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Supported Employment in Australia

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Title: Supported Employment in Australia


1
Supported Employment in Australia
Dr Greg LewisEdge Employment SolutionsPerth,
Western Australia
2
Labour Market Conditions
  • proportion of non-disabled working-age people in
    OECD (30 countries - 22 in Europe) increased
    significantly through 1990s
  • employment in 15 European countries rose by
    average 1.5 through 1990s

OECD Social Indicators 2002
3
Proportion of employed people to total
working-age population (2001)
  • Australia 0.69
  • EU 0.66
  • USA 0.73
  • OECD 0.66

OECD Social Indicators 2002
4
Unemployment rate (2001)
  • EU 6.2
  • USA 4.8
  • OECD 6.7
  • Australia 6.7

OECD Social Indicators 2002
5
Employment participation rate of people with
severe disabilities relative to that of
non-disabled people
  • EU 0.36
  • USA 0.31
  • OECD 0.35
  • Australia 0.41

OECD Social Indicators 2002
6
International supported employment situation
  • The low employment rate of people with
    disabilities reflects a failure of government
    social policies. Societies hide away some
    disabled individuals on generous benefits. Others
    isolate them in sheltered work programmes.
    Efforts to help them find work in the open labour
    market are often lacking. The shortcomings affect
    moderately disabled individuals, as well as those
    with severe handicaps...

OECD Policy Brief, 2003
7
International supported employment situation
  • only 21 of 52 respondent countries believed that
    sheltered workshops or centres had closed over
    previous five years to make way for supported
    employment
  • nearly half of all respondents reported an
    increase in segregated services
  • supported employment services have been slow to
    expand in most countries during the 1990s

Inclusion International, 1999
8
European supported employment situation
  • Global policies, regional funds, national
    mainstreaming, local know-how and individual
    motivation are the winds that blow in favour of
    supported employment. And yet it is becalmedan
    option for only a minority in most European
    countries.

Walsh Beyer, 1999
9
European supported employment situation
  • Despite the EUs history of funding innovation,
    funding at a national level for employment of
    people with disabilities still remains heavily
    and disproportionately invested in sheltered
    employment options.

Walsh Beyer, 1999
10
Life Cycle of an Organisation
Employment Reform
DEATH
11
Australian supported employment situation
  • people with disabilities in supported
    employment 40,360 (67)
  • people with disabilities insheltered
    employment 19,992 (33)

Commonwealth Disability Services Census, 2001
12
Supported vs sheltered employment places in
Australia and United States (as a proportion of
total population)
  • TOTAL PEOPLE IN FUNDED 0.3 0.35EMPLOYMENT
    PROGRAMS
  • TOTAL PEOPLE IN 0.1 0.3SHELTERED EMPLOYMENT
  • TOTAL PEOPLE IN 0.2 0.05SUPPORTED EMPLOYMENT

AUST USA
13
Supported vs sheltered employment places in
Australia and United States (as a proportion of
total population)
14
Relative growth of supported and sheltered
employment places in Australia (1995 - 2001)
15
Primary disability of Australian disability
employment users
16
Post-training production rates(all workers on
all tasks)
17
Early drivers of supported employment development
in Australia (1981 - 2001)
  • growing acceptance/adoption of Normalisation
    principles
  • promising integrated employment research findings
    in USA
  • successful residential de-institutionalisation
    programs
  • coalition of professionals and self-advocates
    seeking change
  • United Nations Decade of Disabled Persons (1983
    - 1992)
  • responsive bureaucracies at State and Federal
    levels
  • Disability Services Act (1986)
  • Disability Discrimination Act (1992)
  • Commonwealth Disability Strategy (1994)

18
EARLY DRIVERSDisability Services Act (1986)
  • values-based and rights-based legislation that
    covers all working-age Australians with severe
    and moderate disabilities
  • provides a consistent set of rules for the
    administration and delivery of specialised
    disability employment services throughout
    Australia
  • includes a set of Principles and Objectives to
    which service providers must commit before
    receiving funding

19
EARLY DRIVERS Disability Services Act Principles
  • Right to be treated as an individual, respected
    for their worth and dignity.
  • Right to realise their individual capacities for
    physical, social, emotional and intellectual
    development.
  • Right to services which support a reasonable
    quality of life.
  • Right to participate in decisions which affect
    their lives.
  • Right to receive services in a manner which
    results in the least restriction of rights and
    opportunities.
  • Right to pursue grievances in relation to
    services.

20
EARLY DRIVERS Disability Services Standards
(1992)
  • Established 12 mandatory Disability Services
    Standards and Key Performance Indicators which
    operationalised the Principles of the Act
  • Std 1. Service access Std 7. Complaints and
    disputes
  • Std 2. Individual needs Std 8. Service
    management
  • Std 3. Decision making choice Std 9.
    Employment conditions
  • Std 4. Privacy, dignity Std 10. Service
    recipient
  • confidentiality training support
  • Std 5. Participation integration Std 11. Staff
    recruitment,
  • employment training
  • Std 6. Valued status Std 12. Protection of
    human rights freedom from abuse

21
EARLY DRIVERS Sample Disability Services
Standard
  • STANDARD 9 EMPLOYMENT CONDITIONS
  • Each person with a disability enjoys working
    conditions comparable to those of the general
    workforce.

