the question is did it work?

Work for the dole? $10.00?

Let's have real jobs paid with real wages. Let's stop this legal slavery now!

ABC: "In Britain, the Blair Government is already getting disability pensioners back into work and an Australian contractor has found that the key to success is not forcing anyone into any work or any training."

The fact is though most disabled people who can do any work actually already work or are volunteers for unfunded and non-government organisations existing on pensions as a basic wage and working when they can within the parameters of their disability.

The Howard Government is aware there is no political danger associated with forcing existing disability support pensioners into work after July 1 when he has control of the Senate. Disability pensioners fear they may lose their pension and associated entitlements if they're forced to work and the job does not work out.

ABC: "In Britain, a program to help people with disabilities find work is well underway."

But that's fine for the disabled who are looking for something to do and haven't found a job or haven't volunteered yet.

After all 'Life is Community Service' and most people find something constructive to do rather than lounge about, because if they didn't they would indulge themselves to death in a very short time. But the governments have a different angle no doubt, 'a good cop perhaps to exterminate the 'cockroaches' with a subtle plan to manipulate, convince and convert people who can easily be led into doing things they may not be able to do and lose those things they depend on for their survival?

These governments say they're trying to help out but they want to shunt the disabled onto Newstart just to save $20.00 the difference between Newstart and the Disability Support Pension and associated entitlements. Forcing them to work when they would otherwise be getting on with their lives and working it out for themselves, when they can, is a lot different than forcing them to do what they cannot.

ABC: "Greg Ashmead is the deputy managing director of Ingeus which is a private company specialising in welfare-to-work[social-services-to-work] programs that has several contracts with the Blair Government, including one to help 2,700 people with disabilities to return to work."

Perhaps though Ingeus is cleaning up in more ways than one and perhaps they are also a scapegoat for the government? To help manipulate clients sent to them with rhetoric and all the while the community is being misled while governments spend their social dollar on warfare expenditure?

Who's cleaning up corporate welfare? What about government advertising to pro-government corporate media? For instance Channel 10 made 94 Million last year?

Welfare Reform for Warfare Expenditure?

Top of the agenda for what the Government describes as its "strategic" Cabinet meetings are the restructuring of industrial relations and welfare reform, but not CORPORATE WELFARE REFORM and it seems increasing GOVERNMENT expenditure on WARFARE in Iraq?

ABC: "Ingeus operates in Australia's Job Network and in the UK and France, specialising in welfare-to-work programs."[social-services-to work programs.

Re: their use of the word 'welfare' is just propaganda for the 'bludger' mentality so the community looks down at the disabled instead of using 'social services' which it really is in terms of assistance to disabled people.

Greg Ashmead says the British program is entirely voluntary.

"I think it's important that we engage people, excite people about the options that are available to them," he said.

As it should be considering the disabled already volunteer their services for free anyway, and all the while paying tax on everything they buy which intern goes back to the government's coffers.

If some of these disabled are already working for non funded government agencies for nothing and paying the government tax all the while, then why can't they be left alone to get on with the job? Think of the inflation of not having mentors in the community and the cost of the government having to deal with every complaint. These people may be disabled but they have lots of skills to pass on in a way that they can pass them on.

How inconsiderate of the government to kick the working poor without taking into account their production and good will considering they're disabled,

ABC: Greg Ashmead says, the key to success there is encouraging, not forcing them, to look for work.

"It's very important that people feel motivated.I honestly don't think people are going to go into sustained quality employment if they feel as though they're forced to do so."

ABC: Less than one year on, Greg Ashmead says 30 per cent of those British pensioners now have sustained part-time or full-time work.

"People can return to benefits if there's an issue or a problem that they endure," he said.

ABC: Mr Ashmead says it is clear an essential ingredient is a team of health professionals on tap, to assess disability pensioners' capacity to work. Doctors, nurses, dieticians, occupational therapists, psychologists and exercise physiologists.

