Jim warns: "Don't
write off people with autism"
Jim is
backing a National Autistic Society (NAS) campaign to stop adults
with autism being written-off by the employment and benefits
system. A new report by the NAS reveals that a third of people with
the condition currently live without a job and without benefits;
many are forced to rely on family and friends for help.
Jim
said: "People with autism have a great deal to offer and we know
that many want to work but are unable to get the help and support
they need to fulfill their potential. It is crucial that people
with serious, lifelong and disabling conditions such as autism get
the help they need when seeking employment and are supported
financially when they cannot work."
Only
15%* of adults with autism in the UK are in fulltime paid
employment. The Don't write me off report reveals that the
majority of the over 300,000 working age adults with autism want to
work but are being held back by a lack of understanding of autism
amongst employment and benefits advisors at Jobcentre Plus and a
dearth of specialist employment services. As a result they often
experience inadequate job-seeking support, unnecessary and
distressing delays in payment, or are being denied essential
benefits altogether.
Mark
Lever, chief executive of the NAS said: "People with autism say
their experiences of the employment and benefits system are marred
by anxiety, confusion, delays and discrimination. It is scandalous
that thousands of people with autism are being consigned to poverty
by a complex and counter-productive benefits system. We are
delighted to have the support of Jim Dowd and strongly urge other
MPs to follow his lead. We will keep campaigning until the
Government's "no-one written off" pledge is a reality for people
with autism."
Research for the Don't write me off
report found:
-
Almost 80% of people with autism on Incapacity
Benefit want to work.
-
Over
a third said their Disability Employment Advisor's knowledge of
autism was "very bad" or "bad".
-
Half
of people with autism have spent time with neither a job nor
benefits with over three quarters of those forced to rely on family
and friends as a result.
-
Over
82% needed some kind of help to apply for benefits, but few were
made aware of their right to an advocate. In the worst cases
parents were actively blocked from helping.
The
NAS is calling for a national strategy from government to transform
access to employment for people with autism across the UK. The
charity is also campaigning for a better understanding of autism
across all Jobcentre Plus staff and new measures to make the system
fair for people with disability.
To
find out more about the campaign, visit: www.autism.org.uk/dontwritemeoff
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