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WORKING NEIGHBOURHOOD FUND

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Title: WORKING NEIGHBOURHOOD FUND


1
  • WORKING NEIGHBOURHOOD FUND
  • Friday 11th July 2008

2
  • Mandy Chambers
  • Derbyshire County Primary Care Trust Chair,
    Bolsover Local Strategic Partnership

3
  • 3-year allocation to Bolsover District Council
  • 2008/09 2,055,516
  • 2009/10 2,440,522
  • 2010/11 2,535,018

4
Today
  • Partnership working
  • Identify and roll-out best practice
  • Develop cross-cutting initiatives
  • Identifying and rolling out best practice

5
  • PROGRAMME

6
  • Eion Watts
  • Leader, Bolsover District Council Vice-Chair,
    Bolsover Local Strategic Partnership

7
OVERVIEW OF WORKLESSNESS THE NATIONAL PERSPECTIVE
  • Councillor Stephen Houghton
  • Leader, Barnsley MBC
  • Chair of National
  • Tackling Worklessness Review

8
TACKLING WORKLESSNESS REVIEW
  • DCLG/DWP Project Review Team Of Three
  • Steve Houghton Public Sector
  • Clair Dove Volcom Sector
  • Iqbal Wahhab Private Sector, BME Perspective

9
FIRST MEETING
  • Refine Terms of Reference
  • Mapping Exercise
  • Scope project timescale
  • What are we dealing with?
  • Review academic research where are we?
  • Whats worked? Whats not? What could work?
  • Develop a work programme

10
TERMS OF REFERENCE
  • To examine how councils and partners are using
    WNF to tackle worklessness within worst
    performing neighbourhoods
  • Identify what more Government departments can do
    to support local partners to deliver better
    employment and skills services for residents and
    employers
  • Consider how private sector, social enterprise
    third sector and RDAs, help local partners to
    improve employment in WNF areas and through the
    new local performance framework
  • To identify an evidence base to demonstrate the
    additionality of a multi-agency approach to
    worklessness
  • To identify how partnerships can extend support
    and deliver improved outcomes for disadvantaged
    groups, (including BEM) and how areas are
    responding to needs of their local residents
  • To consider the role of enterprise in delivering
    employment outcomes and whether partnerships have
    successfully co-ordinated supply and demand side
    interventions through LAAs and particularly LEGI
    and WNF areas

11
WHY DO WE HAVE WORKLESSNESS?
  • Paradox sustained economic growth, but
    concentrated pockets of worklessness
  • Legacy of post-industrial society
  • Imperfections of Labour markets uncompetitive
    Labour supply, lack of mobility
  • Inappropriate standardised national programmes
  • Changing economic demands for skills

12
THE CHARACTERISTICS OF WORKLESSNESS
  • Localised and Entrenched Neighbourhood
    Deprivation
  • Societal low confidence, poor mobility, poor
    information networks, ingrained way of life, high
    social needs
  • Long term IB claimants benefit dependency and
    alternative economy
  • Financial and Social Costs
  • Child Poverty
  • Poor Mental and Physical Health
  • ASB Cohesion, Local Environment
  • Resources lost to economy
  • Low skills correlation
  • Influence of Wider Labour Markets

13
DISTRIBUTION OF WORKLESSNESS
  • Worklessness Neighbourhoods 54 below NVQ Level
    2 of which, 26 have no qualifications
  • Geographical concentration
  • Highest in North and Midlands
  • But can be close to places of affluence
  • BME Impact Employment Rate
  • 75 National Average
  • 62 BME
  • 40 47 Bangladeshi and Pakistani
  • Defined by Place

14
HOW TO TACKLE WORKLESSNESS
  • Understand Local Labour Markets Intervene!
  • Reconcile Demand and Supply Side
    Interventions
  • Demand Side Enterprise, Business Growth
  • Supply Side Skills, Attainment, Counselling
  • System Solutions
  • Joining Up
  • Sharing Resources
  • Invest to Save Benefit Recycling
  • Lead Partners - ?

