Showing posts with label unemployed. Show all posts
Showing posts with label unemployed. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 10, 2011

Media Release: MA welcomes budget focus on disadvantaged areas

Mission Australia has welcomed the Gillard Government’s budget focus on addressing disadvantage in particular areas around the country and helping people in those locations find jobs and better participate in the community.

Mission Australia’s CEO, Toby Hall, said the organisation also supported the budget’s aim of helping more long-term unemployed people back into work.

“We think it strikes the right balance between incentives and increased resources for jobseekers and Disability Support Pension (DSP) recipients who have a reasonable capacity to work with measures that emphasise people’s reciprocal obligations – obligations we think are in line with community expectations,” said Mr Hall.

“There’s nothing in the government’s welfare-to-work changes that we think are particularly onerous. Our experience is that disadvantaged job seekers can respond positively to more rigorously applied compliance measures – if applied consistently and fairly. They provide a measure of order that may be lacking in their lives.

“In terms of DSP recipients who have a reasonable capacity to work, we think the budget changes are sensible and balanced.

“We have to get over the idea that reforming the DSP is an attack on disabled people – it’s not.

“There is no question that the majority of people in receipt of DSP are genuinely disabled and require significant levels of support.

“However, successive governments and a failing welfare system have allowed thousands of people without serious disabilities to move from the dole to receiving DSP where they are not engaged in looking for work. This is despite the fact they might have a capacity for employment and their issues could be overcome with intensive support.

“This group has genuine barriers to employment that they need support in overcoming. But they can be overcome – so let’s do it.

“One observation about the welfare package is that the government is placing a significant emphasis on Centrelink and its ability to help the sometimes vulnerable people the government is seeking to return to the workforce.

“We hope that buried in the detail is more funding to build Centrelink’s capacity to understand the often complex issues around these people.

“And while recognising the very substantial investment in mental health we think $201m over five years to help states/territories better coordinate and provide mental health services related to accommodation and admission/discharge from hospital isn’t enough. We also need more than just co-ordination – we need real housing.

“But overall a fair budget – a positive budget – for the people we help,” said Mr Hall.

Toby Hall is available for comment

Media inquiries: Paul Andrews 0409 665 495

Wednesday, January 19, 2011

Long-term unemployment rises: ABS

The percentage of long-term unemployed people (unemployed for one year or more) rose from 16 per cent in July 2009 to 18 per cent in July 2010, according to figures released by the Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS) this week.

For long-term unemployed people the most common main difficulty in finding a job was '”too many applicants for available jobs'” (14 per cent), followed by “too far to travel/transport problems” (13 per cent) and “own health or disability” (13 per cent).

However, the majority (82 per cent) of unemployed people are short-term unemployed (that is, they have been unemployed for less than one year), with one in four having been unemployed for less than four weeks.

Of those people who had been unemployed for under eight weeks, 20 per cent reported “no difficulties at all” in finding new work and the most common main difficulty reported was “too many applicants for available jobs” (13 per cent).

According to the ABS, for young people aged 15 to 24 years, the main difficulty in finding work was “insufficient work experience” (17 per cent), while for those aged 45 years and over it was “considered too old by employers” (17 per cent).

Of all unemployed people, 21 per cent had never worked before and 17 per cent had worked, but not in the past two years.

Last year Mission Australia worked with more than 154,000 Australian jobseekers, helping them to find and maintain sustainable employment.

Mission Australia Employment Solutions operates eight Department of Employment, Education and Workplace Relations programs nationwide - including Job Services Australia and Apprenticeship Solutions. Our challenge is to prevent more Australians from getting caught up in the long-term cycle of unemployment.

Wednesday, December 1, 2010

Opinion: Here's something Victoria can't boast about

Victorians are arguably Australia's most parochial lot.

Scratch any Victorian and they'll tell you their state leads the country in most pursuits. And Melbourne? Well Melbourne is the centre of the universe - both known and unknown.

Australia's sporting and business capital? Melbourne.

Best events, best entertainment, best food? Melbourne, Melbourne and Melbourne.

And in my line of work - providing support for disadvantaged Australians - Victorians pride themselves on being the most progressive and providing the most innovative social programs to assist people in need.

"Things are different down here," Victorians will tell you. "Don't try telling us how to do things," words more often than not aimed at people from NSW, "…we're already way beyond anything you can bring to the table."

Arrogant? A little.

True? You'll forgive me if, as a Victorian, I answer mostly in the affirmative.