"I think the last thing anybody wants to do is set people up to fail. It's not good enough to put people into a role or a job that is not suitable for them, and then they find themselves maybe even further back than they were before they were referred to an opportunity," he said.

It's not cheap to help disability pensioners into work. One source has told the recent Howard Government pilot program, cost $2,000 to get one jobseeker in the door of an employment agency and another $1,500 to assess their capability to work.

"It's expensive, but I think in terms of returns, it's well worth the investment," Mr Ashmead says.

ABC: To combat any reluctance of employers to hire a person with a disability, the UK program also funds workplace modifications to make sure people can fit productively back into the work force."

By Alexandra Kirk and Just Us posted 2 March 05

Related:

Disability

Peter Saunders shake-up is long overdue: Welfare Not Warfare
Peter Saunders: Many DSP claimants are older men with limited skills who have had difficulty finding work?

Welfare Reform for Warfare Expenditure?
John Howard: "Self-evidently we would have liked the major combat to have gone differently ... [but] coalition withdrawal or defeat is unimaginable."

Govt plots post-July strategy?
Fascist Prime Minister insists he is not on a mission to punish welfare recipients [social services.]

HoWARd 'determined' to make the disabled woRK?
The Federal Government is considering a system of "coercion" and incentive to force the disabled to work. But what happened to 6 billion-budget surpluses? Why do they need to force disabled people to work? Do they need more money and less disabled people? Or do would they rather spend the money on WAR?

Opposition pension claims valid
The Federal Governments secret agenda to cut pensions, including the disability and single parent payments while spending billions on military hardware is just too much for most disabled people to accept.

Thousands march for disability protest
"We are not prepared to go back to the dark ages. This has to be reversed," Mr Preston said. "We are hoping that the community sees that we shouldn't be taking money from people with disabilities. These people have had it tough all their lives (and) there is already more unmet need than we can cope with."

Howard's Job Network Bailout
Up to 670,000 people on disability support pensions will be encouraged to sign up to the Job Network under a radical new plan to get disabled people off welfare and into work.

Corporate Welfare

Corporate welfare or how to steal social services?
Ever wondered why there are so many homeless, why we need a 10 pc GST, lack of services for mental disability, still paying off the Olympics, poor public transport planning etc etc etc?

Unemployed:

Work for the dole is legal slavery
Work for the dole was originally sold to us by Howard as a warm and fuzzy light work project. We would be working for nothing but we would be enjoying giving back something to the community, so it was reckoned.

FIGHT UNEMPLOYMENT!
Peter Costello commended this result in his budget speech. Even if we were to believe this figure it still means more than half a million living at a level much lower than that is recognised as poverty.

Mark Latham's, token gestures for older unemployed
StandUp appreciates the fact that Mark Latham is concerned about older unemployed people. His specialist job network proposal aimed at older people might provide a bit of assistance.

Work for the dole failure for two thirds
THE Un-Australian: " MORE than a third of the people who completed the Howard Government's work-for-the-dole programs last year were in jobs or studying within three months of finishing.

Work for the dole? $10.00?
StandUp! Wishes to draw your attention to a serious attack on all of us--work for the dole. We were assured that unemployed would not be forced to work in areas where employed workers would normally be employed. This has shown to be a lie! Under work for the dole, unemployed have been forced to carry out; concreting, tiling, landscaping, repairs, renovation, painting, gardening, nurses and teachers aid work.

'WORK FOR THE DOLE' REDUCES JOB PROSPECTS
A major independent study commissioned by the Government and released today under Freedom of Information by The Australian newspaper indicates that the 'Work for the Dole' program actually reduces the job prospects of unemployed people.

Youth welfare system unfair: ACOSS
The Australian Council of Social Service (ACOSS) is warning urgent action is needed to fix youth poverty and disincentives for the unemployed to improve their job prospects.

Bringing up children Can we afford it?
Peter Costello expects us to carry out our patriotic duty by going home and having more children. But for most people it is a struggle to bring up one child let alone two or three.

