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Youth Guarantee

Dáil Éireann Debate, Thursday - 5 February 2015

Thursday, 5 February 2015

Questions (50)

Terence Flanagan

Question:

50. Deputy Terence Flanagan asked the Tánaiste and Minister for Social Protection if she will provide an update on the roll-out of the Youth Guarantee scheme; and if she will make a statement on the matter. [4917/15]

View answer

Written answers

The Government’s primary strategy to tackle youth unemployment is to create the environment for a strong economic recovery by promoting competitiveness and productivity. Economic recovery will underpin jobs growth and the availability of productive employment for young people. This strategy has been succeeding, with an increase of over 80,000 in employment over the last 2 years.

Within this framework, the Youth Guarantee sets a medium-term objective of ensuring that young people receive an offer of employment within four months of becoming unemployed. The main plank of the guarantee is assistance to young people in finding and securing sustainable jobs. For those who do not find employment, additional offers are provided for. Most such offers (over 70%) are in further education or training. Others are in community-based employment programmes such as CE, Gateway and Tús, or through the JobsPlus employment subsidy for private employment.

Overall, the Youth Guarantee provides for over 28,000 programme opportunities for unemployed young people in 2014, as set out in the following table. This figure excludes some 24,000 places provided for young people through PLC courses and apprenticeships. These PLC and apprenticeship places, together with the wide range of vocational third-level courses provided for the young, although not reserved for unemployed jobseekers, nevertheless contribute to the spirit of the guarantee.

It is important to note that some of the initiatives planned under the guarantee required primary legislation to allow positive discrimination on age grounds in the provision of employment services and supports. Two employment schemes in particular, the Youth Guarantee developmental internship programme and the JobsPlus variant for young people, were launched in November 2014 after the required legislation was passed in June 2014. The legislation also permits the introduction of earlier and more intensive engagement by INTREO with the young unemployed.

Models for the engagement of young people through Intreo have been agreed and will form the basis of the national roll-out of the Youth Guarantee in 2015. Potential refinement of these models may be considered on the basis of outcomes and learning from the Ballymun Youth Guarantee Pilot Project.

Youth Guarantee Progress YTD: End December 2014

Programme

Expected full-year intake

2014 YTD

Note

Youthreach/CTC

3,300

3553

CTC starters end Dec -- including Youthreach 1800 persons

JobBridge (including developmental internship)

5,000

3,138

As of end December 2014

Tús

1,000

1,410

As of 30th November 3014

JobsPlus

1,500

410

As of end Dec 14- U25 estimated as 14.6% of total starters in 2014 (2806)

Momentum

2,000

631

As of December 12th 2014

BTEA (excl Momentum)

3,300

2319

As of 14th October

BTWEA

200

139

Including 5 persons on STEA

VTOS

500

672

Estimated unemployed entrants

FAS/Solas

9500

8,027

Based on SST, Traineeship, Bridging & LTI starters YTD (end December)

CEB youth Entrepreneurship

Training and Mentoring supports

700

0

Not yet commenced

CEB/MFI micro-loans for young people

150

10

23rd December 2014

International Work Experience and Training

250

0

Not yet commenced

Gateway

450

192

30th November 2014

Community Employment

500

600

End December 2014

Total

28,350

21,101

Excluding where figures are not available

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