15
UTILISING WNF TO TACKLE WORKLESSNESS EARLY L.A.
IDEAS
  • Used to complement and fill gaps in mainstream
    activity e.g. IB claimants beyond one year
    cut-off
  • Funding Projects
  • Individual opportunity adviser and brokerage
    schemes
  • Stimulating enterprise
  • Business Growth and sustainability
  • Job Creation
  • Wider context tackling poor health, street
    scene

16
WHO ARE THE KEY PLAYERS?
  • Local Level
  • Job Centre - support people into work and fill
    vacancies
  • Local Councils Leader of the Locality
  • LSPs Production of S.C.S Performance of LAAs
  • Business Link Support for Business Start Up,
    retention and growth
  • Volcom Sector Outreach support and delivery
  • Work and Skills Boards Employer led oversight
    of Labour Market
  • Local Employment Partnerships JC Employer
    Agreements
  • Educational Institutions attainment, skills
    planning

17
WHO ARE THE KEY PLAYERS (CONTD)
  • Strategic Level
  • RDAs Production of R.E.S.
  • City Regions LA Collaboration on Economic
    Growth
  • L.S.C.s planning and funding of Ed and Trg

18
NATIONAL POLICY LANDSCAPE WHATS HAPPENING?
  • Opportunity, employment and progression making
    skills work
  • Beyond Job Placement tailored responses to
    different communities
  • Employment at heart of Neighbourhood Renewal
  • Funding Reform NRF ? WNF and Reward Fund
  • Local Government etc. Act 2007
  • Enhanced delivery via L.A.A. targets
  • Many more PIs in new framework

19
NATIONAL POLICY LANDSCAPE WHATS HAPPENING?
(Continued)
  • R.I.E.Ps
  • Capacity building and funding
  • Work skills integrated skills and welfare
    services
  • Oct 08 ESA replaces IB can do not, cant do
  • April 09 Flexible New Deal more personalised
  • City Strategy Pathfinders Local Public, Private
    and Volcom Consortia Pooled funding,
    rationalised system, local commissioning
  • SNR-High Level Measures
  • New L.A. duty
  • L.A. Scrutiny of and consultation on RES

20
WHAT APPEARS TO WORK?
  • Demand Side Interventions
  • Business support and development entrepreneurial
    support
  • Supply Side Interventions
  • Initial engagement via outreach
  • A holistic individualised approach personal
    advisers
  • Employment focused education and training

21
WHAT APPEARS TO WORK?(Continued)
  • Supply Side Interventions (Continued)
  • Specific Work Activity Schemes
  • Targeting specific groups e.g. lone parents BME
  • Upskilling existing workforce
  • Job and Skills Matching Employer Recruitment
    Events
  • No single model of successful intervention
  • Multi-element packages work best

22
CHALLENGES
  • Complex and fragmented service delivery
  • High cost of demand side measures e.g. Business
    Support
  • Resource intensity of supply side interventions
    e.g. case workers
  • Tradition of short term funding
  • Data sharing M.O.U. a good start
  • Breaking the Dependency Cycle
  • Making the transition to work

23
WHAT NEXT? TASKFORCE WORK PROGRAMME
  • Identify and visit 12 different Stories of
    Worklessness
  • Identify Best Practice
  • Collate academic and empirical evidence
  • Findings to Ministers October 08
  • Final report to follow

24
Bolsover District WNF Allocation
  • Wes Lumley
  • CEO
  • Bolsover District Council

25
Introduction
  • Introduced as part of Local Government Finance
    Settlement
  • To provide resources to Local Authorities to
    tackle worklessness and low levels of skills and
    enterprise in their most deprived areas
  • Eligibility based on
  • 20 or more of LSOAs in most deprived 10
    nationally in Employment domain
  • 20 or more of LSOAs in most deprived 10
    nationally in overall IMD
  • Ranked among the top 40 districts on an equally
    weighted measure of key benefit claim rate and
    employment rate


26
Deprivation 2007 Index

27
Worklessness - Comparison of IMD data
28
Deprivation
  • Qualify under 2nd 3rd criteria
  • Of the 14 most deprived LSOAs under Employment,
    13 are also the most deprived under Health and 10
    the most deprived under Education, skills and
    training
  • The top 6 worst for Employment are the top 6
    worst for Health


29
Allocation
  • 2008/09 2,055,516
  • 2009/10 2,440,522
  • 2010/11 2,535,018


30
Accountability
  • LAA includes a specific indicator at the
    insistence of GOEM
  • NI 153 Working age people claiming out of work
    benefits in the worst performing neighbourhoods
  • Duty to co-operate
  • CPA to CAA


