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Working for Families in Glasgow

Working for Families in Glasgow. Shona Honeyman Development and Regeneration Services. GLASGOW 2003. The McGregor Report 90,000 jobless working age adults claiming a non-JSA key benefit 71,000 sick or disabled 17,000 lone parents Equal Access Strategy. Glasgow’s Infrastructure.

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Working for Families in Glasgow

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  1. Working for Familiesin Glasgow Shona Honeyman Development and Regeneration Services

  2. GLASGOW 2003 The McGregor Report • 90,000 jobless working age adults claiming a non-JSA key benefit • 71,000 sick or disabled • 17,000 lone parents Equal Access Strategy

  3. Glasgow’s Infrastructure • In 1988 GDC set up LEDCs • Enabled more local response • Built into an extensive social economy network

  4. The Glasgow Model Planning - things we considered • Economic development childcare? • Allocate or request submissions? • Available infrastructure or new? • Who could deliver? • What else does it impact on?

  5. The Glasgow Model OurConclusions Greater flexibility to meet parents needs Allocate the fund according to city-wide strategy – no project funding application process Use existing infrastructure – join it up better Select providers on ability to increase capacity within timescale Align strategically to Equal Access

  6. Programme Overview • Guidance and Mentoring Projects • Sitter Service • Pre-ILM Project • Young Parents Project • HNC Pilot Project • Money Advice Services • Rosemount Transitions Project

  7. Ahead of the Game • In planning the programme we identified our target client groups as • Lone parents • Parents/carers pre-New Deal • Families with health/disability issues • Low income families - benefit or wage • From anywhere within Glasgow city boundaries

  8. Glasgow’s Key Worker Model The Key Features of the model are - • Split function between guidance and childcare • Holistic approach • Specific to client groups • Being the pivot point not the expert on everything • Being there

  9. So …. three years onwhere are we now? • The WFF People – 56.5 FTE and bank/sessional workers • The WFF Organisations – 10 • The WFF Brand

  10. What Have We Achieved? From Oct ’04 – Feb ’07 • Registered 3431 clients • In to work – 915 • Improved their employment - 35 • Assisted to remain in work - 536 • Entered or completed education and training – 664 • Other - 83 • Intermediate activities – 459

  11. What Else Have We Achieved? • Real partnership working • Filled gaps • A programme model that works and produces results • A management style that encourages innovation but retains control • Good working relationships

  12. What Have We Learned? • Client at the centre – key worker model • Flexibility and creativity are key to success • You don’t have to throw money at the problem – Christine’s cooker! • Things don’t happen instantly – but when they do it’s worth it! • Don’t get complacent – there’s always more to be done • Stay focused on the vision

  13. There Are Always Barriers! • 16 hour rule • Parents under 18 • Institutionalised debt • Attitudes • Sustainability

  14. Staying Ahead of the Game • Align with other initiatives in the city • The City Strategy • Maintaining progress on economic growth • Continual development ‘v’ exit strategy

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