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Chamber and committees

Question reference: S5W-34284

  • Asked by: Jackie Baillie, MSP for Dumbarton, Scottish Labour
  • Date lodged: 23 December 2020
  • Current status: Answered by Jamie Hepburn on 11 January 2021

Question

To ask the Scottish Government how it will ensure that people who might not be included in official unemployment figures, including recent graduates, receive support during the COVID-19 pandemic.


Answer

The Scottish Government is ensuring that a wide range of employability support is available to all those who need it during the Covid-19 pandemic.

The No-One Left Behind approach ensures that quality support based on individual need continues to be available across Scotland during this very challenging period. We are building on the £33 million already invested by the Scottish Government to support existing employability support services, including Community Jobs Scotland, Employability Fund and Fair Start Scotland, by investing a further £100 million to tackle unemployment and address retraining needs. This includes £60 million to support the new Young Person's Guarantee (YPG). The YPG aims to ensure every young person in Scotland, aged between 16 and 24 years, has the opportunity, based on their own personal circumstances and ambitions, of going to university or college, joining an apprenticeship programme, undertaking training or fair employment including work experience, or participating in a formal volunteering programme.

Under the Young Person's Guarantee, £30 million is being provided to Local Authorities to deliver enhanced employability support locally to young people across Scotland, ensuring one-to-one flexible support and training is available that will help young people to improve their future employability prospects. A significant part of the YPG funding will be for 'in-work' training, supporting SMEs and third sector employers to create more jobs, including pathways to apprenticeships. Other priorities include providing mental health support for young people and improving the availability of formal volunteering opportunities.

The National Transition Training Fund will support those aged 25 or over whose jobs are at risk as a result of the pandemic or have been made redundant, to access retraining. The first strand of the Fund, managed by Skills Development Scotland, was launched on 8 October. Individual Training Accounts (ITA), offer up to £200 to people of all ages who are unemployed or earn less than £22,000 who wish to upskill. ITAs reopened on 1 July this year, and remain open to applications.

We will continue to provide support for individuals affected by redundancy through our Partnership Action for Continuing Employment, PACE initiative. Through providing skills development and employability support, PACE aims to minimise the time individuals affected by redundancy are out of work. As announced in Programme for Government, we are investing an additional £5 million to scale up and enhance our support for those made redundant.

We have also provided additional funding of £2.35 million for our Parental Employability Support Fund which will provide intensive employability support for those most at risk of poverty, including disabled, young and minority ethnic parents to help them access or progress in work. This brings in year investment to £7.35 million.

All individuals can access careers information and guidance support from Skills Development Scotland through Scotland’s careers website: My World of Work , and a dedicated helpline: 0800 917 8000. Skills Development Scotland has also set up a dedicated Employment Online resource for advice on redundancy, employment, online learning, immediately available jobs, and wider support services: link

In terms of support specifically for graduates, Scottish Government is working with organisations in the FE and HE sector, including the Scottish Funding Council (SFC), Colleges Scotland and Universities Scotland on how to support increased graduate recruitment, internships and upskilling, by building on previous graduate employability models such as ‘Adopt-an-Intern’ and ‘Scotgrad’. Graduates can also access a range of services through their university Careers Office, with most universities providing support to graduates for at least a year following graduation. The October issue of the AGCAS journal, Phoenix, also provides some important advice for students and graduates and can be accessed via the following link: Responding to Covid-19