31
Other Indicators
  • Also included in the 35
  • NI 117 16 to 18 year olds who are NEET
  • NI 146 Adults with learning disabilities in
    employment
  • NI 163 Working age population qualified to at
    least Level 2 or higher
  • NI 172 VAT registered businesses in the area
    showing growth
  • Education indicators


32
Reward
  • There is a reward grant for success
  • To be measured against
  • NI 153
  • NI 117
  • NI 163
  • NI 172
  • NI 118 Take up of formal childcare by low
    income working families (Not in 35)
  • NI 146 not included
  • Targets being determined


33
Delivery
  • Council Core worklessness group to commission
    direct interventions concentrating on moving
    people off benefits i.e. NI 153
  • 1m each year to LSP to concentrate on preventing
    worklessness


34
FAMILY EMPLOYMENT INITIATIVEEAST MIDLANDS
WNF LAUNCH EVENT 11th JULY 2008
35
CRT Track Record
  • Working to create holistic, cohesive approaches
    to reducing worklessness across the coalfields
    via a multi-agency approach.
  • Contributing to the governments agenda of
    tackling child poverty, improving health and
    skills development in deprived communities.
  • CRT core remit - Regeneration of former coalfield
    wards

36
Context for developing FEI
  • Major English Partnerships coalfield regeneration
    site at
  • Brook Park, Shirebrook.
  • 102 hectares of land to be developed
  • Potential significant inward investment and
    residential housing
  • Key Partners committed to maximising potential
    for connecting the surrounding communities to
    opportunities on offer .

37
Geography
  • Communities suffering long term generational
    unemployment
  • Bolsover 46th most deprived district in England,
    - all 4 Shirebrook wards in top 20 nationally
    Shirebrook North West ward - 21 of unemployed
    had been out of work for more than 1 year.
  • Warsop, Mansfield Woodhouse and Pleasley in top
    3 IMD wards - of Income support claimants
    double national average in Northfield ward.
  • Benefit dependent families and households

38
Environment
  • When the industries of older industrial Britain
    were still working, IB numbers were a lot lower
  • In the parts of Britain where the economy is very
    strong and there has effectively been full
    employment for some years, IB claims are far
    lower

39
Will the IB problem simply fade away?
  • A generation of older ex-industrial workers is
    passing out of the figures
  • ..but when they do so, they dont free up jobs
    for the generations behind
  • In practice, the remaining claimants get older,
    and the stock is topped up by new claimants

40
The IB stock is changing.
  • In 1990s, IB stock was dominated by redundant
    industrial workers
  • but theyre rapidly passing out of the figures
  • Current IB stock is dominated not just by those
    with poor health, but also poor skills and (to
    some extent) low motivation
  • More women too

41
Family Employment Initiative
  • Local area based employment initiative
  • Working with families and households
  • Targeting specific streets in deprived
    communities
  • One-to-one intervention with customers

42
Aims and Objectives
  • Reduce numbers of Incapacity Benefit, Income
    Support claimants and economically inactive
    residents
  • Improve employment chances for local people
  • Reduce 16-18 year olds not in Employment,
    Education and Training (NEET)
  • Partner with key agencies in the delivery of
    training programmes, childcare specialist
    advice supply chain
  • Bring local people to the employment and training
    opportunities

43
The FEI Brand
  • Heart of the community
  • One to One approach
  • Family/household focus
  • Good, knowledgeable advisors personality
    counts!
  • Door knocking, street walking, leaflet dropping
  • Flexible funding fill the fridge

44
The FEI Brand
  • Joined up approach with other services Strong
    partnership/protocols with JCP
  • Handhold and support through whole process
  • Not mandatory, no pressure, - no sanctions, not
    seen as part of the establishment
  • Emotional contracting
  • Continued aftercare once client is into work

45
Achievements so far
  • Wholesale commitment from Partners
  • Credibility in the community
  • Geographical Roll Out - MEGZ
  • Exemplar project Martin Yarnitt Associates
  • 831 clients engaged
  • 231 into work

