Transcript Document
A review of labour market
interventions for problem drug
users
Mike Stewart, Director, Inclusion
Evidence
• users of Class A drugs significantly less likely
to be in work
• duration of unemployment associated with the
number of drugs used
• six major areas of disadvantage: lack of
education and skills, health, social
disadvantage, provision of support services,
engaging with employers and support
professionals, stigma
• mental health and crime significant barriers
Problem drug users’ experiences of employment and the benefit system Department for Work
and Pensions, Research Report No 640, Linda Bauld, Gordon Hay, Jennifer McKell and Colin
Carroll 2010
Types of interventions
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light touch assessment, referral and support
life and social skills
vocational training
volunteering
job preparation/work trials/interview
techniques;
• waged employment and training: supported
employment, Intermediate Labour Markets, Social
Enterprises, self employment
• job brokerage
Pre-70s
• residential projects
• remote locations
• on site work or training directly to service
users.
• independently funded
• perceived as integral to treatment
• would now be called supported employment or
social enterprises
1980/90s
• funding and operational silo’s
• supported housing and training providers
• mainstream interventions for disadvantaged
groups
• some drug services developed interventions to
support their service users
• employment support relied on individual
projects and their leadership
• flexibility of mainstream employment and
training programmes squeezed out
90/00s
• interventions across government departments
• New Deal included commitment to help people
with drug problems
• First UK drug strategy referenced employment
• DATs provided a mechanism to support
employment activity
• DIP includes a specific emphasis on
employment
• But funding and delivery mechanisms still did
not support development
progress2work
• launched September 2001
• recognition of need for ring-fenced funding
• strategic and co-ordinated inter-agency
approach
• effective interventions should reflect local
circumstances and capacity
• does not prescribe who should deliver and
how
• the only public mainstream labour market
intervention for problem drug users anywhere
Tackling problem drug use,NAO, March 2010
Drug strategy prioritises employment and builds on p2w
model. Will that survive?
• c13,000 pa
• expensive
• success rate low and below target
• Jobs target 20%: 20% 2006-07, 15% 2008-09
• 13 weeks or more 8%
• cost per long term job £11,600
NAO:
• ensure new programme evidence based
and demonstrates value for money.
The Work Programme: Principles
• Single, personalised welfare-to-work
programme for all client groups
• Contracted out, almost all funding for
additional sustained outcomes
• Differential prices based on customer group
• Longer programme, with payments for
potentially up to two years
N.B. Mandatory Community Activity for all
jobseekers who spend two years unemployed
during a three year period.
The Work Programme: Design
• payment for results after delivery
• avoid paying for unnecessary help
• price for jobs worthwhile to help each group of
customers
• no specification as to how it should be done
• price paid should not exceed benefit savings