BHT’s Intern Programme is responding to the needs of BHT clients

Over the last few days, following an article in the Brighton Argus, there have been some comments made about BHT’s decision to launch its Intern Programme.  Of course with the scandalous revelations this weekend regarding unpaid labour and the stewarding of Jubilee events, the focus undoubtedly would return to the merits and, more to the point, negative sides of internships.

One critic on Twitter has written “so shocked Brighton Housing Trust, which has an honourable history promoting social justice, is joining workfare – why? Unpaid internship undermines labour markets – flooding job market with unpaid work is no solution to unemployment!”

BHT is offering 40 unpaid internships to its current and former clients. We wish they could be paid positions but the current economic climate does not allow this. It is our ambition to pay not just the National Minimum Wage, but to pay the Brighton Living Wage which is higher.

This is not “workfare”. Under workfare, recipients have to meet certain participation requirements to continue to receive their welfare benefits.  An important criterion for our programme is that participants engage voluntarily in the programme.  We are not engaged with any of the government backed schemes.

Those who are taking up the opportunities we are offering are current and former clients of BHT. Many of them will have had years of unemployment.  They will have addressed the causes that led them, for example, to homelessness, addiction, and mental ill health.  While they are able and talented, they lack experience of the workplace. Gaining such experience makes a difference between long-term unemployment and securing jobs.

We didn’t launch the BHT Intern Programme without first consulting clients and making sure that they were happy with what we were proposing. Without the support of potential beneficiaries we would not have made to the investment to ensure that this is a good programme.

Many employers, including BHT, are spoilt for choice when it comes to filling vacancies in the current market.  BHT has a commitment that 15% of our staff will be former clients by the end of 2013.  Currently 30 (12%) of our staff are former clients.  With the Intern Programme I anticipate that we will easily exceed that 15% target.

The BHT Intern Programme is up and running, and doing great things

BHT has, after many months planning, launched our Intern Programme.  It is funded by the Esmee Fairburn Foundation and BHT itself, and provides opportunities for up to 40 people per year to take up an internship in BHT.  The programme has been designed to enable participants to gain the skills and experience needed to increase their employability.

Internship opportunities are on offer in BHT projects in Brighton & Hove, Eastbourne and Hastings. Interns will complete a six month work placement and are supported by a trained mentor.  Each participant has a tailored training programme that focuses on the skills employers look for.

The programme is open to BHT clients and those who have experienced long term unemployment or those who lack the skills and experience to break into the job market.

We are lucky to have appointed an experienced manager from within BHT, Rob Robinson, as the Intern Programme Co-ordinator.  He has said: “The programme will give participants the edge when entering what is an incredibly competitive job market. Our interns will graduate with CV boosting skills and experience and will have evidenced their commitment. The structured training programme incorporates key employment skills such as team working, communication and problem solving”.

The idea was mine, and I originally proposed the initiative following successful internships undertaken by my own daughter, locally and in London, in her year out before going to university.  Having seen the benefits and confidence that Clare gained from her experience as an intern, I questioned who was creating such opportunities for BHT clients. I concluded that unless we did something, our clients would continue to be excluded and marginalised.

We are immensely grateful to the Esmee Fairbairn Foundation for their confidence and generosity in part funding this programme.  The challenge for BHT now is to ensure that, having gained experience as interns, our clients can progress to paid employment.

For more information please contact Rob Robinson on 07827 803102.

BHT Intern Programme

Last year BHT secured funding from the Esmee Fairbairn Foundation to launch its Intern Programme. The Intern Programme will boost the chances of those people embarking on a work career after, in many cases, years on the margins of society.

It is our aim that at any one time 40 Interns will be working across the organisation (on six-month placements for a minimum of two days a week) gaining valuable workplace experience and undertaking a tailored training programme.

Our vision is for the BHT Intern Programme to be recognised as an ‘Academy of Excellence’, where a reference from the Programme is regarded as a significant endorsement by future employers in the locality. We want to overcome prejudice of potential employers, so that the training and expertise gained through the Programme combined with the life-experience of our Interns will provide a blend of experience and expertise that cannot be bought.

BHT as an organisation will benefit from furthering our Mission to “create opportunities and promote change”. We will gain from the experience of clients, embedding their experience within staff teams. BHT, and other local employers, will also benefit from workforce planning, where we are training up the next generation of staff including in the care and support sector.

Our existing staff will benefit from engaging with former clients as peers, challenging prejudice and testing individual commitments that change is possible. Staff will also benefit from the opportunities for career development. They will receive training and practical experience in the mentoring and supervision of Interns, together with a small salary enhancement for the added responsibility of supervising an Intern.

