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Issue Date:- 28 January 2008

LOCAL CHARITY HELPS LONG TERM UNEMPLOYED TRIUMPHANTLY RETURN TO WORK

PROVIDING inspiration, guidance and support, The Social Partnership has helped many gain new qualifications and grasp new horizons.

It’s hard to believe that Sam Holdstock, a sharp, savvy support worker based in an alcohol and drug detox centre in Chester, suffered 12 years of unemployment and bleak personal hardships before she found her current job. But that’s exactly what the 38 year old mother of 2 was dealing with before she discovered the Fixers project in Halton.  

Training long-term unemployed people to fill gaps in the labour market for qualified community drug workers, Fixers provides not only industry specific training with the National Occupational Standards for Drug and Alcohol (DANOS) but also bespoke personal training, support and mentoring.  Improving participant’s employability skills by supplying paid employment, locally-based work placements and job search support Fixers has enjoyed much success and has helped many, including Sam, overcome the odds and turn their lives around.

Having gained a clutch of NVQs and qualifications that enable her to assess young people and help them overcome difficulties including financial difficulties, teenage parenting and aggression as well as emotional and drug problems. Sam said:- “My life has been transformed thanks to Fixers; I’m a different person now. I’ve worked hard and the project has helped me overcome my problems. I now feel I can really help people who come to see me as a support worker, not just because I know what they are going through and have been in their shoes before, but because I now have the qualifications to give them the right advice.”

Determined to “give something back,” Sam’s enthusiasm for learning was awakened by the project, about which she says:- “It made me feel equal, that I could and would achieve something in life.”

Marie Fox, services co-ordinator at The Social Partnership, said:- “We’re really proud of Sam; she’s a great example of what Fixers can do for people. She worked really hard and her thirst for knowledge and constant eagerness are something to be in awe of. She has always given it her all and she is a fantastic student with a great deal to offer.  What’s really striking about Sam is the great relationship she has with clients. They even stop her in the street for a chat. She always has time for people and genuinely wants to help. It’s been wonderful to watch her confidence, skills and knowledge grow as a result of her involvement with Fixers, she said she got involved with the project because she wanted to give back what she’d taken and she’s more than done that.”

Since 1999, 168 people have accessed the Fixers programmes, of these 91% have progressed into full time sustainable employment in the substance misuse and social care field, and 100% have gained industry specific and generic qualifications.  The majority of people who take advantage of Fixers must overcome multiple exclusion barriers further to being long term unemployed, including criminal records, a history of substance misuse, being single parents, homelessness, lack of work history, poor qualifications, basic skills and health as well as low self confidence, self esteem and aspirations.

The average length of unemployment for those on the 2005/6 Fixers programme was 17 and a half years, 90% of this group progressed into full time employment. During 2006/7, 97% of those completing Fixers progressed in to full time employment.

Fixers aims to remove these barriers by promoting skill development coupled with actual work experience and providing training, qualifications, people development, intermediary support and access to information. 

For more information on Fixers programmes call 0151 258 6333 or log on to www.tsp.org.uk/page5.htm.  If you would like more information on The Social Partnership call 0151 258 1199.  

LOCAL CHARITY AIMS TO PROVIDE EFFECTIVE EXIT STRATEGIES FOR STREET WORKERS

THE Social Partnership has launched Routes Out of Sex Work,’ a service that targets female street workers that want to move from the kerb side to the work place. 

Up until now little provision has been made for street workers in Liverpool that may want to pursue legitimate employment.  Providing advice on how to gain skills for work, advice on health issues and support, 'Routes Out of Sex Work', is a European Social Fund project, managed through Liverpool Neighbourhood Regeneration Programme and based in the heart of the city centre. Working in partnership with the Armistead Street Project, the 'Routes Out of Sex Work' team is based in Armistead’s Stanley Street premises and aims to bridge the gap between street and the work place for active female street sex workers, by offering them opportunities to exit.

Jackie Bethel, one of the directors at The Social Partnership said:- “Many of the women that Routes Out of Sex Work have engaged with so far have revealed a wide variety of career aspirations, from working in a shop or office to teaching, but lack legitimate work related skills and experience. We have fully trained staff available to give those interested in exiting advice and guidance on how these aspirations could become realities.

From dealing with housing and welfare rights issues, to gaining education and employability skills, to emotional support, counselling, assertiveness training, confidence building and healthcare advice, we offer a range of interventions designed specifically to aid women in getting off the streets and giving them a shot at a normal life.”


Often motivated to start selling sex as a means to pay for a drug habit, frequently in addition to that of a partner or relative, exiting the street is far from an easy option for some and certainly a complex issue for anyone wishing to exit.

“Commonly there will be people closely connected to the woman that are relying on the money she makes from sex work, whether it’s her pimp, partner or other relative, to pay for their drug habits and lifestyles,” explains Jackie. “She’s caught in a trap of being in an undesirable, and often dangerous, line of work but feels financially responsible for those around her, making the decision to exit more difficult and complex. Coming to us and wanting to leave street work is comparable to suddenly quitting a job. Some of the women may make a substantial of pounds a week on the streets and with often no qualifications and work experience to gain a legitimate job; they simply can’t match those earnings.”

Hoping to engage with around 120 women actively involved in street sex work within the 9 month funded life-span of the project is a very positive step in the right direction for Liverpool, this year’s European Capital of Culture.

As Jackie says:- “This is undoubtedly a great project for the city, which we hope will bring about a big shift in attitude and lifestyle choices for the women that access the project. What we do isn’t an instant solution, it takes time, but it works. Even if we manage to help a few, it’s a few whose lives will have been changed and vastly improved forever.”

Routes Out of Sex Work is based at the Armistead Street Project in Liverpool. Armistead Street is dedicated to offering support services to sex workers and offers a variety of interventions including outreach support that focuses on harm reduction, crisis intervention and drop in facilities. Armistead Street also provides a sex worker health clinic, referral to other agencies, plus fast track for drug treatment and GUM care.

For more information about Routes Out of Sex Work call 0151 227 1893.

Alternatively, for more information on The Social Partnership call 0151 258 1199 or log on to www.tsp.org.uk.

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