Friday 6 July
2012
UNISON is calling for
an urgent meeting with local MSPs to defend the future of Scotland’s career
service.
The move follows a
series of cuts to careers services in the south side of Glasgow which the union
says will have a detrimental impact on young unemployed
people.
Last month, Skills
Development Scotland (SDS) closed its Cathcart Road centre and moved to a
smaller shared facility within Newlands Job Centre. The services on offer have
also been cut and young people will no longer have on-site access to SDS’s
online service which, in addition to offering careers guidance, allows young
people to search for job vacancies.
To add insult to
injury, SDS also cut the hours of its Castlemilk centre from one day a week to
just half a day.
Gerry Crawley,
UNISON’s Regional Organiser, said: “With youth unemployment at unprecedented
levels, there is a clear need to ensure crucial face-to-face guidance is easily
accessible to young people.
“Some young people
now face two bus journeys just to get to the new centre, not to mention a
further journey to a local library to access the online careers service. This
raises concerns over accessibility and the increased financial burden on young
people to access careers advice.
“We need to make
getting on the career ladder as easy as possible for young people, and putting
barriers in their way is not the way forward. We’re calling on MSPs to defend
Scotland’s careers service and not to condemn a whole generation of young people
to life on the dole queue.”
ENDS
Note to editors
The Skills Development Office
in Cathcart Road offered careers advice to 150 young people in the month of May
alone
.
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