The target group for the Programme will predominately be men and women who have been clients of BHT’s projects (or other local projects working with our client groups), who face multiple barriers to employment, including poor educational attainment, lack of confidence, self esteem, lack of workplace experience and workplace discipline and facing strong competition from people recently unemployed.

We will expect those applying to become Interns to have addressed any issues that might have led to homelessness or unemployment. For example, if someone has had an addiction, a prerequisite of joining the programme might be that interns must have followed a recognised abstinence-based treatment programme and/or have been clean for a period of at least two years.

There will be a range of placements available, initially within BHT projects (possibly with other local agencies once established) and each placement will be advertised with a full description of the role and its requirements. Each placement will have a dedicated, specially trained mentor to work with the Intern from within the existing staff team they will be working with.

Interns can either be referred into the programme by staff or refer themselves. They will need to complete an application form for the placement they would like to undertake and have an interview. If successful the placement will be organised with the Intern, HR, the Projects’ Manager, the staff mentor and the training department.

The Interns will gain on the job work experience (for at least two days a week) focussing on building confidence and self esteem, introducing and explaining workplace processes, PC and internet training and skills specific to the placement.

Whilst in the placement they will be required to produce a personal development plan which will be regularly reviewed and updated with their mentor.

All interns will be expected to attend a tailored training and induction programme to introduce BHT’s processes and inform around health and safety, professional boundaries and other areas relevant to their role.

Interns will also be supported to undertake further training within BHT or with other external learning providers such as City College, Brighton and Hove. The type of further training could include NVQ and City & Guilds courses, where funding will allow.

Successful completion will result in a placement certificate, a reference, a portfolio of BHT training courses undertaken and a possible job-related qualification.

I am really excited about this programme and I am sure it will help change the lives of those on it.

We should all rally together to save the Whitehawk Inn

I recently visited the Whitehawk Inn and spent a couple of hours with its inspirational director, Frances Duncan. To say I was impressed by its range of facilities and achievements would be an understatement. I think it was the best example of what I have seen either locally, nationally or internationally.  I came back to the office saying that the Whitehawk Inn had set the bar impressively high, and that BHT had much to do to catch up!

So it was with huge concern that I read in today’s Argus that its future is in doubt.  Frances says that this “training centre is at serious risk unless we can persuade individuals and businesses across Sussex to support a campaign that could fund many more years of helping people to find confidence and success through learning and work, and make a significant contribution to lowering the county’s unemployment figures.”

The appeal has already had the backing of Des Pritchard (chief fire officer of East Sussex Fire and Rescue) and Chief Inspector Graham Bartlett (Sussex Police’s commander for Brighton and Hove).

Yesterday I was at the City Forum, organised by DemSoc Brighton, where charitable giving to local charities was discussed and some great ideas were put forward.  However, it sounds as though we need to act fast in the case of the Whitehawk Inn.

I fear that the situation facing the Whitehawk Inn is not unique, but I feel very strongly that this resource is particularly important, not least for women in Whitehawk, whose life choices are greatly enhanced by this amazing facility.

For more information please look at http://www.whinn.org.uk/.

The hopes and fears for the Comprehensive Spending Review

This week sees the announcement of the Comprehensive Spending Review, and I must admit that I await the detail with some trepidation.  BHT has long been aware that we, as a country, would be facing difficult times.  Indeed, at BHT we began preparing for this moment two years ago.  We examined our cost base, and made some very painful decisions regarding the salaries we pay.  We have made strenuous efforts to increase our income, and have made some bold steps in the direction of creating profitable social enterprises.

During this time, and in the months and years ahead, it is the ongoing support we receive from individuals, church and community groups that make the difference for many of our services.  As a result of your generosity and support, we are possibly better placed than many other charities to cope with even quite dramatic cuts.  We are determined to do what we can to safeguard the services we provide to vulnerable men and women. 

I take comfort from the pledge made by the Prime Minister in Downing Street shortly after the Coalition Government was formed.  David Cameron said: “I want to make sure that my government always looks after the elderly, the frail, the poorest in our country. We must take everyone through with us on some of the difficult decisions we have ahead.  Above all it will be a government that is built on some clear values. Values of freedom, values of fairness, and values of responsibility.”

BHT doesn’t provide any specific services to the elderly, but we do a lot with and for the frail and the poorest.  And the values of fairness and of responsibility run through our veins.

So, what do I hope and fear about Wednesday’s announcements?  I have three key issues I will be listening out for.

