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29 March 2010 – Building Bridges to Work – helping the long term unemployed back to work

Long-term Jobseekers Allowance claimants will be given the guarantee of a job or work placement as part of the Government’s radical next stage of welfare reform.

Publishing a Command Paper – Building Bridges to Work, the Government will offer all JSA claimants who have been out of work for two years a guaranteed job or work placement to prevent long term unemployment as the economy recovers. Claimants will be required to take up the offer if they cannot find other work to make sure people who lost their jobs during recession aren’t left to a life on benefits.

Alongside this, the Government is today laying regulations to abolish old style Incapacity Benefit and announcing new measures for those on sickness benefits. From October all Incapacity Benefits claimants will be reassessed with a new Work Capability Assessment which looks at what they can do and what help they need, rather than on whether they could do their previous job.

More people are expected to be found fit for work and they will be given extra intensive support from Day one to help them into work. People moving onto the new style Employment and Support Allowance will also be given more personalised help with stronger conditions attached so they can prepare to return to work in future.

Today’s measures will help deliver over £1.5bn pounds in savings from welfare reform over the next four years that are now built into the Treasury budget plans.

Government action has already kept unemployment much lower than expected, and the number of people on sickness benefits has fallen slightly during the recession compared to big increases in the 80s and 90s.

Work and Pensions Secretary of State, Yvette Cooper said:

"As the economy recovers, we have to make sure no one is left behind. In the 80s and 90s too many people were abandoned to long term unemployment or sickness benefits, pushing families into poverty, devastating communities and hurting the economy and the taxpayer too. That's why it is more important than ever to press ahead with extra help and welfare reform.

"This is a "something for something" approach which gives people more help alongside a responsibility to take it up so that no one who is fit for work is left to a life on benefits.

"Getting people back to work is good for families, boosts local economies and helps the public finances too"

Additional help to disabled people will be made available with the creation of a new Work Choice programme from October as well as expanding the Access to Work programme.

The new employment support including the Jobseekers Guarantee will be funded within DWP existing budgets by reshaping the help for long term unemployed through Job Centre Plus and changing the £300m Pathways programme which is not flexible or cost effective enough.

The Command Paper outlines:

The Government expects that the reforms to Incapacity Benefit and Employment Support Allowance will deliver over £1.5bn of savings over the next five years and these are built into the Treasury plans. This is on top of £14bn savings from lower than expected unemployment and a further £1.5bn savings from getting more lone parents into work.

Notes to Editors:

1) The Building Bridges to Work Command paper can be found at: www.dwp.gov.uk/building-bridges-to-work

2) For more information about the Governments welfare reforms please visit www.dwp.gov.uk/policy/welfare-reform/legislation-and-key-documents/building-bridges-to-work/

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