Title: Helping disabled people get and keep jobs
1Helping disabled people get and keep jobs
2Access to Work programme
- Access to Work is one of our most popular and
successful labour market programmes, with aim of
reducing inequalities between disabled people
and non-disabled people by removing practical
barriers to work - Likely to help c 28,000 disabled customers get or
keep employment this year - High levels of satisfaction from disabled
customers and their employers.
3Access to Work Eligibility
- To be eligible to apply for Access to Work, a
customer must - have a disability or health condition as defined
under the DDA which is affecting their ability to
work - be 16 years-old or over (there is no upper age
limit) - live and work in Great Britain
- be in work already, or have a confirmed
start-date - not be in receipt of Incapacity Benefit or ESA
(however the customer may get limited help if
they will be working under Higher Level or
Supported Permitted Work rules).
4Access to Work Elements
- Communicator Support at Interview meets full
cost of hiring an interpreter to remove any
communication barriers faced at an interview.
Predominantly used by people with hearing
difficulties, could also provide support to
someone with learning disabilities or speech
difficulty - Support Worker, might include reading to a
visually impaired person, communicating for a
hearing impaired person via British Sign
Language, providing specialist coaching for a
person with a learning difficulty or helping
someone with personal care needs in their working
environment - Travel to Work grants, to meet the additional
costs of travel to work for people who are unable
to use public transport. Might include funding
adaptations to make a customers own vehicle
accessible, or paying the additional costs of
taxis to and from work - Special Aids and Equipment, e.g. specialist
chairs or Information and Communications
Technology required by the customer - Adaptations to Premises and Equipment, making
premises and equipment accessible and usable by
disabled person.
5What AtW Programme Pays for
- Access to Work will pay 100 of approved costs
for - People in their job for less than six weeks, or
who are about to start in a new job - People in self employment
- Support workers
- Travel to work
- Communicator support at interview
- For people in their job for six weeks or longer,
Access to Work meets up to 80 of approved costs
above a threshold of 300 and below a ceiling of
10,000 and 100 of approved costs above 10,000,
over a 3 year period.
6Access to Work Delivery
- Delivered by Jobcentre Plus
- Initial interview and eligibility check generally
done by telephone to Operational Support Units
(based in Glasgow, Cardiff and London) - If eligible, customer then referred to relevant
Access to Work Adviser, based in Jobcentre Plus
offices. Further detailed discussions to
determine needs, usually by telephone but may
involve visits or other arrangements as necessary - Support determined individually, following
assessment by Access to Work Adviser and, if
appropriate, by a contracted specialist
third-party assessor.
7Access to Work Developments 1
- An additional one-off 8m has been secured for
09/10 to support customers during the economic
downturn - As promised in the White Paper Reforming Welfare
for the Future the budget for Access to Work
will double to 138m in 2013/14. Budget growth
begins in 2010/11, but profile not yet set. - In planning for growth of programme, particular
focus on increasing participation by customers
with mental health conditions and moderate to
severe learning disabilities, both
under-represented by comparison with need, and on
supporting people working for SMEs - From April 2009, disabled people taking part in a
formal Work Trial can apply for Access to Work.
Work Trials can last from a few days to 6 weeks
and because there is a genuine job vacancy at the
end they are a direct route into paid employment
8Access to Work Developments 2
- November 2008, launched a small pilot
specifically aiming to assist customers with
fluctuating mental health conditions move in to
and retain paid employment - Run in conjunction with mental health
organisation, Mind, operating in London Boroughs
of Islington and Hammersmith Fulham - Over c. 9 month period, the pilot expects to
provide assistance to 60 customers, with the
intention that employers will build a greater
capacity to support their employees in times of
ill health, without the assistance of Mind or
AtW - Lessons learned can be applied to support
customers with other fluctuating conditions.
9Access to Work Developments 3
- Testing concepts of Right to Control through a
small pilot increasing choice and control within
the AtW programme. This pilot will include up
front payment of awards to new customers. This
pilot will begin in July and will run initially
for 6 months. Evaluation of this will inform the
wider Right to Control trailblazers being
developed by ODI - Working with major employers e.g. Royal Mail
Group to develop more efficient delivery models.
RMG arrangement gives single national point of
contact and accelerated decision making, in
exchange for greater contribution rate (first
1000, then 30 contribution rate). JCP working
with other major national employers to develop
similar arrangements.
10Specialist Disability Employment Programme
- Current provision
- WORKSTEP Support for disabled people facing
complex issues in getting/keeping a paid job
(currently spend around 69m, helping some 14,000
people) - Work Preparation Helps disabled people address
employment related issues associated with their
disability and prepare to enter work (currently
spend around 11m) - Job Introduction Scheme Can pay a wage subsidy of
75 per week for up to thirteen weeks (currently
spend around 1m)
11Why change?