The first is housing benefit.  The changes in entitlement to housing benefit already announced remains a major cause for concern, but I hope that high rent areas like Brighton and Hove will receive some extra support to prevent the otherwise inevitable rise in homelessness.

Secondly, I hope that the value of fairness will ensure legal aid will still be there to prevent homelessness, tackle debt, and sort out welfare benefit problems.  This is specialist work and the social return on investment is enormous.  If these specialist services provided by the CAB, BHT and others are cut, we will see the consequences for many years to come.

Finally, I hope to see that the elderly, the frail and the poorest in our country will still be able to receive support through the very excellent services funded through the Supporting People programme.  This budget has already been significantly reduced in recent years.  There is little, if any more, to give.  I feel so strongly that the most vulnerable men and women in our society must continue to be supported to remain in their homes, to move to greater independence, and are supported into training, education and employment.

By Wednesday evening we will no longer have to speculate.

Social Enterprises are an essential component for the survival of charities

If charities must are to survive this period of austerity, they must control their costs and find ways of generating new income.

At BHT we have controlled our costs by, controversially, reducing salaries and changing terms and conditions of employment. We have also increased turnover by acquiring new services (such as work and learning schemes) and the organic growth of existing activities.  But most excitingly, we have developed a number of social enterprises which are designed to generate new income that is not dependent on local and national government or charitable giving.

Developing profitable social enterprises is not ‘an optional extra’ for charities but an essential part of surviving cuts in public spending and the reduction in charitable giving, while at the same time they benefit clients, the community and charities alike.

Clients benefit from learning and training opportunities.  Social enterprises provide meaningful routes from training, through work experience, and into employment or further training.

The community benefits because of increased employment, reduced homelessness and rough sleeping because those in training and employment have increasing access to accommodation.  There is a reduction in social exclusion, dependency on benefits, substance misuse, anti-social behaviour and crime.

And organisations, particularly charities, are able to generate additional income, compete for completely new contacts and business, and it raises profile.

By delivering social enterprises we send out a strong message that we are taking a positive stand regarding our future funding, it shows we are prepared to innovate, and it reaffirms that we are an interesting organisation and one worth doing business with.

Brighton Housing Trust has established a trading subsidiary, BHT Enterprises Ltd.  Together BHT and BHTE Ltd operate a number of social enterprises, including:

  • BHT IT Solutions which provides a comprehensive IT infrastructure to other charities through the creative and cost effective use of Cloud and thin-client technology;
  • BHT Training provides 40 different training courses to people and organisations throughout Sussex working in the social care and related sector;
  • Blue Rocket PR delivers a diverse range of national PR and helps our clients develop and grow. Specialist areas of PR include charity, social enterprise, health, property, finance and environmental campaigns. Third sector experience includes RNIB, Help the Aged, Social Firms UK, SignHealth, Social Enterprise London, and Enterprise UK.
  • Dine! A catering company that caters for public and private events including weddings, banquets, meetings and conferences;
  • Flavour: A jam and marmalade production company selling its produce at farmers markets and other specialist outlets.

Our social enterprises are good news for Brighton’s economy.  Every pound that is spent in our social enterprises is a pound that remains in the local economy, creating local jobs which, in turn, pay salaries that are in turn spent in the local economy. On every level, and from every view point, social enterprise makes sense.

(This article was first published in the Brighton Argus Business Section’s ‘The Bottom Line’ on 5th October 2010)

Reflections on 25 Years at BHT

I started working for BHT 25 years ago today. I hope you will forgive me for posting something more lengthy than usual: my reflections on BHT, what we are here to do, and the need to increase the pace and scale of change for the benefit of our clients.

BHT’s Mission (“combating homelessness, creating opportunities, promoting change”) doesn’t go back quite 25 years, but it continues to provide a neat summary of what we are about. Or does it? We have recently reviewed the Mission and what we mean by it, and fresh challenges have emerged, not least because of the economic and social policy changes we are facing.

In his speech in Downing Street, immediately after being asked to form a government, David Cameron said he aimed to “help build a more responsible society here in Britain… those who can should and those who can’t, we will always help. I want to make sure that my government always looks after the elderly, the frail, the poorest in our country”.

Since that speech, government ministers have emphasised the message that individuals ‘who can’ are expected to take responsibility for addressing their situation and for moving from dependency on benefits and into work. Measures are being put in place to put pressure on claimants to seek work. The change to housing benefit eligibility is an obvious and high profile measure that the government seems determined to implement in spite of wide-spread opposition.