Federal Budget: Tax cuts for the rich!
For the Howard government, unemployed people are not even worth thinking about.

Private job network agency blues
Can you trust a private job network agency? No you can't! A friend of ours is registered at MTC Marrickville.

Indigenous Social Justice Association Djadi Dugarang
INDIGENOUS EMPLOYMENT. Part 1

Centrelink puts the screws on prison debt
A 1999 study by the Brisbane Prisoners Legal Service revealed that on leaving prisoners had an average debt of $14,031. Almost one in five had a debt to Centrelink while in prison. This debt arose as a result inability to cancel things such as leases, Social Security payments, utilities and telephones.

Democrats approve tougher welfare penalties: But how does that pan out?
There used to be an old saying in Australia" if your hungry steal a sheep and leave the pelt on the fence.

Six weeks, six months, six years: inmates have little chance of making fresh start Even prisoners who serve short sentences are likely to suffer long-term consequences, including increased rates of homelessness and unemployment.

Military Spending

Howard: We as a nation have got to invest heavily in defence?
Fascist Prime Minister John HoWARd has indicated the Government will make major changes to work place laws, cut disability support forcing the disabled to work and increase his defence commitment.

Hill primed for war!
Australian Caretaker Defence Minister Robert Hill has announced a multi-million dollar upgrade of the Pearce Air Force base in Western Australia. Hill says $87 million would be spent on a major upgrade of the base, which is Australia's main flying training facility.

Troop deployment not a deepening of effort: Hill
Deploying an extra 30 troops to Iraq was not a deepening of Australia's involvement because they were being sent to protect those already there, Defence Minister Robert Hill said yesterday.

Auditor Generals damning defence report
The Defence Department computer system upgrade has cost Australia tens of millions of dollars in a gigantic bungle, according to the Federal Opposition. The Commonwealth auditor-general has issued a damning report into the project.

Thursday, September 9, 2004

Transport costs 'discourage' unemployed renters

A report on housing assistance has found that one of the biggest work disincentives for unemployed renters and public housing tenants is the cost of public transport.

Researchers interviewed 400 unemployed renters and public housing tenants in Sydney and Melbourne on behalf of the Australian Housing and Urban Research Institute. Report co-author Professor Bill Randolph says 60 per cent of participants did not own a car.

He says they told researchers that most available jobs are too far away or too costly to get to on public transport. "A large proportion of people basically said 'look, getting to work, finding work because the good work locations are so far away from where we live was the real problem'," he said.

"So it wasn't so much the fact that they might lose rent assistance or whatever but it was the fact that the housing wasn't in the right place."

Professor Randolph says the report encourages the Federal Government to change the structure of its rent assistance scheme.

"Rent assistance doesn't help people living in high-cost areas. It's a flat rate across the whole country and there's no incentive for people to try and get access to housing in high-cost areas in the city locations where the jobs are. Rent assistance doesn't help with that," he said.

By Peasants 9 September 04

Related:

Governance a misfortune to experience As an employee with the Australian government agency Centrelink my job was to interpret Australian law to determine entitlements for Australian citizens.

Families worse off under Lib/Lab: Community!
The London lights are far abeam, behind a bank of cloud. Along the shore the gaslights gleam, the gale is piping loud; And down the Channel, groping blind, we drive her through the haze. Towards the land we left behind -- The good old land of "never mind", and old Australian ways.

Families worse off under Lib/Lab: Community!The London lights are far abeam, behind a bank of cloud. Along the shore the gaslights gleam, the gale is piping loud; And down the Channel, groping blind, we drive her through the haze. Towards the land we left behind -- The good old land of "never mind", and old Australian ways.

Democrats call for improved accountability
Democrats' Senator Andrew Murray says reform of the rules governing political donations and politicians' salaries is needed, as well as measures to help whistleblowers in the public service.

FIGHT UNEMPLOYMENT!
Peter Costello commended this result in his budget speech. Even if we were to believe this figure it still means more than half a million living at a level much lower than that is recognised as poverty.

