Maman Poulet | Clucking away crookedly through media, politics and life

Work Placements and Internships – who should ‘hire’?

May 14th, 2011 · Irish Politics, Recession

Following up on the Tús post I’ve been having a look at the companies who use the Work Placement Programme and the posts being suggested.

My attention had been drawn to a post created by TESCO for a town planner (h/t Allan Cavanagh) and approved by FAS for a graduate work placement. The money for this post is a social welfare payment, paid for by the Department of Social Protection. I know that jobs in planning are scarce but if TESCO need somebody to work in the area we all know they can afford to hire someone. Ireland is not known as Treasure Island in Tesco HQ for nothing, though the company do not reveal the extent of their Irish profits.

This is not a student work experience placement – this post is for a graduate where the advert states that skills are required and prior work experience to a so called work experience post being desirable!

Town Planning Assistant (WPP1) – Fas Work Programme
Employer: Tesco Ireland
Closing Date: 28th February 2011
Location: Dublin
Salary Range: €n/a
Employer’s Website:
Employer’s Email: www.tesco.ie

Job Description

Tesco Ireland – Head Office (Property Acquisition Department) seek suitable candidates for the position of Town Planning Assistant. At the end of the 9 month placement, the participant will have gained broad practical experience in some or all of the following areas: Monitoring and review of development plans and changes to planning law / policy; Liaising with other internal departments and external consultants; Database management; Tracking planning applications; Planning enforcement; Planning issues affecting retailers; General administrative experience.

Person specification: Graduate with a degree/masters in town planning. Work experience is desirable but not essential. Candidate should have good IT, administrative and communication skills, and be self motivated.

Please Note:

You must be registered with FAS and have checked your eligibility before you apply for this placement.

Your CV should be emailed to david.nevin@ie.tesco.com or posted to David Nevin, Tesco Ireland – Head Office, Gresham House, Marine Road, Dun Laoghaire, Co. Dublin.

Closing date for Cv’s is 28 February 2011.

If you look at the work placements offered through Fás at the moment you can see all sorts of job titles around the country in both public and private sectors.  No salaries are attached to these job titles but they all sound very grand for graduate posts with no pay :  Marketing MANAGER, Health and Safety Officer, Teachers, Project Officers in Third Level Colleges and as I feared – Social Care workers for people with Disabilities.

Surely companies who offer these placements should be investigated to see if they are able to pay salaries and not rely on free labour of graduates who are being supported on social welfare by the state?

From comments left on the blog and conversations on twitter I’ve heard that the Work placement programme is being  abused by companies who have let people go and take on the ‘freebies’ instead. The government know where staff are let go by companies through redundancy fund applications and indeed individual social welfare applications. Shouldn’t they check and only permit work placement posts to startups and not to companies who have recently let staff go or can well afford to pay staff in junior/graduate positions.  Maybe a job for the National Employment Rights Authority?

Yet it’s clear that people are so desperate for experience and a ‘foot up the ladder’ that they will apply for these posts while their peers have been let go and their new ’employers’ profit margins remain undisclosed and uninvestigated.

The same concerns are held on the new internship programme which seems to be a similar scheme with an added €50 for expenses.  These are not jobs, it’s work experience and should be described as such and management and other high falluting terms banned from being used.  Companies who can afford to pay staff should be told to pay salaries.  The Department of Social Protection should check the satisfaction and career progression of those on work placements and internships and prohibit companies taking part who abuse the schemes and those participating on them.

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Tús, CE, forced labour disguised as training and the ‘vulnerable’

May 10th, 2011 · Disability, Equality, Irish Politics

Enforced participation in a work placement scheme is seen a legitimate provision of personal care services to all age groups and people with disabilities.  The Tús scheme which was launched by the previous government in late 2010 never actually started as Joan Burton found out when she took over her brief in the Department of Social Protection.

However in the Jobs Initiative launched yesterday the scheme has remained in place and ‘activation’ will commence – this means that people will be invited for interview and organisations in the community and voluntary sector will be asked to host participants.

Children, older people and people with disabilities deserve much much better.  Home care and personal services are unregulated as it is.  The race to the bottom is well underway with private sector organisations being invited to apply for contracts to provide these services.  Hours of support by home helps and personal assistants are being cut and the bare essentials only being covered. Peoples own homes are the new institutions.  And now the government expects that those who are long term unemployed and forced into a placement being desirable providers of care to such groups.

It takes up to six months to get Garda clearance for such roles and training should be comprehensive and the ‘workers’ supervised.  Tús is for the reluctant, it is not a voluntary programme, the Department of Social Protection will invite people to participate and if they don’t their welfare payments will be cut.

Many people have had worries over the years about the use of Community Employment to provide services in peoples homes and to provide personal care and support.  The use of such programmes is exploitative of both the participants and those receiving the services.  If we value life we need to provide staffing that is focused and qualified and has a direct career path and for training purposes uses supervised students who are in training for such roles. Older people and people with disabilties should control and/or direct the budget that is used to provide for their support and approve of those who are working for them.

Community Employment can be extremely beneficial to participants and also communities in the services that are provided but it is a training programme first and foremost and it and Tús cannot and must not be used as a mode of delivery of vital services of a personal or intimate nature to those at risk.  The numbers of those involved in delivering services may be small but the message that is sent is huge if the Government continue to see those at risk as the recipients of forced labour.

I’ll come back to the Internships and Work Placement Programme later – I’ve had some interesting correspondence this week on the experiences of some in seeking and taking up places. Email me at tips (@) mamanpoulet.com or leave comments below if you want to let me know your views.

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Bertie goes to China…again

May 10th, 2011 · Irish Politics

What does a former Taoiseach do in his spare time?  Head east.

