I propose to take Questions Nos. 915, 916, 917 and 918 together.
My Department provides a wide range of income and employment supports to assist jobseekers and employees with disabilities, and their employers. Supports available include the Reasonable Accommodation Fund, the Disability Awareness Support Scheme and the Wage Subsidy Scheme. These supports are generally not contingent on the type of disability but on the extent to which it restricts a person’s ability to pursue employment in the open labour market.
The Reasonable Accommodation Fund provides financial support for people with disabilities and for employers to help make their workplaces more accessible. The Disability Awareness Support Scheme provides funding for disability awareness training for employees. The Wage Subsidy Scheme is an employment support to private sector employers to encourage employment of people with disabilities in the open labour market.
I am committed to improving disability employment supports to better meet the needs of disabled people and to increase their take-up. For this reason, over the past two years my Department has run extensive public consultations to inform the reviews of these three schemes. This is in line with the UN’s Convention on the Rights of People with Disabilities. The consultations combined received nearly two thousand submissions from people with a broad range of disabilities including autism, from disability groups, Disabled Person's Organisations and employers. This feedback has been used to inform how these schemes can be improved.
Following consultation, I published a review of the Reasonable Accommodation Fund and Disability Awareness Support Scheme last August. The report made nine recommendations which aim to improve the scheme for persons with disabilities including persons with autism. The review recommends combining the two schemes into a single flexible scheme, promoting the availability and potential benefits of the reformed scheme to all, simplifying systems and processes, and providing approval in principle.
It also recommends increasing funding, extending workplace needs assessments, and job coaching to new recruits and all existing employees, increasing the number of support hours eligible for funding, providing support for blended working, and opening the scheme to other employers, for example the voluntary and community sector. I expect to launch a reformed scheme that will give effect to all nine recommendations in Q1 2024.
A review of the Wage Subsidy Scheme is underway. My officials are currently compiling the analysis from the consultation and working on completing the report, which I expect to be finalised over the coming months. In anticipation of recommendations in the review, I have made provision in Budget 2024 to decrease the minimum hours from 21 to 15 hours, which was a key issue raised by stakeholders in the consultation. I expect this change to be operationalised in the first half of this year.
I trust this clarifies the matter for the Deputy.