Mark Latham's, token gestures for older unemployed
StandUp appreciates the fact that Mark Latham is concerned about older unemployed people. His specialist job network proposal aimed at older people might provide a bit of assistance.

Department of Housing Tenants
A leaflet put out by the Inner city Tenants Advice and Advocacy Service contains some interesting information about how the Carr Government is planning to take some more rights away from the Department of Housing tenants.

Govts failing homeless, ACOSS says
The Australian Council of Social Services (ACOSS) says many homeless people are being refused shelter because support services are not properly funded to cope with demand.

Work for the dole failure for two thirds
"The study provides strong support for our view that 'Work for the Dole' is a "cruel hoax" that fails to truly help jobseekers." ACOSS President Andrew McCallum.

Bonus prompts baby talk, principal says
A western Sydney school principal says the Federal Government's $3,000 baby bonus is encouraging his students to fall pregnant.

Government ignoring housing crisis: ACOSS
There are 100,000 homeless people nationwide and one third of those are children. The Australian Council of Social Service (ACOSS) says low-income families are facing a crisis in affordable housing that the Federal Government is choosing to ignore.

Youth welfare system unfair: ACOSS
The Australian Council of Social Service (ACOSS) is warning urgent action is needed to fix youth poverty and disincentives for the unemployed to improve their job prospects.

Australia: Private job network agency blues
Can you trust a private job network agency? No you can't! A friend of ours is registered at MTC Marrickville. This agency has a practice of forcing unemployed to fill out preparing for work agreements. Of course they didn't offer him any work! So why was he cut off the dole?

Work for the dole? $10.00?
StandUp! Wishes to draw your attention to a serious attack on all of us--work for the dole. We were assured that unemployed would not be forced to work in areas where employed workers would normally be employed.

INDIGENOUS EMPLOYMENT: ISJA
If we want to survive we must work at it Indigenous unemployment reaching crisis: welfare group Action to lower Indigenous unemployment rate Govt underspends on indigenous employment: dept Economic development: The outback malaise Call for end to Indigenous welfare cycle.

Howard's Job Network Bailout
Up to 670,000 people on disability support pensions will be encouraged to sign up to the Job Network under a radical new plan to get disabled people off social services and into work.

ACOSS urges C'wealth to invest in families
The Australian Council of Social Service (ACOSS) is urging the Federal Government to abandon any plans for a pre-election tax cut and instead increase benefits for families.

The Criminal Law (Rehabilitation of Offenders) Act 1986 Qld
The Criminal Law (Rehabilitation of Offenders) Act 1986 (Qld), requires that any person who has committed an offence which is less than 10 years old or which resulted in a prison sentence of more than 30 months, must disclose that offence if requested eg. for employment purposes. If a criminal record is disclosed in a job application, it is unlikely that person will be given the job.

Tax cuts wrong way to help battlers: ACOSS
The Australian Council of Social Service (ACOSS) says the Budgets fails to deliver anything for low and middle income Australians.

Public housing on a precipice
THE booming housing market was squeezing thousands of low-income earners out of private rental accommodation into a public housing system on the verge of collapse, Australia's peak social body has warned.

Democrats approve tougher welfare penalties: But how does that pan out? There used to be an old saying in Australia" if you're hungry steal a sheep and leave the pelt on the fence. How do you plead, Peter Saunders?

Shoplifting and homelessness
Shoplifting increased by 7.5 per cent last year, making it the only major crime category to register a significant increase in 2002, crime statistics show. "It's a chain reaction kind of thing. No payments, more crime. More crime, more cops. More cops, more harassment. It goes back to the bloody payments, basically," he said.

Fears for poor if Social Services take a social slide?
The director of the NSW Council for Social Service, Alan Kirkland, said it was very difficult to balance the impact of problem gambling against the broader community benefits.

Democrats approve tougher welfare penalties: But how does that pan out? There used to be an old saying in Australia" if you're hungry steal a sheep and leave the pelt on the fence. How do you plead, Peter Saunders?