46
A twin-track strategy is the only way
Help for claimants training, rehabilitation,
advice, re-motivation Economic regeneration in
the areas where claimants are concentrated
Steve Fothergill Professor,
CRESR, Sheffield Hallam University
47
(No Transcript)
48
Markham Vale Colliery
49
Post Colliery Closure
50
FEI Regeneration The offer
  • To developing/relocating companies
  • Recruitment support
  • Community Engagement and Pre Employment Skills
    development - Skills for Jobs.
  • Post employment workforce development Train to
    Gain.
  • Roll out to other strategic sites

51
The Team
52
HGV TRAINING
53
SECURITY TRAINING
54
WHEELS TO WORK
55
Flexible Routeway Provision North East
Derbyshire 2008-11
 
56
Contract Scope
  • Local Authority Areas of Chesterfield, Bolsover
    North East Derbyshire
  • 5,200 starts 1,820 jobs over three years
  • Initially, 3 year contract to June 2011

 
57
Eligibility
  • Unemployed - People without a job and available
    to start work and looking for work.
  • Economically inactive - People without a job who
    do not satisfy the criteria for unemployed.

 
58
Priority Communities
Wards
  • Shirebrook East
  • Shirebrook Langwith
  • Shirebrook North West
  • Shirebrook South East
  • Elmton with Creswell
  • Middlecroft and Poolsbrook
  • Rother
  • St.Helens

 
59
Priority Target Groups
  • People on incapacity benefits and Income Support
    particularly those with children
  • Lone parents including support for those with
    health problems and lacking job search skills
    (especially in preparation for increased
    conditionality)
  • Other people with children including those not
    on benefit
  • The most disadvantaged.

 
60
Most Disadvantaged Groups
  • Ethnic Minority Groups
  • Offenders or ex-offenders
  • Those with a history of drug and alcohol misuse
  • Homeless
  • People with Learning Difficulties
  • People with mild to moderate Mental Health Issues
    (claiming JSA)
  • Migrant Labour
  • Refugees
  • People with Caring Responsibilities
  • People in need of Basic Skills (mainly those who
    are able to gain employment without long term
    support)
  • Jobseeker Allowance Customers (18)

 
61
Most Disadvantaged Groups
People who continue to experience significant
barriers to employment and skills development-
  • Women
  • People on Incapacity Benefit (not Mandatory
    Pathways)
  • Older People

62
Project Aim
  • Improve the employability and skills of
    unemployed and economically inactive people to
    enable them to gain, retain and progress into
    sustainable employment.
  • Emphasis on delivery through outreach workers
    placed in the community through Multi Agency
    Employment Teams (JobMAETS).

63
The Customer Journey (i)
  • Community based IAG Outreach Workers
  • Individual initial assessment with ongoing
    reviews throughout the programme
  • Addressing these barriers via an individually
    tailored Action Plan, with regular reviews and
    update
  • Agreeing SMART objectives in the Action Plan with
    the final aim being to gain sustainable
    employment

 
64
The Customer Journey (ii)
  • Signposting to other partner agencies/training
    providers where appropriate to overcome these
    barriers
  • Through links with employers and the local
    employment market in general, providing job
    matching and vacancy opportunities
  • Training on money management when transferring
    from benefits to employment
  • Offering up to 26 weeks in-work support
  • Individually tailored provision, with additional
    modular group activity.

65
Employability Model
Action Planning
Job Placement
In Work Support
Client
Employer
Engagement
Employability
Robust and Effective Case Management Ongoing
Individual Assessment and Tracking
66
ESP Task and Finish Group Recommendations
(February 2007)
  • Co-ordination and planning
  • The development of local multi agency employment
    teams (JobMAETS)
  • The expansion of the number of Personal Advisors
    in the region
  • Outreach through local centres and community
    organisations
  • Employer Compacts.

 
67
Job Multi Agency Employment Teams (JobMAETS)
Regional esp
LSP(s)/LAA(s)
Employer facing
Client facing
JobMAETS Multi-agency employment teams Comprising
Direct Delivery partners focused into local areas
Employer Link Advisors
Local centre staff
JCP local staff
IAG Advisors
Employer related staff
Personal Advisors
Specialist services eg drugs/ homelessness
Skills brokers, colleges and other providers
Volunteer placing organisations
68
Customisation of Local Service Delivery
  • Information Guidance and Advice.
  • Employer Links/ Job Brokerage
  • Modular group delivery of support at local level.

