Title: Supported employment and the National Disability Strategy
1Supported employment and the National Disability
Strategy
- Eithne Fitzgerald
- Head of Policy and Public Affairs
- National Disability Authority
2Outline
- Facts and figures
- National Disability Strategy
- Promoting partnership
3Low participation in work
- A third of people with disabilities have a job v.
three quarters of others (Census 2006) - 60 of people with disabilities not working are
restricted in type or amount of work they can do - Raising employment rates will mean more emphasis
on supporting people to get and to keep work
4Employment and disabilityCensus 2006
5Highest level of education achieved Age 24 who
have completed education (Census 2006)
6Employment rates, disabled and other men by
education level (age 25-34 Census 2002)
7Difficulty in types or amount of workpeople with
long-term illness or disability QNHS 2002
8National Disability Strategy Employment and
disability commitments
- Develop a comprehensive employment strategy for
people with disabilities - Numerical targets for increased employment
- Develop and enhance FÁS supported employment
programme - Cross-departmental co-operation across
Enterprise, Trade and Employment Health Social
and Family Affairs - Specific commitments to enhance supported
employment to bridge between HSE and mainstream
training systematic process of engagement with
people with disabilities to establish employment
aspirations - 3 target mandatory under Part 5 Disability Act
9National Disability Strategy Targets Employment
and disability
- Sectoral Plan
- 7,000 more in work by 2010
- National Development Plan - 2016
- participation in education, training and
employment up 50 - proportion at work up from 37 to 45 (QNHS)
10Comprehensive employment strategyNDA report -
Key pillars
- Make work pay, remove benefit traps
- Equip pwd to compete in labour market now and
future - Enlist public and private sector employers
- Prevent flow into inactivity
- School leavers
- People acquiring a disability
- Systematic process of engagement
- Comprehensive across individuals and levels of
ability
11Supported employment Almost 4 of workers with a
disability
- Two separate state-funded arrangements
- FÁS scheme
- In principle 18 hours a week
- c. 900 in work 1,100 in job assessment/job
search phases - HSE-funded supported employment
- Less than 18 hours a week
- c.1,000 receiving HSE or service provider job
coach support
12Joined-up thinking
- HSE review of Adult Day Services
- Decline in sheltered workshop nos. opportunity
for alternative forms of employment support - Review of ETE Supported Employment programme
- Earnings disregard of 50 over 120 a week
- Social Welfare developments
- Commitment in Government programme on medical
card continuation - Importance of dovetailing changes in HSE, ETE and
social welfare - Less rigid conditions for FÁS support may allow
more opportunities under FÁS rather than HSE
umbrella
13Part 5 Disability Act
- Legal obligations on public bodies to
- Promote and support employment of people with
disabilities - Achieve 3 target of employees with a disability
- People with ID under-represented in the public
service relative to other employments - Good models of partnership with local disability
services and supported employment consortia could
be built on - Small bodies that find it hardest to reach 3
could use supported employment work experience
placements
14Conclusion
- Lots happening in employment/disability policy
- Opportunity for partnerships and joined-up
thinking - Supported employment partnerships with both
public and private sectors