Government’s plan to push 100,000 off welfare with no job plan in place is shameful
Posted on March 20, 2013 by admin in John Minto, News, Press ReleasesGovernment’s plan to push 100,000 off welfare with no job plan in place is shameful
“It’s shameful that the government is pressing ahead with this latest round of welfare changes”, says John Minto, Vice-President of the MANA Movement. “When the Social Security (Benefit Categories and Work Focus) Amendment Bill comes up in the House for its second reading later today there’s only one place it belongs – in the rubbish, because that’s how it treats people impacted by it –as rubbish.”
The bill marks the second big step in the wave of reforms initiated by Paula Bennett and Paula Rebstock back in 2010, all aimed at getting up to 100,000 beneficiaries off welfare in the next ten years.
“MANA would be delighted if this goal meant the government was committed to a serious job creation plan that would see 100,000 of those currently unemployed achieve decent jobs at decent wages.
But sadly that is not the plan.”
“Instead, National is hell bent on measures which will see:
· sole parents, the sick, injured and disabled harassed by a work testing regime designed to push them into any work at any cost, and which would set them up to compete with other low paid and unemployed workers in an increasingly difficult job market;
· compulsory drug testing used to get people off the unemployment benefit rather than actually helping them with either employment or addiction issues; and
· the further privatisation and outsourcing of services traditionally provided by the state, and without being upfront about it.”
“And Maori and Pacific Peoples will be disproportionately affected by this legislation and are fed up with being kicked around by a government which cares more about getting votes from its beneficiary-bashing support base than it does about people who already spend their lives in a daily struggle for survival.”
“The answers to poverty and unemployment lie in the creation of decent jobs, support for community economic development, and a major overhaul of the current rotten welfare apparatus, not in measures like these which only serve to deepen inequalities.
ENDS
For further information please contact John Minto, (022) 085-0161
Angeline says:
Post Author April 9, 2013 at 12:24 amThe 20-80 world discussed by world leaders in San Francisco in the 1980′s seems to be going to plan. 20% will be privileged and in paid jobs while the other 80% will be unemployed and condemned to watching propaganda and tittytainment tv programmes specially designed to keep them entertained and misinformed through spin while they wait for jobs that won’t come. With over 60% of the world without internet, and enough people passionate enough to challenge and overturn corrupt governments, the plan will fall over.
I agree the answers to poverty and unemployment lie in the creation of decent jobs. The community cooperative model promoted by the late Matiu Rata in the 1980′s is worht revisiting. The video is a bit long but what has been achieved is inspiring. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-obHJfTaQvw