Is the government flouting it’s own rules and making people work 30 hours a week in a profitable organisation like Poundland for £50 job seekers allowance just the same as slave labour?
I supported the idea to get people that claim job seekers to work for their money, I was for the government placing them within charities or getting them to do community based jobs where by they help to look after their community in some way.
However I am dead against them being placed in profitable companies and the tax payer paying their wages. Which I believe is denying people a paid job within the company and helping the company save money and make larger profits.
My son has recently finished his degree and trying to get into the industry he has been trained to do. He has actively been seeking work and has even taken a few expenses only jobs in his specialist line of work to help put a portfolio together which he can present to any potential employer in the future.
He has been told he can’t do this by the benefits office even if he gets letters stating the job was an expenses only role. He has been told he can only work 30 hours a week unpaid with companies on their books only or they will stop his claim.
This seems madness to me. He is out of the house with traveling time 40 hours a week and has to prove he is actively seeking work which he is doing at night.
I am not being biased because of my son, the government is seems are encouraging students to stay on and get degrees and debt but are not supporting them by then placing them in places like poundland.
The government, have been saying we are supporting our 18-25 year olds.
Is encouraging our youngest to get a degree and debt then making them work 30 hours a week for £50 a week really helping our future generations really believe we are doing the best for them?
As a tax payer I am dead against the government using my money to support the work force of profit making organisations.
I Wonder if I am alone thinking this way?
errrr don't Lords and Politicians ALWAYS flout thier own laws ?
TV licence exempt
Road Tax exempt
Smoking ban exempt
I partially agree that sticking someone in a shop like Poundland is wrong, it is not as if poundland or the like is going to give someone a good qualification for the future, however I am not against a better thought out variation of the idea,
The old apprenticeships schemes used to work well and a system whereby the Government subsidised the salaries of people employed in genuine qualification acquiring positions would not be such a bad thing. Providing Companies on the scheme could prove that they are actually training the person in a skill and at the end of the aprenticeship they would have a recogniseable qualification to help them seek a job in the industry perhaps even at the place they serve thier time.
Off the top of my head, fork lift driver, jcb driver, HGV driver, seamstress, toolmaker, bricklayer, tiler, plasterer, carpenter, mechanic, gas fitter, cable/sattelite fitter.
I know some schemes have been tried and some turned out to be rubbish but it DID work in the past because specifie trades were the only ones eligible for the scheme
It is only 24 years ago that i left school at just under 16 and went to work at the Co Op on a YTS scheme, i worked 39 hours a week for , i got valuable work experience and the only promise i had was that the scheme was for 2 years, if after 2 years there was a permanent position then it would be mine.
I worked hard,listened and learned and after 18 months was offered the job on a full time basis, i had been trained to do a job and do it well and it sure as hell did me no harm.
Why should people be allowed to sit on their arses all day and be paid to do so, far too many people these days think that they are owed a living and far too many benefits are paid to people who have been brought up to think this way.
Maybe big companies are getting employees on the cheap but in the main those companies are willing to give these youngsters a chance to have some work experience, give them some training, and maybe get some work ethics into them..........
nice to hear a success story
nicer to hear that the scheme worked, that someone appreciated the chance and took advantage of it, so I say again, a tweaked system is a good system of getting people trained, schooling is important but why do we think that learning ends with school, or college or university, for many the best education comes after school when they should be thinking about learning a trade or profession even if that is simply working on a checkout. I respect checkout people without their experience I would be queueing for hours
I think it would be a good idea for the employers to match the persons JSA as I feel very uneasy with large companies getting workers there for free. Stacking shelves in a supermarket is not really work experience I would have said, and whilst nothing wrong with stacking shelves the people doing that are getting paid at least the minimum wage for doing it.
All that will now happen is the Government will slightly alter the wording of this, and next month nobody will be able to challenge it in the courts. I did read somewhere from an age ago that only around 11% of these placements end up with a job offer. So if a person got £56 a week on JSA, what is wrong with a company matching that amount? At least there would not only be some experience for that person but also a financial incentive as well.
What is £56 to a company like Sainsbury's?
I meant with art that it isnt the biggest sector for a career other than being a teacher. I have a close friend who is now doing ok after 15 years trying to sell her art. Not many make as much as Mr Hirst though. But hey .. if its your love and you enjoy it then you should go for it. Just so many non relevant degrees for what they apply for its no wonder they never hear back for interview.
J
I am on holiday and was talking to a young couple yesterday. They were both pilots. They said that their training to become pilots cost them less in debt than their associates who had gone to University to study for a Degree.