There are some proposals which I, personally, welcome and endorse. The government is determination to tackle drug problems. Those with drug problems will have to engage in treatment or they will lose their benefit entitlement. I have some serious concerns about this, but not so the treatment model that Ministers are promoting. They have instructed the National Treatment Agency to “champion abstinence”, a 180 degree change from that of the previous government where stabilisation and harm minimisation was the objective. This is a policy change that I, personally, have advocated for more than a decade and one which I warmly welcome.

I believe that if we are to see lasting change for those with addictions, achieving abstinence is not the end goal, it is merely the starting point for a transition to normal living.

The services provided by BHT remain as relevant as ever, and the need is likely to increase. What each service seeks to achieve will need to be reviewed, partly in light of the changing social policy and financial environment, but mainly because regular reviews are the right thing to do.

BHT must retain and enhance its reputation of ‘doing difficult’, working with homeless men and women, including those with complex needs, and we must retain our ability to work with people where they are at. But we must also ensure that by emphasising the vulnerabilities and problems experienced by some of our clients, we do not ‘ghettoise’ all clients. Many of our clients are in housing need simply because of the lack of affordable housing. As my colleague John Holmström continually reminds me, we must put housing back into homelessness!

Combating Homelessness

BHT recognises that there is a genuine shortage of affordable and social housing and that alternate provision is required to meet housing needs of our clients through the private rented sector. Securing social housing for our core client group is becoming a less achievable outcome and will remain so, at least during the lifetime of this parliament. Councils are using new legal freedoms to give people with a job an advantage over unemployed people when it comes to gaining social housing. Already Manchester, Rochdale, Newcastle, Barnet, Uttlesford and Westminster (who between them manage almost 86,000 homes) are amongst those who plan to give people in work or training priority in the allocation of social housing.

BHT’s current policy is to campaign for greater provision of social housing. While we will continue to argue the case for public investment into bricks and mortar, in the current environment our clients are likely to be best served by increasing access to the private rented sector. In doing so we will need to be upfront and honest with our clients that social housing is not likely to provide a solution to their housing need. We need to ensure that they are focused on preparing themselves for housing in the private rented sector and all that that entails. If our clients are able to secure social housing, that will be a bonus.

Creating Opportunities

BHT creates opportunities and circumstances that will increase the potential for clients to be housed, undertake training and education, and secure employment since poverty is a major reason for homelessness and ill health. In the current environment, our clients will not thrive if they opt out of engaging in rehabilitation, training and employment opportunities. Our staff must ensure they motivate clients to actively engage with this approach, and they should spell out the consequences of ‘opting out’ in terms of housing opportunities and future welfare benefit entitlement.

We must ask if we trap people with their labels, get people identified by their problem. Do we inadvertently create ‘ghettos’ by reinforcing the problem by providing services that might suggest that mainstream services are for others? Do we have the right attitudes, culture and expertise to ensure that clients have ambitions, and that those ambitions are meaningful and achievable? And do we nurture hope and aspirations within our clients?

On the whole I think we are doing ok and in some areas very well, but there are some areas and individuals who may argue that clients have a right, for example, not to address their alcohol or drug problem, who will excuse a failure of a resident to pay rent, or who will focus on a ‘counselling approach’ at the expense of housing, training and employment solutions. I believe that should such attitudes or work practices exist, they need to change.

Promoting Change

‘Combating homelessness’ and ‘creating opportunities’ are fairly straightforward concepts. Not necessarily so with ‘promoting change’. Most, if not all, staff would support the concept of ‘change’, and BHT does some inspirational work in facilitating change for our clients, but we now need to go to the next level by being clear exactly what “promoting change” means. There may be a few who would qualify a commitment to change with “only if that is what the client wants” or “but clients have the right not to change”. What the client wants or does not want should not be the defining factor for us. We have a moral duty to work in the best interest of the client and clients as a whole. True advocacy requires the advocate to spell out what is best; it is not merely giving a voice to a client’s wishes regardless of how unachievable or non-sustainable such wishes are.

I believe that the pace and scale of change can and must be increased, firstly, because it is right for our clients and, secondly, because of the prevailing economic and social policy imperatives that have emerged following the 2010 general election. There should be an expectation that staff ‘drive’ change. The concept ‘promoting change’ is not passive. In doing so we must equip clients to manage their problems and to sustain progress made.

Whatever our views are of the approach of the Coalition Government, those “who can” who remain dependent on welfare benefits and state support will find fewer opportunities (accommodation, benefits, etc.) and a more ‘coercive’ approach from government. We must prepare our clients for this reality. There needs to be a sense of urgency about this agenda.

