Community Action Programme

The Community Action Programme (CAP) also known as Support for the very long-term unemployed[1] is a workfare programme in the United Kingdom whereby long-term unemployed people who have been unemployed for over three years must work for their benefits for six months or have them removed. It was piloted in six areas and then expanded in autumn 2012.

Criticism

The Centre for Economic and Social Inclusion thinktank have argued that rolling out the CAP scheme could be an "expensive mistake". David Simmons of the CESI has argued that "We have to be careful about a one size fits all solution for the very long-term unemployed by requiring them to work for their benefits."[2]

gollark: 11 hours 51 minutes.
gollark: Slightly less now.
gollark: When lyric demotion occurs we might.
gollark: You have burned through about 200 seconds.
gollark: ++remind -1m44000s (slightly later than that, but you know, be there early)

References

  1. "DWP Central Freedom of Information Team: Ref VTF 2618" (PDF). Whatdotheyknow.com. Retrieved 2012-09-27.
  2. Shiv Malik (2012-07-29). "Million jobless may face six months' unpaid work or have benefits stopped | Society | guardian.co.uk". London: Guardian. Retrieved 2012-09-27.
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