Social services groups swamped
A new report has revealed higher costs and increasing demands are forcing [social services] groups to turn more people away.

Fears for poor if Social Services take a social slide?
The director of the NSW Council for Social Service, Alan Kirkland, said it was very difficult to balance the impact of problem gambling against the broader community benefits.

Social Services small change? Or wast the money on WAR!
Lone parents on [social services] average 12 years of benefits - and are often worse off if they work. But reforming the system is risky and often costly, Bettina Arndt explains.

EX-PRISONER UNEMPLOYMENT: SENTENCED FOR LIFE
Name removed by request served time in prison decades ago. Shes still being punished today. According to commonwealth and state legislation, ex-prisoners applying for jobs must declare any conviction that fits into the following categories: less than 10 years old, more than 10 years old but served more than 30 months in prison.

Unemployed farm postings would cost jobs: AWU
The Australian Workers Union has rejected a proposal to place work-for-the-dole participants on drought-affected rural properties.

Tough luck! Kicks the poor to death
Australia is urged to adopt a United States-style welfare system, [?] cut welfare spending [social services spending] and encourage people to help themselves in a book on poverty published today.

Economy benefiting from non-profit institutions
Non-profit institutions are contributing $30 billion a year to Australia's economy. The Australian Bureau of Statistics has found about a third of that comes from volunteers who worked free for more than 550 million hours in 1999/2000.

NSW prisons - primary industry bailed up!
In many quiet regional centres around NSW there is a new primary industry shaping up. It has something to do with Bail but not with bales. The minister for Agriculture Richard Amery who also has the prisons portfolio is now committed to farming prisoners.

Robin Egan
Two thirds of fines are never collected because they go beyond the means of the defendants and because in lots of cases people do not see that they are responsible. Especially where people know their in the right and no fine ought to have been a penalty.

Wednesday, July 21, 2004

Mark Latham's, token gestures for older unemployed

StandUp appreciates the fact that Mark Latham is concerned about older unemployed people. His specialist job network proposal aimed at older people might provide a bit of assistance.

But the main issue is not the deficiencies of older people. It is the prejudice of employers. These days in some professions one can be over the hill at aged forty. This is a disgrace.

Under the Anti Discrimination Act, discrimination against the aged as well as sex, religion, sexual preference, transgender status, race etc. is supposed to be illegal but in reality this is extremely difficult to enforce.

If an employer were challenged on this issue, he or she would merely find another excuse for not employing the older job applicant.

There is no compulsory Work for the Dole for those over fifty. There should be no forced Work for the dole for anyone. But job network agencies find other ways of persecuting us.

One fifty five year old told us how he was forced to go to his agency office several days a week to sit all day in front of a computer -- looking for jobs which simply are not there.

Mark Latham has a knack of making policy initiatives on significant issues ignored by the Howard Government. It is indeed timely that older unemployed be put on the political agenda. But Latham is at best only offering band-aid solutions.

In no way is he guaranteeing jobs? In no way will he enforce employers to change attitude and in no way will he guarantee the right to work.

StandUp supports the right to work for everyone. No matter how old we are we still need a decent income. Working is the way to get it. Many of us also like to work as we find it creative fulfilling, providing satisfaction and for the social life. We should have the right to work if we want to irrespective of how old we are.

By StandUp NEWS posted 21 July 04

Related:

Department of Housing Tenants
A leaflet put out by the Inner city Tenants Advice and Advocacy Service contains some interesting information about how the Carr Government is planning to take some more rights away from the Department of Housing tenants.

Work for the dole failure for two thirds
"The study provides strong support for our view that 'Work for the Dole' is a "cruel hoax" that fails to truly help jobseekers." ACOSS President Andrew McCallum.

Bonus prompts baby talk, principal says
A western Sydney school principal says the Federal Government's $3,000 baby bonus is encouraging his students to fall pregnant.