At the invitation of the Chinese People’s Institute of Foreign Affairs(CPIFA),Mr. Bertie Ahern, former Prime Minister of Ireland, visited China from 26 to 30 April. Ambassador Cheng Tao, Vice President of CPIFA, Mr. Loujiwei, Board Chairman of China Investment Corp.,met with Mr. Ahern. The two sides exchanged views on international hot issues, economic and investment cooperation between China and Ireland. Mr. Ahern also visited Anhui Where he met with Mr. Zhang Baoshun, Secretary of CPC Anhui Provincial Committee and Mr. Sun Jinlong, Secretary of CPC Hefei Municipal Committee.

How much did that cost?  Well now he’s no longer a member of the Oireachtas we won’t know and we won’t know how much he was paid.  We know that he’s not seeking a presidential nomination, well Micheál Martin won’t be giving him one anytime soon!

International hot issues?  Such as?  How not to run an economy into the ground or overheat it? ‘Do you know where I’d get a pint of Bass around here?’

 

Bertie’s previous trip to China involved hawking our forests or exploring the possibility on an all expenses paid trip.

Bertie Earner

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Explaining and broadcasting the Oireachtas

May 9th, 2011 · Irish Politics, Social Media

I was invited by the Oireachtas Communications Unit to the Dáil to watch and tweet some of the proceedings of today’s debate to mark Europe Day.  Myself, Ken Curtin, David Cochrane from Politics.ie and Billie Sparks from the European Movement were in attendance. There was little to report on the debate itself or that which I observed, a strange day and a strange time to be analysing Ireland’s relationship with Europe. However I came away thinking that more interaction between MEP’s, Commission Officials and Oireachtas members would be helpful in the analysis of legislation and EU directives.

I know from liveblogging other debates that there have been tweets sent  surreptitiously from the gallery before but today was different.  An usher was about to tell  me to put my phone away when it was explained to him that today it was allowed.  In the gallery there were a number of dignitaries from embassies and former MEP’s and classes of school children.   The embassy staff were writing things down presumably to report back to their governments.  That is a normal rule violation in the gallery.

In fact there is no applause, no talking, no reading, no writing and above all no phones or data devices in the public gallery of the Dáil or Seanad or from the committee rooms.   I have watched a lot of Dáil and Seanad debates from the comfort of my sofa and rarely visit due to work restrictions but also due to the fact that I cannot communicate what I see or think or when I want to fact check due to these rules.

I can understand no noise, no photos, no phone ring tones, no applause or disruption but surely now is the right time to allow people to communicate what they think or see when they are in to observe?  Also it’s time to explain why the Oireachtas does the things it does and as procedures change in terms of the committee structures and their powers of investigation people from various groups and sectoral interests  should be invited in to watch and tweet/blog  about how things operate and the issues that are discussed.

The experience of live blogging all the stages of the Civil Partnership and Certain Rights of Cohabitants Bill last year gave me a lot of food for thought on the lifelong civics education of the population.  How a bill is written and what happens at its various stages is something that few understand.  The set pieces that make the news do little for the reputation of the parliament but the debates and questions put on issues and legislation and discussions that happen in committee would make for much better fodder for understanding of the Oireachtas and what it actually does and can do.

The online broadcast of Oireachtas proceedings has improved hugely in recent months, I hope with digital TV on the horizon we can have an Oireachtas channel complete with broadcast of local authority meetings.  Enough of the ‘playing to the camera’ worries it’s time for transparency and that includes increasing the volume of the online message and the ability of voters and visitors to communicate what they see.

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Martin won’t block FF councillor support of ‘independent’ candidates

May 8th, 2011 · Elections, Irish Politics

Now that it has all settled down after the general and Seanad elections, some thoughts turn to Aras an Uachtarain.

David Norris is traversing the country looking for a nomination and is beginning to address council meetings and seek support. Today he’ll be looking for Wexford County Council’s support. Dragon Sean Gallagher announced his intention to contest the election on Friday night on the Late Late show (he wants to turn the Aras into a theme park or something) and he has said he will be seeking the nomination of councils so that he can contest the election. Four council nominations are needed.

With Gallagher’s Fianna Fáil tinged hat now in the ring (large ring, many players) news from Micheál Martin today that the party will not be telling FF councillors who to vote for or not vote for as councils are approached for their support.

Given that there is no incumbent standing and the experience of previous elections where a contest increased the standing of the office, we believe that there should be a contest between a range of candidates who are potentially credible holder of the office of President.

“It is the Fianna Fáil view that the people of this country are entitled to have as wide a choice for the office of President as possible and that this choice should not be limited to the official nominations of the political parties. For this reason, I will not be taking the same approach as other parties as they seek to block the nomination of independent candidates and will permit party representatives to facilitate the candidacy of individuals who they believe should have the right to stand before the
electorate.”

The statement has a shot at Fine Gael’s recent edict to councillors not to support David Norris’s candidacy via the council nomination process. But is it more about supporting Sean Gallagher than it is about support for a candidate like Norris? Martin has confirmed that Fianna Fáil will take the next month to decide on their candidate and he confirmed that there will be a contest.

Paddy Power’s latest odds on the race or who they believe to be in the race include Gallagher at 20/1

David Norris 13/8
Michael D Higgins 11/4
Pat Cox 6/1
Mairead McGuinness 6/1
Brian Crowley 9/1
Sean Kelly 11/1
Fergus Finlay 12/1
John Bruton 14/1
Sean Gallagher 20/1
Emily O’Reilly 25/1

Mary Davis, Mary White, Brian Crowley are all names floating about seeking the FF nomination with Mary Davis (50/1)  anxious to appear independent in doing so.

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