But as I travel around the country - and as the head of a national community service organisation I need to travel quite a bit - I'm beginning to boast less and reach for excuses more.

Excuses for the fact Victoria has the highest youth unemployment rate in the country.

Excuses for the fact Melbourne is the least affordable capital city for housing.

Across a host of social indicators things are looking bleak in 'Bleak City' and we need to act quickly and work more smartly if we're to address them.

Not since the rust belt years of the early 90s has Victoria seen youth unemployment rates of the kind we're witnessing now.

In the Central Highlands -Wimmera youth unemployment has reached 50 per cent.

In north-west Melbourne it's 51.6 per cent.

Nearly 20 per cent of Victorians aged 18 to 24 are neither in full-time employment nor study.

These figures are scandalous and yet we seem inured to them and the squandering of youthful potential they suggest.

Victoria needs a youth employment strategy.

The new state government needs to recognise that assisting organisations like Mission Australia tackle youth unemployment isn't just a federal responsibility.

The state government is well-placed to support programs that are complementary to federal efforts at driving youth unemployment down.

For example, we know from our experience that there is a growing disconnect between labour supply and demand in many of Melbourne's disadvantaged communities. 

Businesses need job-ready applicants and many young jobseekers don't have the employability skills required.

Greater funding for locally-focussed, employer-first initiatives that identify job needs  and focus on assisting young people so they can fill available vacancies is what's needed.

The jobs are there; we need to make sure that young people have the capacity to take them.

At the same time, for those kids in danger of dropping out of school early and disengaging from training or employment, Victoria needs to offer more flexible learning, opportunities for casual work experience and pathways to traineeships and other employment.

The Coalition Victorian Government could and should take a lead on this. Their predecessors largely deferred to their federal colleagues in this area - that must change.

As for its affordable housing problem, Victoria needs to develop a detailed housing plan that incorporates where affordable housing can be built, how it can be financed and how individuals can afford to continue living with their families in the communities in which they were raised.

Part of this will require a review of planning laws to balance the needs of today with tomorrow.

On top of that a strategy to fix, replenish and manage Victoria's ageing public housing will need to be addressed sooner rather than later.

There are currently 40,000 Victorians sitting on the public housing waiting list and there's no evidence that the previous government's efforts at generating affordable housing growth is having any impact.

Victoria can't continue to rest on its laurels in terms of its approach to social and employment challenges.

Look around: South Australia leads the country in terms of offering flexible schooling in non-traditional environments to keep young people from dropping out of school.

Perhaps more than any other state in recent years, NSW has thrown its resources - and better coordinated the assistance coming from the Australian Government - into the development of affordable housing…often at its political cost.

And again NSW has embarked upon a pilot of using social impact bonds - an innovative method of raising funds from non-government investors to pay for the provision of services - while Victoria stands idly by.

I'm sure Victoria's new Premier, Ted Baillieu, is receiving mountains of unsolicited advice at present, but if I might add to the pile:

"Mr Premier, in the area of social services and support for disadvantaged people, Victoria is in danger of falling behind the rest of the country. We need to act now to arrest the slide."

Let's hope he hears the message.


Toby Hall is the Chief Executive Officer of Mission Australia.

This piece was published in the National Times today.  Read more of Toby's articles at this link


Tuesday, October 19, 2010

Media Release: One-in-ten Queenslanders who rely on welfare agencies miss out on one square meal a day

Anti-Poverty Week – 17-23 October

Around one-in-ten people in Queensland who turn to welfare agencies for help lack a substantial meal at least once a day according to community service organisation Mission Australia.

As well as the most basic need for food, 43 per cent of welfare clients in Queensland can’t afford necessary dental treatment, 34 per cent can’t afford to pay their utility bills, 26 per cent have had to pawn or sell something to obtain money and 13 per cent have no access to a bulk-billing doctor. Thirty-three per cent of Queensland clients are unable to afford medicines prescribed by a doctor.

The state-based results are from a 2008 national research project led by Professor Peter Saunders from the Social Policy Research Centre at the University of New South Wales in partnership with Mission Australia and a range of community service organisations.

The research pays particular attention to households with children requiring welfare agency support, revealing 27 per cent are unable to provide hobby or leisure activities for their kids, 22 per cent are unable to afford school activities and 14 per cent are unable to provide separate beds for each child.

Mission Australia’s Queensland State Director, Tony Stevenson, said the results revealed the often desperate levels of poverty, deprivation and exclusion facing the individuals and families who rely on community service agencies for support.

“These aren’t encouraging figures. They show just how far we have to go as a society to truly arrive at a ‘fair Australia’,” said Mr Stevenson.