Government ignoring housing crisis: ACOSS
There are 100,000 homeless people nationwide and one third of those are children. The Australian Council of Social Service (ACOSS) says low-income families are facing a crisis in affordable housing that the Federal Government is choosing to ignore.

Youth welfare system unfair: ACOSS
The Australian Council of Social Service (ACOSS) is warning urgent action is needed to fix youth poverty and disincentives for the unemployed to improve their job prospects.

Australia: Private job network agency blues
Can you trust a private job network agency? No you can't! A friend of ours is registered at MTC Marrickville. This agency has a practice of forcing unemployed to fill out preparing for work agreements. Of course they didn't offer him any work! So why was he cut off the dole?

Work for the dole? $10.00?
StandUp! Wishes to draw your attention to a serious attack on all of us--work for the dole. We were assured that unemployed would not be forced to work in areas where employed workers would normally be employed.

INDIGENOUS EMPLOYMENT: ISJA
If we want to survive we must work at it Indigenous unemployment reaching crisis: welfare group Action to lower Indigenous unemployment rate Govt underspends on indigenous employment: dept Economic development: The outback malaise Call for end to Indigenous welfare cycle.

Howard's Job Network Bailout
Up to 670,000 people on disability support pensions will be encouraged to sign up to the Job Network under a radical new plan to get disabled people off social services and into work.

The Criminal Law (Rehabilitation of Offenders) Act 1986 Qld
The Criminal Law (Rehabilitation of Offenders) Act 1986 (Qld), requires that any person who has committed an offence which is less than 10 years old or which resulted in a prison sentence of more than 30 months, must disclose that offence if requested eg. for employment purposes. If a criminal record is disclosed in a job application, it is unlikely that person will be given the job.

Shoplifting and homelessness
Shoplifting increased by 7.5 per cent last year, making it the only major crime category to register a significant increase in 2002, crime statistics show. "It's a chain reaction kind of thing. No payments, more crime. More crime, more cops. More cops, more harassment. It goes back to the bloody payments, basically," he said.

Democrats approve tougher welfare penalties: But how does that pan out? There used to be an old saying in Australia" if you're hungry steal a sheep and leave the pelt on the fence. How do you plead, Peter Saunders?

Social services groups swamped
A new report has revealed higher costs and increasing demands are forcing [social services] groups to turn more people away.

Fears for poor if Social Services take a social slide?
The director of the NSW Council for Social Service, Alan Kirkland, said it was very difficult to balance the impact of problem gambling against the broader community benefits.

Social Services small change? Or wast the money on WAR!
Lone parents on [social services] average 12 years of benefits - and are often worse off if they work. But reforming the system is risky and often costly, Bettina Arndt explains.

EX-PRISONER UNEMPLOYMENT: SENTENCED FOR LIFE
Name removed by request served time in prison decades ago. Shes still being punished today. According to commonwealth and state legislation, ex-prisoners applying for jobs must declare any conviction that fits into the following categories: less than 10 years old, more than 10 years old but served more than 30 months in prison.

Unemployed farm postings would cost jobs: AWU
The Australian Workers Union has rejected a proposal to place work-for-the-dole participants on drought-affected rural properties.

Tough luck! Kicks the poor to death
Australia is urged to adopt a United States-style welfare system, [?] cut welfare spending [social services spending] and encourage people to help themselves in a book on poverty published today.

Economy benefiting from non-profit institutions
Non-profit institutions are contributing $30 billion a year to Australia's economy. The Australian Bureau of Statistics has found about a third of that comes from volunteers who worked free for more than 550 million hours in 1999/2000.

NSW prisons - primary industry bailed up!
In many quiet regional centres around NSW there is a new primary industry shaping up. It has something to do with Bail but not with bales. The minister for Agriculture Richard Amery who also has the prisons portfolio is now committed to farming prisoners.

Robin Egan
Two thirds of fines are never collected because they go beyond the means of the defendants and because in lots of cases people do not see that they are responsible. Especially where people know their in the right and no fine ought to have been a penalty.