During the remainder of 2010/11, we need to review our approach to ‘change’, its scale and pace, and put in place new policies and approaches should they be required.

 There are a number of issues that will need to be explored further. For example: 

  • How can we understand the difference between ‘can’t change’ and ‘won’t change’, and how we should continue to work with clients in each group? We don’t want to create new classes of excluded men and women.
  • How should we position ourselves regarding choices and consequences? For example, with rents, should we only support move on if someone has no arrears, or no arrears for 3 or 6 months, etc.? This is a real client-centred approach where we treat them in the real world, not in some cotton-wool world.
  • What can we expect, even demand, from clients when considering what is “for the greater good”?

How we do this must be left with individual services, but I am giving out a clear message that we need to increase the pace and scale of change. It is a message that should be welcomed by most, not least because the greater the change, and the sooner it happens, can only be good for our clients. BHT, its staff and supporters have a lot to be proud of, and we can be excited about the difference we will be making to the lives of our clients for the next 25 years.

How are we getting on about employing former clients of BHT services

We have recently undertaken a survey about the personal experience of homelessness amongst BHT’s staff.  We have a target that, by the end of 2012/13, 15% of our staff should be former users of our services.

So how have we done?  9% of our staff have used BHT services in the past, and 33% have received a homelessness service (although not necessarily from BHT).  We are not there yet, but it is a start.

Being a former client doesn’t necessarily make one a good worker, or a better one than those who are not.  We don’t employ someone because they were once a client.  No, we employ people because they are the best person for the job.  We employ them because they are professionals, that they understand the ethical framework within which we work – competence, confidentiality, non-judgemental attitudes, and integrity.

One reason we have this target is to ensure that we continue to facilitate learning and work experience opportunities for current and former clients.  We recognise that there can be prejudice against men and women who have a history of homelessness, unemployment, mental ill health, substance misuse problems, and so on.  Part of the role of BHT is to challenge prejudices.

Another reason for the target is to demonstrate that our Mission (tackling homelessness, creating opportunities, promoting change) is more than six words.  It shows that change is possible.

There is no tokenism at work here.  I want the best possible workers within BHT, and I want all our projects to be of the highest quality.  Who knows, the person who knocks on our door today needing help and support may one day be the person answering the door when you and I are in need.

A new BHT Blog joins the fold

I am really pleased that the BHT HR Department has embraced the brave new world of blogging through a new blog called Jobs at BHT which will provide details of all job vacancies within BHT.

BHT employs just short of 250 members of staff and feedback received at the recent Jobs Fair in Brighton, where there was a queue of people at the BHT stand, was that people had heard about BHT and wanted to work for us.

This doesn’t come as a surprise to me as we have more and more people passing the 10 year mark with the organisation, others approaching 15 years, and a few who are touching 20 years.  In my own case, September will see me clock up 25 years.  When I started there were less than ten employed staff plus a similar number of people of Community Programme placements.  My deputy, John Holmstrom, and I are the only two who date back to 1985.

If the new Jobs at BHT site attracts more applications for job vacancies it can only benefit the organisation and, ultimately, the men and women who use our services.

It is poverty of ambition if we forget to ask “What next?” for service users

Today at BHT’s office in London Road, Brighton, we are holding a Work and Learning Fair for service users. BHT does a lot of work in combating homelessness and helping to facilitate change, but creating opportunities is an equally important part of our Mission.

At BHT we work with people who have enormous strengths and capabilities, as well as aspirations to move forward in their lives. Very often, in addition to housing and support, employment is a cornerstone for a successful living.

Some of the people we work with have a very inconsistent employment histories, and employers are, understandably, reluctant to take a chance with them. It is one reason why at BHT we offer volunteering and work placements for former service users, to give them work experience and to create a track record of being reliable in the work place.

We are often approached by people wishing to volunteer. It is unfortunate that we usually have to decline such offers given that we tend to prioritise former service users for volunteering opportunities. If we don’t take them on, few other organisations will. One exception to this is locally based charity Crime Reduction Initiatives who have an excellent peer mentoring and training programme that many former residents of our Addiction Services benefit from.

If we are to make a real difference in the communities within which we work, we must always ask “What next?” for our service users. Getting someone in doors and off the street is fantastic, but what next? Stabilising a chaotic life style is good, but what next? Becoming alcohol and drug free is a huge achievement, but what next? Training, education and work experience is a major milestone in a person’s life, but what next? Employment and housing, and what next?  A failure to ask “what next” may reflect a poverty of aspiration by workers on behalf of our service users.

Today’s Work and Learning Fair might provide that spring board for someone to realise what is next for them.