- On 3 December 2007, DWP launched its public
consultation Improving Specialist Disability
Employment Services, aimed at improving the
effectiveness of some of the specialist support
which the DWP provides to help disabled people
enter and/or retain employment. - The consultation document provided an analysis of
our current specialist disability employment
programmes and showed that they did not always
focus on the needs of individual customers, were
not always of a good quality and may not be
available near where people need the services. - It was clear from our programme evaluations that
Work Preparation (either as an assessment or job
entry service) and WORKSTEP could be used
together effectively to help someone gain and
retain employment, but this did not happen often
enough.
12 New Programme Modular Design
- Module 1
- Aimed at disabled people who have more complex
barriers to work, primarily those who are likely
to need some form of support to retain their
position when they have entered work. - This module is six months long with a three month
extension possible dependent on individual need,
determined on a case-by-case basis. - Module 2
- Once an individual has found paid employment the
service provider will work with the employer and
customer to identify the support required for the
disable customer to start work. - This module will last for up to two years,
although the expectation is that the majority of
customers will remain on the module for a shorter
period. - Module 3
- The longer-term supported employment module would
focus on helping provide a stable working
environment and helping the individual develop
their career. There will be however, some focus
to move into unsupported employment. - This module will recognise that, for some people,
there will always be a need for them to be
supported in the workplace.
13New Programme Targets
- More people getting jobs
- minimum expectation that 55 of new participants
get a supported employment placement - minimum expectation that 30 of participants will
move to unsupported employment - More people staying in jobs
- minimum expectation that 60 of participants who
have attained unsupported employment will
continue
14Timetable for Implementation
- Pre-Qualification Questionnaire (PQQ) events
March/April 2009 - PQQ bids received May 2009
- Critical Design Review July 2009
- Invitation to Tender (ITT) July 2009
- ITT bids received October 2009
- Contract Award April 2010
- Operational Readiness Review June 2010
- Contract Start Date w/c 26.10.10
15Remploy
- Remploy is one of the UK's leading providers of
employment services and employment to people with
disabilities and complex barriers to work. - The company is the largest WORKSTEP programme
provider employing nearly 3000 disabled people in
54 factory sites. Remploy factories produce a
wide range of high quality goods and services for
the public and private sector. - In 2008-09 Remploy supported over 7,600 people
into mainstream jobs through their Employment
Services. -
- They also deliver Work Preparation and Pathways
to Work and are a preferred bidder for Flexible
New Deal in one District. - Remploy will become a national provider for
specialist disability employment programmes
following the same policy principles as other
providers. - Further information can be found at
http//www.remploy.co.uk/
16Right to Control Background
- Green Paper published July 2008
- We will consult on a series of possible further
changes that would give disabled people greater
choice and control over their lives, giving
disabled people a right to request control over a
range of public funding to which they are
entitled, allowing them far greater choice over
how best to spend this money so as to meet their
needs. - White Paper published December 2008
- many disabled people do not have the sort of
choice and control over their lives that
non-disabled people take for grantedToo often,
services are structured in a way that can
reinforce dependency instead of providing support
in a way that enables disabled people to achieve
their aspirations and access the same
opportunities as non-disabled people.
17How will the Right to Control work?
- Regulations under the bill will empower disabled
adults to take greater choice and control over
support and services. This means being able to - require authorities to tell them how much money
is available - require the authority to plan with them how best
to use this money to meet their needs - being able to choose the degree of control over
the support they receive. - The individual will be able to receive a direct
payment, continue to allow the public authority
to arrange their support, or use a mixed
approach.
18Which funding streams will the Right to Control
cover?
- Access to Work
- Independent Living Funds
- Specialist disability employment programmes
- Other funding streams for inclusion will be
determined through a national consultation
exercise with disabled adults, providers and
user-led organisations. They will be considering - Funding for equipment and adaptations
- Funding that enables disabled adults to access
education and training - Adult Social Care is excluded from the right to
control as legislation already exists to enable
direct payments. We will align the right to
control with Adult Social Care.
19Right to Control implementation
- From 2010 the right to control will be piloted in
a small number of trailblazing public authority
areas - We want to test both if the right to control
should be implemented nationally, and also how
this should be done - We will be asking local authorities, Jobcentre
Plus and other agencies to develop proposals
together and in co-production with disabled
people, setting out how they propose to implement
the right to control - Neither social care, nor any other service should
be the sole gateway to choice and control - The trailblazers will join up different services
and funding streams to avoid the fragmentation of
support too often experienced by disabled people - Being taken forward by Office for Disability
Issues. Consultation opened 11 June 2009, runs
until September. - For further information on the Right to Control,
refer to the website www.odi.gov.uk
20Helping disabled people get and keep jobs
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