The Socialist

The Socialist 24 November 2009

"We wont pay for the crisis"

'We wont pay for the crisis'


How could full youth employment be achieved?

Bristol Youth Fight for Jobs challenges council leader


Lessons of struggle: If you fight, you can win!


Flood chaos in Cumbria


Afghanistan: Brown and Obama scrabbling for an exit strategy


Main parties plan cutbacks: It's time for a fightback!

Mobilising to stop Griffin

Racists - stay out of Wrexham!

Successful Manchester Tamil Solidarity meeting

Fast news


People's Charter - a step towards workers' political representation?


The battle for state education

Socialist Party candidate increases vote in NUT election

Education: 'Try your best' is not enough

Schools paying for the crisis

Attacks begin at Bangor University

Fight cuts at Manchester Met


Leeds bins victory

Superdrug workers show industrial action can win victories

Defend the four!

Postal dispute: Bosses still on the attack

London bus workers strike

Axiom railworkers' strike remains solid

Cuts crisis on the Isle of Man


Guadeloupe - End the profiteering and exploitation


The 1970s, mainly viewed from the top

 
 
Socialist Party logo Socialist Party on the climate change demo December 2007, pic Paul Mattsson Socialist Party News
Socialist Party Policy statements
Socialist Party contemporary Marxist analysis

Link to this page: http://www.socialistparty.org.uk/issue/603/8410

Seach this siteGoogle search the site

Printable versionPrintable version

email to friendemail to friend

Facebook

Twitter

Home   |   The Socialist 24 November 2009   |   Join the Socialist Party

Subscribe   |   Donate   |   Bookshop

Bristol Youth Fight for Jobs challenges council leader

On Tuesday 17 November a delegation from the Bristol Youth Fight for Jobs (YFJ) campaign met with the Liberal Democrat leader of Bristol city council, councillor Barbara Janke, to discuss the council's response to the present crisis of youth unemployment.

Andrew Taggart, Bristol YFJ

As with the rest of Britain, unemployment amongst young people has risen dramatically in Bristol over the last year, almost doubling.

Our meeting was an opportunity to probe the councillor on her response to youth unemployment in the city and to propose to her a series of measures to help tackle the crisis.

When questioned over the council's strategy to avoid the prospect of creating a 'lost generation' through chronic unemployment, councillor Janke's response was tepid. An already existing apprenticeship scheme and the startlingly inadequate Future Jobs Fund are the extent of the council's plans.

In addition to the inadequacies of these schemes, which pay low wages and offer no long term job security, they will cater only for around 300 young people, less than 10% of the 18-24 year olds in Bristol who claimed Jobseekers Allowance last month.

In distinction to the lacklustre plans of the council, Bristol YFJ proposed to her that:

  • The number of the apprentices in the council should be doubled, with agreed trade union rates of pay and a guaranteed job at the end.
  • A feasibility study should be commissioned to provide information on how much it would cost to create a job or training scheme for all under 25s who have been looking for work for more than six months.
  • The council should provide free travel by bus and train for unemployed people under the age of 25 who have been looking for work for over six months.

Responding to these proposals, councillor Janke rejected any prospect of change to the existing apprentice arrangements, using the worn excuse of 'the recession not allowing it'. On the issue of free transport, she has agreed to further discussions with us.


In this issue

'We wont pay for the crisis'


Socialist Party editorial

How could full youth employment be achieved?

Bristol Youth Fight for Jobs challenges council leader


Marxist analysis: history

Lessons of struggle: If you fight, you can win!


Environment and socialism

Flood chaos in Cumbria


War and occupation

Afghanistan: Brown and Obama scrabbling for an exit strategy


Socialist Party news and analysis

Main parties plan cutbacks: It's time for a fightback!

Mobilising to stop Griffin

Racists - stay out of Wrexham!

Successful Manchester Tamil Solidarity meeting

Fast news


People's Charter

People's Charter - a step towards workers' political representation?


Education

The battle for state education

Socialist Party candidate increases vote in NUT election

Education: 'Try your best' is not enough

Schools paying for the crisis

Attacks begin at Bangor University

Fight cuts at Manchester Met


Socialist Party workplace news

Leeds bins victory

Superdrug workers show industrial action can win victories

Defend the four!

Postal dispute: Bosses still on the attack

London bus workers strike

Axiom railworkers' strike remains solid

Cuts crisis on the Isle of Man


International socialist news

Guadeloupe - End the profiteering and exploitation


Socialist Party review

The 1970s, mainly viewed from the top


 

Home   |   The Socialist 24 November 2009   |   Join the Socialist Party

Subscribe   |   Donate   |   Bookshop

Related links:

Youth Fight for Jobs:

triangleYouth Fight for Jobs Northern Ireland launched in Belfast

triangleYouth Fight for Jobs Northern Ireland launched

triangleLiving to work, not working to live

triangleYoung people explain why they're angry

triangleRare sighting of Tories in Scotland

triangleNo to workfare - fight for a genuine alternative

Youth:

triangleUN reports rise in global youth unemployment

triangleStockland Green march for jobs

triangleBirmingham, Erdington, March for Youth Jobs

triangleYoung people stand for TUSC

Jobs:

triangleBack to work? How the system fails the unemployed

triangleCon-Dems' hypocrisy over children's care

triangleHospital jobs scandal - Action now to save the NHS!

Council:

triangleCouncil workers in Cheshire strike against attacks on pay

triangleVictory for Greenwich Unite library campaign

triangleGreenwich libraries - fighting back can win

Bristol:

triangleBristol East Socialist Party: No Pasaran! Fighting the far right

triangleBristol East Socialist Party: There is an Alternative

triangleBristol Central Socialist Party: Art and Politics

Unemployment:

triangleWork programme not reducing long-term unemployment

triangleDWP tells young people to bail out big business

triangleInterview with a jobcentre worker