No, my complaint is that it operates under the 'back to work' banner. A term which encapsulates a series of completely retarded sub-schemes. When in reality it offers absolutely no career path, no help towards a career path, and no type of permanent placement (or at least very, very few, and completely useless at that).
What it does offer is a short period of virtually free labour, followed by a very temporary drop from the Job Seekers register. And what do we gain?, a slight improvement in government statistics?. A handful of well educated shelf stackers?. Get real..
doing work - yes
for tesco - no
If Tesco have room for all this free labour, why don't they hire more people?
http://www.guardian.co.uk/society/2011/nov/16/young-jobseekers-work-pay-unemployment?intcmp=122
Job Seekers are being forced into taking upto 6 weeks upaid 'work experience' at Tesco (posted 3.5 billion profits last year), poundland, and other stores. As soon as they sign up for the unpaid experience with no promise of a job at the end of it, they are told that if they quit their JSA will be stripped off them.
We are training our young and vulnerable to be slaves for big corp britain.
Conservatives, take a bow
The only benefit I get is JSA. If I need to travel down to London for an interview that's my 2 weeks JSA all but gone. I've done a degree and I'm still applying for jobs and occasionally getting interviews. I'm not someone who claims loads of benefits and just wants to stay on benefits without ever getting a job. That IS a problem. The government could surely get me work experience doing something better than poundland. If they're that bothered why not get people who are qualified into jobs that benefit them?
Next time you are at the jobcentre go and ask your personal advisor about the Travel To Interview scheme (TIS).
If you have a job interview outside the local geographical area the jobcentre has a scheme to support you with the costs of travel, and, if reasonable, an overnight stay if the timing of the interview is such you could not reasonably expected to get there and back on the same day.
I realise the costs travel to interviews far away is a real strain for someone whose only income is JSA, as you mention train travel to London is expensive if you're only on £53.50 a week (if you're less than 25)....but there is help for you with this, if you ask.
Good idea tbh... most modern employees are 'slaves' to some degree or another anyway - might as well make the sponges who are a net drain on our society contribute something.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/society/2011/nov/16/young-jobseekers-work-pay-unemployment?intcmp=122
Job Seekers are being forced into taking upto 6 weeks upaid 'work experience' at Tesco (posted 3.5 billion profits last year), poundland, and other stores. As soon as they sign up for the unpaid experience with no promise of a job at the end of it, they are told that if they quit their JSA will be stripped off them.
We are training our young and vulnerable to be slaves for big corp britain.
Conservatives, take a bow
Ultimately I'm diluting my original point, which is that forcing people to work all hours for £1.50ph, essentially, with the threat of removing their poultry safety net is nothing short of disgusting.
Unfortunately they require evidence, and if you've been called in a day or so before, you can't exactly provide evidence (i.e. a letter). Not only that but it's a refund, so you have to pay out initially, and if you're like many, most if not all of your JSA goes on bills and food, and it can be dangerous to spend it all on an interview, and then have to wait around for them to sort it out.
I could be persuaded to agree to it if it did not disciminate against the young, and was targetted only at SME's. Businesses turning over billions to do not need state subsidy. So as far as I currently understand it, I would have to say no.
Hardly the point, larger companys deal with new staff all the time, they have programs and systems in place to look after and 'train' them, small companys don't and it will oftern be more trouble than it's worth, plus it's much harder to manage 100's of small companys than a couple of huge ones.
It's much harder for smaller companys to take unskilled workers onboard, they don't have the experience nor procedures in place to deal with unskilled staff, think about it due to the nature of larger organisations they have to deal with new staff more oftern.
It's not an insult, it's the nature of small vs. large organisations.
I could be persuaded to agree to it if it did not disciminate against the young, and was targetted only at SME's. Businesses turning over billions do not need state subsidy. So as far as I currently understand it, I would have to say no.
There is no evidence for this.