Mr Stevenson said he hoped the figures would re-energise the Federal Government’s social inclusion agenda which is aimed at achieving better outcomes for disadvantaged people.

“Now that we’re through the global financial crisis – and with a capable new Minister for Social Inclusion in Tanya Plibersek – the Federal Government has the opportunity to get on the front foot and pursue an agenda that makes real differences in the lives of people who are currently excluded from the essentials of life.

“The Gillard Government must apply itself to the issues which currently weigh so heavily on disadvantaged Australians – reducing homelessness, providing substantially more support to people with mental health issues, tackling rising youth unemployment, and providing ‘place-based’ support to people in the country’s most disadvantaged postcodes.

“Particularly at a time when Australia is patting itself on the back for avoiding the worst of the financial crisis and a possible return to the boom years, these figures are a wake-up call that poverty is still very real in this country.

“It will take targeted and deliberate action to change that. We hope that the political realities of a hung Parliament won’t get in the way – the people we help can’t afford for to wait for another three years,” said Mr Stevenson.

Media Release: One-in-seven in NSW who rely on welfare agencies miss out on one square meal a day


Anti-Poverty Week – 17-23 October

Around one in seven people in NSW who turn to welfare agencies for help lack a substantial meal at least once a day according to community service organisation Mission Australia.

As well as the most basic need for food, 49 per cent of welfare clients in NSW can’t afford necessary dental treatment, 44 per cent can’t afford to pay their utility bills, 29 per cent have had to pawn or sell something to obtain money and 20 per cent have no access to a bulk-billing doctor.

Thirty-five per cent of NSW clients are unable to afford medicines prescribed by a doctor.
The state-based results are from a 2008 national research project led by Professor Peter Saunders from the Social Policy Research Centre at the University of New South Wales in partnership with Mission Australia and a range of community service organisations.

The research pays particular attention to households with children requiring welfare agency support, revealing 26 per cent are unable to provide hobby or leisure activities for their kids, 20 per cent are unable to afford school activities and 14 per cent are unable to provide separate beds for each child.

Mission Australia’s NSW/ACT State Director, Leonie Green, said the results revealed the often desperate levels of poverty, deprivation and exclusion facing the individuals and families who rely on community service agencies for support.

“These aren’t encouraging figures. They show just how far we have to go as a society to truly arrive at a ‘fair Australia’,” said Ms Green.

Ms Green said she hoped the figures would re-energise the Federal Government’s social inclusion agenda which is aimed at achieving better outcomes for disadvantaged people.

“Now that we’re through the global financial crisis – and with a capable new Minister for Social Inclusion in Tanya Plibersek – the Federal Government has the opportunity to get on the front foot and pursue an agenda that makes real differences in the lives of people who are currently excluded from the essentials of life.

“The Gillard Government must apply itself to the issues which currently weigh so heavily on disadvantaged Australians – reducing homelessness, providing substantially more support to people with mental health issues, tackling rising youth unemployment, and providing ‘place-based’ support to people in the country’s most disadvantaged postcodes.

“Particularly at a time when Australia is patting itself on the back for avoiding the worst of the financial crisis and a possible return to the boom years, these figures are a wake-up call that poverty is still very real in this country.

“It will take targeted and deliberate action to change that. We hope that the political realities of a hung Parliament won’t get in the way – the people we help can’t afford for to wait for another three years,” said Ms Green.

Sunday, September 19, 2010

Opinion: Time for fresh thoughts on welfare reform

Eleven years after the last major report into reforming Australia’s welfare system it’s clear we’re still stuck with an approach that doesn’t work – for the country or the individuals and families it’s meant to help.

Sure, the past decade has seen some positive reforms, but we still have too many jobless families, too many people on disability support, too many long-term unemployed people wasting away without fulfilling their full potential.

Through the McClure Report, published in 1999, Australia had the chance for root and branch reform of Australia’s income support system – but we squibbed it.

It’s now time to re-apply ourselves to the challenge.

But let’s not be satisfied with simply tinkering around the edges.

Why not recast a radically different income support system that works for people instead of undermining them?

There is no doubt that a fair Australia must have an adequate safety net that provides unemployed, sick, disabled and vulnerable people with the support they need.

But let’s not kid ourselves that too long a time spent on welfare – particularly for people who are physically and intellectually able to work – doesn’t have a dramatic impact on a person’s health and well-being.

A report released last week by the Australasian Faculty of Occupational and Environmental Medicine stated that long-term joblessness significantly increases the risk of heart disease, lung cancer and suicide.

