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Edinburgh

`. One Parent Families Scotland. Lone Parents in Scotland. Edinburgh. Child Poverty – Setting the scene. 1 in 5 children in Scotland live in poverty. With Scotland’s undoubted wealth OPFS believes this is a scandal. 1 in 3 children live in poverty in areas of deprivation

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Edinburgh

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  1. ` One Parent Families Scotland Lone Parents in Scotland Edinburgh

  2. Child Poverty – Setting the scene 1 in 5 children in Scotland live in poverty. With Scotland’s undoubted wealth OPFS believes this is a scandal. • 1 in 3 children live in poverty in areas of deprivation • 1 in 2 children in a one parent family live in poverty • Poverty is the most serious • Poverty is the most serious problems facing Scotlands children today. Its’ effects last a lifetime, negatively impacting on health, education, social and physical development and seriously harming future life chances and opportunities. • No reason why our child poverty rates should be so much higher than in many other European countries. • In Denmark and Norway less than 10% of children live in poverty Child poverty is not inevitable

  3. Profile of Lone Parents in Scotland LP Population Over 163,000 LP’s with 295,000 children (1 in 4 families) Projected to increase to 238,000 next 20 yrs Ave age 34 yrs, 92% are women 46% children in one parent families poor The challenge of sustaining employment 57.2% in paid work ( 71% of LP’s with 11-14 yr olds) 54%of LP’s with 5/6yr old’s work (75% work part-time) 22% who start a job end up unemployed within 12 mths 68% enter three occup groups which are lowest paid Job insecurity, see-sawing between poorly paid work & benefits

  4. Challenges Facing Lone Parents in Scotland • Poverty & low income • Low levels of skills, qualifications and confidence • Isolation & lack of social support • Concentration in deprived areas • Poor health (parent & child) • Low Benefit Levels & impact of Welfare Reform • Reconciling the demands of work and family life • Finding good quality, affordable childcare; • Barriers to access - travel and transport • Attitudes towards lone parents • Unique challenge - sole carer & sole breadwinner

  5. Impact of Welfare Reform & Public Sector Cuts Conditionality Income Support for LP’s with youngest child 5 yrs ends Conditionality & Sanctions but support with transition to work not in place. LP’s 3yrs & 4yr olds – intro mandatory work-related activity ; work-focused interviews increased & good cause list abolished. Benefits &Tax Credits Lone Mothers will be hardest hit by benefit changes IFS: lose on ave.8.5% of income after tax by 2015 Switch to CPI from RPI, withdrawal,restriction,reduced benefits. Public Service cuts – LP’s 18% drop in living standards

  6. Effects of spending cuts by family type: as % of net income, all services ( Reed & Horton, 2010)

  7. Skills & Lone Parents Lack of formal education and consequently of job skills limits access to occupations that provide enough income for an acceptable standard of living. 92% are women so many end up in traditionally female occupations that are low paying, perpetuating the cycle of poverty Welfare to Work policies are “Work – First” lone parents access to higher level training & education blocked

  8. Career Development Needs of Lone Parents/1 LP’s have sole responsibility for support of their families; aspire to achieve a good job and economic independence. • Outreach, engagement, participation • Emotional /family support (self help groups, lone parent peer support, support systems) • Basic skills (especially literacy skills) • Affordable, high quality, flexible, accessible childcare

  9. Career Development Needs of Lone Parents/2 • Self-confidence building • Skills assessment • Job-seeking skills • The challenges of combining work and family roles • Recognition of the role of gender in occupational choice

  10. Policy Concerns In addition to effective programmes, we need advocates for public policy designed to assist lone parents. • Work First Approach replaced Human Capital • Employment discrimination, • Recognition of non-traditional roles, • Government and employer support of child care, • Pay equity, • Work environment alternatives.

  11. Type of welfare state ? Poverty faced by LP’s across diff countries remarkably different . Do not depend on prevalence of LP’s but on type welfare state. UK Adult Worker ModelAll able adults should be in employment independent of the type of family. (but 2nd highest Child Poverty level) Parent-Worker model in Scandinavian countries Families are diverse and adults should be supported as workers and parents (highest opfs- lowest child poverty levels) The added challenges that lone parents face should be recognised through good quality childcare, family friendly employment opportunities and reasonable parental leave.

  12. Pathways To Participation Progression Model Key Success Criteria * Recognition not dependency * Barriers, also assets * Holistic ,trusted services * Tailored for Lone Parents * Focus on Family Goals * Peer Mentoring Approach * Capacity to Motivate * Cross Sector Partnerships

  13. Marion Davis One Parent Families Scotland 100 Wellington Street, Glasgow, G2 6DHTel: 0141 847 0444marion.davis@opfs Lone Parent Helpline: 0808 801 0323 www.opfs.org.uk How to contact us…

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