We are publishing below the latest briefing from 'Boycott Workfare'.
"On Monday, David Cameron and Iain Duncan Smith launched a new workfare scheme called Compulsory Work
Placements – part of a bundle of punitive measures called Help to Work. It ran
into a lot of
trouble on launch day and hasn’t been doing well since then. You
can help by asking even more voluntary organisations to boycott the
scheme.
Over
150 voluntary organisations have signed up to the Keep Volunteering
Voluntary campaign to say they won’t take part in any workfare scheme,
including Oxfam, Anti-Slavery International, Unison, Unite, and NCIA. And the government won’t be able to fall back on the
public sector: Liverpool City Council say they won’t be taking part.
The
pledge was launched on the same day as Help to Work. Already more than twice as
many organisations have said they’ll never take part in CWP as the 70 that the
government claims are
signed up to deliver it. It’s not clear how those 70 organisations are going to
be able to arrange for more than 120,000 people to do 780 hours of unpaid work. They’d have to
accept more than 1,800 placements each.
And
it turns out that even the unpaid work the DWP especially suggested unemployed
people should do – like cleaning war memorials – won’t work. No-one in government
bothered to check this with the War Memorials Trust. They say that they can’t
actually take part in CWP, because each memorial is the responsibility of one of a hundred thousand custodians, who’d have to be asked
individually. And anyway, the work is usually done by ‘specialist contractors or conservators’.
Compulsory Work Placements are one form of further punishment for people who’ve already been through the Work Programme. The 200,000 people who are expected to have to go through Help to Work will either have to sign on every day at the job centre, or undergo intensive harassment by their advisor intended to frustrate them off benefits (the Mandatory Intervention Regime), or work for 30 hours per week unpaid for six months (Compulsory Work Placements).
Compulsory Work Placements are one form of further punishment for people who’ve already been through the Work Programme. The 200,000 people who are expected to have to go through Help to Work will either have to sign on every day at the job centre, or undergo intensive harassment by their advisor intended to frustrate them off benefits (the Mandatory Intervention Regime), or work for 30 hours per week unpaid for six months (Compulsory Work Placements).
The
placements have to be at public sector and voluntary organisations: according
to DWP regulationspeople can only be directly forced to work for
free if what they’re doing is supposed to be for ‘community benefit’.
But
by Monday, tens of voluntary organisations had already signed up to the Keep Volunteering
Voluntary pledge.
Four days later, there are over 150 who’ve signed up.
The
government won’t reveal the names of the 70 organisations that are going to
delivery the schemes. Probably for the same reason it
wouldn’t reveal the names of organisations involved in Mandatory Work Activity:
‘disclosure [of names] would have been likely to have led to the collapse of the
MWA scheme’.
All
we know is that the primary contractors who will be organising the scheme across
the UK are very familiar: Interserve, Seetec, LearnDirect, Rehab Jobfit,
Working Links, Pertemps, and the brutal, fraudulent, and incompetent G4S. These are the same
companies who already run the Work Programme, where you’re five times as likely to be sanctioned as find a job. These
are the companies who will arrange the placements with parts of the public
sector, and ‘voluntary’ organisations like Groundwork.
We
don’t think that any worthwhile voluntary organisation should take part in
workfare. It’s inhuman to force people to work for no money: it doesn’t help people
find jobs, and wouldn’t be justified if it did. It warps what volunteering
is. It replaces
jobs and erodes pay and working conditions for people who are in work.
It’s oppressive, demeaning, and an excuse for sanctions, which
force people into poverty, hunger, and homelessness.
Take
Action!
The
list of organisations who’ve signed up is here. If
you’re part of a voluntary organisation, or you know one that hasn’t signed the
agreement yet, then please ask them to sign the pledge. Any kind of voluntary
group can sign up: from a union branch to a major charity to a local housing
action group.
You
can also find out if your council replied to research we did
at the end of 2013 about councils using workfare by downloading the spreadsheet here. If there’s nothing for your
council, you could try your own Freedom of
Information request: they know this is information they should share.
If
enough organisations refuse to take part, the government will have to scrap
Compulsory Work Placements. Workfare is a ‘failed policy’: it should be an
impossible one.
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