And that suicide among young men out of work for six months or more increases 40-fold.

An unproductive life destroys a person and can spread like a cancer through their family and community.

Witness the destruction and decay passive welfare has created in some Aboriginal communities and suburbs on our metro fringes.

We all know this – governments know it, community agencies know it, the public senses it…and yet it seems we’re determined to persist with the system as it stands.

Take the Disability Support Pension for example.

Between 1996 and 2007 the number of people receiving the Disability Support Pension (DSP) actually increased from 500,000 to more than 700,000.

Growth in the number of DSP recipients was greater than in any other pension category in the decade to 2007.

It’s estimated that 20 per cent of this total – 140,000 people – are thought to be capable of work.

We can’t let this situation go on.

Recently Mission Australia was asked to report on our experiences of job seekers complying with their obligations to look for work while receiving income support.

These obligations are known as a job seeker’s ‘activity test’.

Our frontline staff told us that a significant number of job seekers were using multiple occurrences of illness as a reason for not looking for work but failing to provide the required medical certificates to support their claims.

And if that wasn’t enough, in a large number of cases where we brought such behaviour to Centrelink’s attention for action the matter was overturned.

In the six months between July and December 2009, Mission Australia submitted more than 20,000 reports to Centrelink – known as Participation Reports – for issues of job seekers not living up to their obligations.

According to our figures, Centrelink overturned 45 per cent of these.

Now, on some occasions, having our reports overturned is to be expected.

But 45 per cent?

It is reasonable that unemployed people on income support should be required to follow a set of simple rules when seeking work.

But the rules must be applied – and at the moment it appears they’re not.

I was pleased to see during the election campaign Labor commit to a tightening of the compliance regime as well as the potential to suspend a jobseeker’s income support on their first failure to meet their obligations.

In essence a sharp message to say ‘This is a responsibility that needs to be taken seriously’.

The government should also consider moving all job seekers not exempt from the activity test into community service or work experience within three months of becoming unemployed – not 12 months as is currently the case.

This would help avoid the loss of productivity and engagement that comes from passive welfare. It’s as much about keeping an individual’s work skills up as it is about maintaining their self-esteem and avoiding isolation and depression.

Finally, we need to focus on income support obligations that bolster families and children. Despite the naysayers, I believe linking the receipt of benefits to basic things like school attendance or the payment of rent can make sense.

To this end I think Jenny Macklin’s efforts with income quarantining should be supported.

But we also need to make sure such measures are complemented by well-resourced intensive case management and access to incentives such as matched savings and financial counselling.

A fair and well-managed income support system offers hope for people in need.

An income support system that continues to let people capable of social, economic and community participation avoid such contact does them – and all of us – a grave disservice.

Welfare reform is undoubtedly one of the most difficult areas of policy to address – but address it we must – not for my sake, or the sake of taxpayers, but the sake of the individuals, families and communities at the mercy of a system that seems determined to let them down.


Toby Hall is the Chief Executive Officer of Mission Australia

This piece was published in the Sydney Morning Herald on 20th September 2010


Wednesday, March 10, 2010

Mission Australia client looks outside-the-square to build a path to success


After relocating to Adelaide from Melbourne three years ago, Madee River found that, after a few months of unemployment, he would need to think outside-the-square if he was going to be able to support himself.

He came across Mission Australia's New Enterprise Incentive Scheme and soon had the small business training, mentoring and relevant qualifications to help him develop a business plan that set him on the path to success.

The New Enterprise Incentive Scheme (NEIS) is a self-employment program funded by the Department of Education, Employment and Workplace Relations (DEEWR). NEIS has helped over 100,000 unemployed people since the early 1990s by helping them develop the skills and knowledge needed to start and manage their own business.

At the recent National NEIS Association Awards for Performance, Mr River achieved national recognition in the 'best growth business' category for his company Designer Muzik.

Mr River and his team now help businesses such as Novotel hotel group, Cibo and BMW build their branding through tailored music, advertising and promotional events

"My background is in the music industry and I certainly spent many months researching and planning my business proposition," said Mr River to the Adelaide Advertiser.

"But I am sure I would not be here now without Mission Australia NEIS support," said Mr River.

DesignerMuzik is set for further success, with plans for the business to expand into Sydney and international markets.



To read more about NEIS, or apply see the links below...

Thursday, March 4, 2010

We must act now to save a lost generation


Twenty-two-year-old Marcus* had been involved in drugs ever since he’d been at school. He dropped out in year 9 and over time his relationships with family and friends disintegrated. He ended up living in a car, spraying graffiti and getting into trouble with the law.