KPI 1 The service ensures that, when people
with disabilities are placed in employment, their
wages are paid according to a relative award.
When a person is unable to work at full
productivity, the service ensures that a pro-rata
wage based on an award, and assessed through an
approved assessment process, is paid. KPI 2 The
service ensures that, when people with
disabilities are placed in employment, their
conditions of employment are consistent with
general workforce norms and relevant industrial
legislation. KPI 3 The service ensures that,
when people with disabilities are placed in
employment, they are informed of how wages and
conditions are determined and the consequences of
this.
22
EARLY DRIVERS Disability Discrimination Act
(1992)
  • rights-based access to labour market for all
    people with disabilities
  • outlaws both direct and indirect discrimination
    in areas of work, accommodation, education,
    sport, recreation, transport, access to premises
    and provision of goods and services
  • makes provision for, and clearly specifies,
    exemptions based on unjustifiable hardship or
    unreasonable burden
  • includes standards that establish benchmarks for
    acceptable actions by governments and society
  • does not include quota-based access to the labour
    market for people with disabilities

23
Quota systems
  • have not proven beneficial to people with
    disabilities (especially people with more
    significant disabilities) in most countries
  • difficult to classify/assess breadth and severity
    of disabilities eligible for set-aside positions
  • difficult to police compliance and to impose
    sanctions/fines
  • potential negative attitudes of employers to
    quota systems that remove their discretion to
    select the best person for the job
  • potential difficulties for employees with
    disabilities to establish their credentials as
    productive and valued workers
  • reduced pressure on supported employment
    providers to effectively promote job seekers with
    disabilities as competitive candidates

24
EARLY DRIVERS Commonwealth Disability Strategy
(1994)
  • 10 year plan to ensure people with disabilities
    have equal opportunity to access all federal
    programs, facilities and services
  • sought to integrate the UN Standard Rules on the
    Equalisation of Opportunities for Persons with
    Disabilities (1993) with Australias Disability
    Discrimination Act (1992)
  • has since been implemented by most
    state/provincial governments in Australia

25
Employment Solutions
Employment Outcomes 1984 -2002
TOTAL JOBS SECURED
2664 1066
TOTAL WORKERS PLACED
26
Registrants and Workers
  • of Register Employed
  • Intellectual Disability 54 76
  • Physical Disability 18 76
  • Sensory Disability 15 89
  • Psychiatric Disability 6 64
  • Neurological Disability 4 43
  • Acquired Brain Injury 3 50

27
Employer Type
28
Hourly Wage Rates (AUSTRALIAN DOLLARS)
State Minimum Wage
10.34
All EDGE Workers 10.83
PRIVATE SECTOR EMPLOYERS Small
Medium Large Average EDGE
Workers 8.67 9.32 11.70 10.21
PUBLIC SECTOR EMPLOYERS Local
State Federal Average EDGE
Workers 12.70 14.40 14.90 14.40
29
Same Job Tenure
  • gt 1 year 70
  • gt 2 years 55
  • gt 3 years 42
  • gt 5 years 30

30
(No Transcript)
31
Key Success Factors within EDGE
  • clearly enunciating the values of EDGE to
    funders, consumers and staff
  • selecting, training and supervising staff in line
    with EDGEs values system
  • promoting EDGE to prospective users as long-term
    career service not a short-term job placement
    service
  • making EDGE look, feel and operate like a
    business (rather than a welfare service)
  • establishing a corporate Board comprising
    high-profile leaders in business, government and
    the professions

32
Key Success Factors within EDGE
  • identifying our competitors as mainstream
    recruitment agencies promoting candidates without
    disabilities
  • matching jobs to people, not people to jobs
  • targeting major corporations and government
    agencies to supply the majority of all positions
  • where appropriate, seeking positions that offer
    formal work-based training (eg. apprenticeships)
  • employing and training specialist marketing
    personnel to promote job seekers with
    disabilities
  • employing and training specialist support staff
    to provide on-the-job support and co-worker
    training

33
Key Success Factors within EDGE
  • promoting each job seeker with a disability as an
    attractive commercial proposition
  • keeping and publicising the superior performance
    of workers placed by EDGE in areas of job tenure,
    attendance and safety
  • establishing an enduring partnership between the
    employer, the employee, the support network and
    EDGE
  • providing full-time on-the-job support to all new
    workers for as the long the partnership considers
    it necessary
  • providing free off-site training to company staff
    in mentoring co-workers with disabilities and
    maximising natural supports in the workplace

34
Key Success Factors within EDGE
  • fading on-the -job support gradually and
    providing ongoing back-up to workers and
    employers
  • securing maximum repeat business with employers
    by being able to offer a continuum of workers
    from unskilled to university graduates
  • ensuring workers are able to change careers or
    employers as their needs and preferences change
  • maintaining a quality assurance system and a
    commitment to continuous quality improvement
  • maintaining focus on EDGEs core business of
    getting people with disabilities into quality
    mainstream employment

35
Supported Employment in Australia
Dr Greg LewisEdge Employment SolutionsPerth,
Western Australia
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