28/09/2016
Dear All
Below is a short BLOG that will appear in this week’s Third force News. Best wishes Marian
The Employability Landscape in Scotland’ – where does the Engine Shed fit in?
Scotland’s learning disability strategy, the Keys to Life seeks to improve the quality of life for people with learning disabilities so that they live longer healthier lives, participate fully in all aspects of society and prosper as individuals. ‘Enabling people with learning disabilities to work is critical to achieving that vision.’
Research into our work at the Engine Shed has been viewed as an essential tool to record the success of our organisations work from its inception way back in the mid 1980’s to when it closed in 2015. The major part of my working life has been working with people i.e. people with learning disabilities , their family and friends, community based services, schools and colleges professionals , other employability services within the network, employers etc. who have understood and embraced this vision. Our training approach, delivered through the Engine Shed’s employability programme, created a framework that successfully met the learning needs and aspirations for this group of people i.e. to move into sustainable paid work.
Our current research, commenced in 2014 and was based on interviewing 24 people who had completed their training programme throughout the period of time we were in operation and the basic questions we asked them were: what did you do in terms of employment when you left the Engine Shed and what are you doing now. After leaving the Engine Shed 19 out of the 24 went into paid work of over 16 hours a week (79%) and at the current time 16 still had a full time job (66%). Another three left to a job under 16 hours a week and they successfully remained in paid work.
Over the years our rates to employment have been evaluated: Blake Stevenson in 2015, ESF over the first 18 years, 1989-2007, monitored our targets to employment. For those that are interested in further statistics and the story behind them, our research report can be accessed from October via our website.
Because at the moment research is high on my agenda, I was interested to read the latest report –Mapping the Employability Landscape for People with Learning disabilities in Scotland commissioned by the Scottish government and SCLD (August 2016)*. Its aim is ‘to record what is happening and how to make it better’ and is an interesting document. However I do feel more than slightly miffed at being left out of the ‘landscape’! If supported employment is the framework that is funded for helping people into work, then our model is viewed under one of the other categories i.e. specialist service, social enterprise/sheltered employment ( which doesn’t get a high success rate in terms of moving people on?). Unfortunately I think there is still the misconception that the Engine Shed offers sheltered employment which is farthest from the truth. Our vision was/is to support those furthest away from the labour market to make the successful transition into full time paid work. This takes time and cannot be achieved with short term interventions.
Unfortunately with loss of our funding last year the answer to the question is that we no longer ‘fit in’ and are no longer part of an option within a network of employability resources available to people with learning disabilities in Scotland. I personally think this leaves a huge gap in training provision and means that a group of people with learning disabilities that require additional supports to access the work market will be denied this tried and tested proven resource that would enable them to take their first big step into the world of paid work.
* http://www.scld.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2016/08/SCLD-Report-Web.pdf