Transcript Slide 1

Delivering reform – helping homeless
people into housing and employment
Amanda McIntyre
Director, ERSA
[email protected]
What is ERSA?
• The voice of independent providers of
welfare-to-work services
• Support long-term unemployed and others
to find and keep work, develop skills
• Over 65% DWP’s contracted provision
• Private, public and voluntary sector
organisations, of all sizes
• Believe work changes lives for the better
Our overall view of welfare reform
• We’re at the start of an ambitious reform
journey
• Sound aspirations, but challenging for
policy makers, commissioners & providers
• We should not expect to get everything
right first time
• But we must learn lessons
• And fix the problem, not the blame
What was wrong with the system?
• Process driven
• Fragmented – and disconnected from
other public policies
• Old-style contracting
• Not good for those with multiple barriers
• Not learning lessons from niche providers
who were breaking down the barriers
How is this being addressed?
• A “revolution in the provision landscape”
• Flexible New Deal: ‘black box’ for
innovation
• Commissioning Strategy: focused on
sustainable employment outcomes
• Devolution and joined-up government: to
address multiple sources of disadvantage
• Big changes – in an economic downturn
Flexible New Deal
• Takes forward the “deal” between Govt
and clients, after 12 months with JCP
• Sub-regional planning & provision
• “Black box”: specification limited to action
plan and employment related activity
• But will low FND budget support hardest to
help?
• Will FND processes foster innovation?
Commissioning strategy
• Strongly support focus on outcomes
• Most outcome risks are outside control of
any one party, so model needs to change:
– From risk allocation to risk management
– From contractor-client split to genuine
‘one team’ approach across supply chain
• Need outcome-based performance
management that avoids cash-flow
hit
Devolution & joined-up government
• Yes please!
• Huge opportunities, through Local Area
Agreements, Housing Green Paper etc
• Local leadership key
• Allow providers in to help develop local
strategies
• Don’t make life difficult, eg set sub-regional
boundaries carefully
Big changes in an economic downturn
• A welfare “trampoline” not a safety net
• “No one written off” must hold true –
don’t park the hardest to help
• Base financial evaluations on whole life
VFM, not short term affordability
• Smart investment of the fiscal stimulus,
eg better housing + jobs + training
Make sure we learn the lessons
• Flexibility – and fair competition
• Learn lessons for next round of flexible
New Deal – and for other programmes
• Invest in building relationships
• Celebrate successes together
• WILLOW – Off the Streets and into Work
running 2 yr project to gather voice of
smaller London providers
Take sound advice
Franklin D. Roosevelt
“One thing is sure. We have to do
something. We have to do the best we
know how at the moment…If it doesn’t
turn out right we can modify it as we go
along.”
Speaking about the New Deal – March 1933