 
69
Service Delivery
In the end, everything depends on how well
good policies are implemented locally, face to
face with workless people and employers.
 
70
Programme Delivery Arrangements
  • Laura Khella
  • Chief Executives and Partnership Team

71
How has the WNF been allocated?
  • 1m per annum to be managed by the LSP. Focus of
    activities on preventing worklessness
  • Remainder of WNF allocation to be used to
    commission activities aimed at moving people off
    benefits and into work

72
NI 153 Working age people claiming out of work
benefits in the worst performing neighbourhoods
  • Measured by areas with a claimant rate of 25 or
    more
  • 6 Lower Super Output Areas eligible in Bolsover
    district
  • Government Office target to reduce claimant rate
    from 28.7 to 24.4 by March 2011
  • Equates to a net reduction of 163 people off
    benefits and into work
  • Focus for the Core Worklessness Group

73
Other Relevant Performance Indicators
  • NI 148 - Care leavers in employment, education or
    training
  • NI 150 Adults in contact with secondary mental
    health services in employment
  • NI 151 Overall employment rate
  • NI 152 - Working age people on out of work
    benefits
  • NI 163/164/165 Working age population qualified
    to level 2, 3 and 4 respectively
  • NI 171 VAT registration rate
  • NI 173 People falling out of work and onto
    incapacity benefits
  • NI 174 Skills gaps in the current workforce
  • NI 176 Working age people with access to
    employment by public transport

74
What activity can be supported with WNF?
  • The LSP wishes to commission initiatives that aim
  • to prevent people claiming out of work benefits.
  • Key themes include
  • Employment and enterprise e.g. social enterprise
    support, entrepreneurial support, staff
    development etc
  • Education, skills and training e.g. training,
    re-skilling, job ready skills, sector-led
    employment programmes, apprenticeships etc
  • Health e.g. mental health, occupational health,
    support for carers, stop smoking etc
  • Transport (cross-cutting)

75
How the LSP funding has been allocated
  • Some initiatives may be cross-cutting e.g.
    transport
  • Allocations to areas of activity, not thematic
    Action Groups of LSP encourage cross-working
  • Action Groups will need to take ownership of
    projects in the longer term

76
Commissioning Process
  • Commissioning not bidding!
  • Stage 1 Identification of
  • intervention projects
  • Stage 2 Commissioning Brief
  • agreed by relevant Action Group(s)

77
Commissioning Process (contd)
  • Stage 3 Lead organisation invited
  • to submit a WNF Proposal Form in
  • response to the agreed Commissioning
  • Brief
  • Or
  • Call for tenders through open tendering process

78
Commissioning Process (contd)
  • Stage 4 Project Appraisal
  • Stage 5 Assessment against
  • Scoring Framework (min. threshold
  • 50)
  • Stage 6 Contracts issued by
  • Chief Executives and Partnership Team

79
Project Eligibility
  • Response to identified need/clear evidence base
  • Impact on relevant WNF performance indicators
  • Targets the most deprived areas within the
    district
  • Minimum threshold for commissioned projects of
    50K p.a.
  • Partnership working/consortium projects
  • Match funding (where appropriate)

80
Match Funding
  • Lets make the most of it!
  • European Regional Development Fund (ERDF)
  • European Social Fund (ESF)
  • Coalfields Regeneration Trust (CRT)
  • LEADER programme
  • . to name a but a few

81
Next Steps
  • Workshops
  • Information fed back
  • Further development of project ideas
  • Completion of Commissioning Briefs

82
For further information
  • Please contact the
  • Chief Executives and Partnership Team on
  • 01246 242276
  • www.bolsoverpartnership.org.uk

83
QUESTION ANSWER
  • CHAIR
  • MANDY CHAMBERS
  • PANEL
  • STEPHEN HOUGHTON
  • EION WATTS
  • JANET BIBBY
  • WES LUMLEY
  • ANDREW MILTON
  • HIKE HUGILL
  • LAURA KHELLA

84
WORKSHOPS
  • FIT FOR WORK
  • SKILLS FOR WORK
  • GROWTH FOR WORK
  • ACCESS TO WORK
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