Marcus realised he was headed down a road that would destroy his life and decided to take action. He tried to give up drugs on this own, but without the support of his friends and family, he became suicidal and depressed.

For Marcus, a happy, fulfilled life with a rewarding job seemed like an impossible dream.

Australia may be showing signs of emerging from the effects of the global financial crisis, but for one group of Australians, those like Marcus aged 15 to 24, the challenges continue to grow.

With youth unemployment rising Marcus’ story is an increasingly familiar one in Australia. For many young people who face the quest to secure a job it’s getting even further out of reach. In December 2009, the unemployment rate for teenagers was 16.2%^. This is a sharp increase on the same period in 2008 and nearly three times higher than the unemployment rate across the whole population^.

It’s especially worrying that the rise in teenagers not engaged in full-time education or full-time work since 2008 is a reversal of a previous downward trend.

Estimates for 2008 indicated that after a decade in which the number of teenagers doing traineeships and apprenticeships increased every year, this trend has now halted.

Why is this a problem? For three reasons:

First, history has shown that the most vulnerable people suffer the harshest and longest effects of economic downturn, with high levels of unemployment.

Second, because of their lack of qualifications or work experience, young people are at risk of becoming long-term unemployed. This can lead to intergenerational disadvantage with long-term economic and social consequences.

Third, with people living longer and the number of people of traditional working age (15-64) decreasing, Australia simply cannot afford to have the current and next generation of young people unengaged and unproductive.

Why is this happening?

Our society places a lot of importance on career, employment and money. When young people are unable to participate in the workforce, especially at an age when much of their own identity is being formed, the consequences can be particularly damaging. Confidence, security and a sense of belonging can be destroyed in a matter of months.

Many are already grappling with substance abuse, mental health issues, risk of self harm, homelessness, low literacy, a history of sexual or physical abuse and lack of residential living skills.

When these young people turn to agencies for help, they are often met with a confusing and daunting array of services and processes.

“The way Australia delivers employment and related services to these at-risk people at present is often complex and fragmented,” says Mission Australia CEO Toby Hall.

“Without enhancing our efforts we will find ourselves with a large pool of untrained and unemployed young people with insufficient education to contribute fully to Australian society – a lost generation.”

The solution

What can be done? Mission Australia believes the primary focus of service providers must be to prevent youth unemployment in the first instance by offering holistic support.

In situations where prevention fails we must ensure there is a timely, targeted and tailored response for each young person to ensure that unemployment does not become entrenched.

Any framework must obviously include a focus on the young people who are most vulnerable – those currently not engaged in education, employment or training. That translates to around 300,000^^ 15 to 24-year-olds and we expect another 50,000 by July 2010^^^.

Mission Australia, as a non denominational Christian not-for-profit is well placed to work in communities with high numbers of unemployed youth across the country. We can join with smaller grassroots organisations, employers, local governments and schools to develop collaborative plans to keep young people in education or identify job opportunities.

“We need to get away from prescriptive and bureaucratic approaches to youth employment and instead support and measure the success of local initiatives based on their outcomes,” explains Toby.

“The government has already hinted at something similar with its $200 million Get Communities Working package but we need something that has a stronger youth focus.”

Australia should build a national mentoring strategy into its youth agenda. Mission Australia has good evidence about what works and how mentoring can play an important role in promoting the wellbeing of young people – particularly those who are struggling.

Mission Australia believes the primary focus of service providers must be to prevent youth unemployment in the first instance by offering holistic support.

Mission Australia continues to provide, refine and expand its programs dedicated to education and providing pathways to full-time employment.

These include:
  • 13 programs providing career advice and work experience to get young people who had been unemployed for over 12 months into paid work.
  • 8 services providing one-on-one support to people who left school prematurely as a result of family conflict, bullying, learning disabilities or mental health issues.
  • 5 mentoring programs targeted at youth at risk of leaving school.
  • 16 programs providing training which assists young people to re-engage in education, additional training courses or employment.

Ultimately, the upward trend in the rate of young unemployed Australians could herald a worsening crisis. With resolve and sensible coordination of policy and effort, Australia can give many more of them the future they deserve.

* Name and image have been changed to protect the identity of the client
^ ABS Labour Force, December 2009
^^ The Hon Julia Gillard MP. RMIT speech. March 2009
^^^ The Hon Julia Gillard MP. Address to the Sydney Institute. 19 February 2009