People taking up work experience places
~ providing up to 30 hours a week of unpaid labour
~ face losing benefits if they quit
~ providing up to 30 hours a week of unpaid labour
~ face losing benefits if they quit
By Shiv Malik
November 16, 2011
Britain's young
unemployed are being sent to work for supermarkets and
budget stores for up to two months for no pay and no guarantee of a job, the
Guardian can reveal.
Under the government's work
experience programme young jobseekers are exempted from national minimum
wage laws for up to eight weeks and are being offered placements in Tesco,
Poundland, Argos, Sainsbury's and a multitude of other big name businesses.
The Department
for Work and Pensions says that if jobseekers
"express an interest" in an offer of work experience they must
continue to work without pay, after a one-week cooling-off period, or face
having their benefits docked.
Young
people have told the Guardian that they are doing up to 30 hours a
week of unpaid labour and have to be available from 9am to 10pm.
In three such cases
jobseekers also claim they were not told about the week's cooling-off period,
and that once they showed a willingness to take part in the scheme they were
told by their case manager they would be stripped of their £53 a week
jobseekers allowance (JSA) if they backed out.
Twenty-two-year-old Cait
Reilly is currently completing three weeks at Poundland, working five hours a
day.
Last week, Reilly, who
graduated last year with a BSc in geology from Birmingham University, found
herself with five other JSA claimants stacking and cleaning shelves at
Poundland in south Birmingham.
Reilly says there are
around 15 other staff at the store but unlike them she will receive no
remuneration for her work.
"It seems we're
being used as some free labour especially in the run-up to Christmas," she
said.
Reilly says she told her
local job centre in King's Heath, Birmingham, that she did not need the
experience in the store as she had done plenty of prior retail work.
I got a degree in Geology to do THIS? Cait Reilly, who is
currently completing three weeks at Poundland, working five hours a day.
(Photograph: David Sillitoe for the Guardian)
Despite DWP rules, Reilly
says she was told by the job centre she would lose her benefits if she didn't
take the Poundland placement. The DWP says jobseekers should be told about the
cooling-off period but was unable to comment on individual cases without being
given personal details.
"I was told [the
work experience placement] was mandatory after I'd attended the [retail] open
day," said Reilly.
She said she felt she had
to do it because, "without my JSA, I would literally have nothing".
The work experience
programme, which is separate from a multitude of other programmes designed to
get people back into work, was advertised in January as voluntary after the
time spent volunteering was increased from two to eight weeks.
However, the DWP has clarified
that there is a clause which allows job centre case workers around the country
to force the unemployed into placements.
The DWP say that once
people "express an interest" including verbal consent, in doing work
experience they will lose their JSA if they pull out after the first week.
One big superstore told
the Guardian it thought the entire scheme was voluntary and that people could
pull out whenever they wanted without fear of penalty.
Under the scheme, there is no guarantee of a job, only an interview.Multiple jobseekers can work in one store at the same time, cleaning or stacking shelves and competing against each other for a potential paid work on offer.
The DWP has no overall
figure for the numbers involved in the scheme so it is not known how many
hundreds or thousands of young people are working without pay for months.
But including similar
schemes such as "mandatory work activity", sector-based work
academies and the work programme, which is mainly run by
private companies, the government expects hundreds of thousands
of young people to do weeks of unpaid, and forced work experience for big companies.
As part of her placement
Reilly has been given training at another company, which will gives her a City and Guilds qualification in retail.
The DWP says Reilly is
likely not to be on the work experience scheme but on another placement called
a sector-based work academy, which was announced this October.
The scheme is different
from straight work experience in that it has a defined training element, but
Reilly says that it was only ever told that she was doing work experience and
that her work at King's Heath branch of Poundland has been very unstructured.
"No one really knew
what we were supposed to be doing. We were just put on the shop floor and told
to tidy shelves," she said. James Rayburn has just spent seven weeks
working for Tesco doing, he says, the same work as other paid employees.
He said he had gone to
the job centre to help him find employment, and the manager there told him that
Tesco was looking for staff. "I thought that's quite handy because I knew
a friend who used to work there and it sounds like quiet good fun."
Like Reilly, 21-year-old
Rayburn said that he had little instruction from the store in Warfield,
Berkshire.
"I didn't actually
have much support …They were getting on with their own jobs … they
left me to it," he said. "They said, 'Good work today, Joe'. That was
it, everyday."
Rayburn, who was also
told by his job centre he would lose his benefits if he did not work without
pay, said he spent almost two months stacking and cleaning shelves and doing
night shifts on occasion.
"They said [my JSA]
would be cut off if I didn't do it."
Asked if he thought he
should have been paid he said: "I reckon they should have paid me … I
was basically doing what a normal member of staff does for Tesco. I had the
uniform and I was in the staff canteen. I obviously got access to the food and
drinks in the staff canteen … that's what they let you do … but I got
nothing else apart from that.
"I was there doing
it as if I walked into the store and said, 'Look I'll help.'"
ED: In Great Britain, Tesco has been frequently targeted by the BDS because of their stocking of foodstuffs from illegal Israeli settlements, often products stolen from the Palestinians.
Like Reilly, Rayburn was
not told that he had a week to refuse the placement, and was working in Tesco
with two other young unemployed people who did get a job at the end of their
placement.
Other large stores
including Sainsbury's, Argos and Asda have been confirmed as taking on work
experience placements.
Tesco said that in the
last two months 150 people had carried out placements at their store. However,
Tesco told the Guardian it was under the impression that work experience
placements were totally voluntary.
It said they would not be
taking on placements during Christmas adding: "These placements are not a
substitute for full-time employees."
Poundland also confirmed
the practice but said it didn't have exact numbers.
Sainsbury's said:
"Following an approach from their local Job centre Plus and in the belief
that they were doing the right thing, a small number of stores have recruited
colleagues under this new initiative.
"We have since
reminded our stores that they must continue our normal work placement policy,
which means they will take on candidates only when there is a chance of a
permanent role at the end of the placement."
Employment minister Chris
Grayling has defended the scheme, saying: "Our work experience scheme is
proving to be a big success with over half of young people leaving benefits
after they have completed their placement. It is not mandatory but once someone
agrees to take part we expect them to turn up or they will have their benefits
stopped.
"Work experience
will give young people a real taste of the work environment and act as a
stepping stone into a career. And it's working.
"Jobcentre Plus is
working with major multinationals and smaller businesses to offer thousands of
opportunities for young people so that they can start to get on the job
experience whilst enabling them to keep their benefits."
© Guardian News and Media Limited 2011
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