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Off Welfare… What Now? Informing Policy with Qualitative Research Findings. Linda Bell The Saskatoon Anti-Poverty Coalition

Off Welfare… What Now? Informing Policy with Qualitative Research Findings. Linda Bell The Saskatoon Anti-Poverty Coalition

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Page 1: Off Welfare… What Now? Informing Policy with Qualitative Research Findings. Linda Bell The Saskatoon Anti-Poverty Coalition

Off Welfare… What Now?

Informing Policy with Qualitative Research Findings.

Linda Bell

The Saskatoon Anti-Poverty Coalition

Page 2: Off Welfare… What Now? Informing Policy with Qualitative Research Findings. Linda Bell The Saskatoon Anti-Poverty Coalition

The Saskatoon Anti-Poverty CoalitionMission Statement

We are a Coalition of concerned citizens and organizations who are dedicated to

addressing the causes and effects of poverty in Saskatoon.

Page 3: Off Welfare… What Now? Informing Policy with Qualitative Research Findings. Linda Bell The Saskatoon Anti-Poverty Coalition

The Saskatoon Anti-Poverty CoalitionOur Work:

Delivery of The Poverty Workshop in partnership with the Saskatoon Health Region

Supporting the Get On The Bus transportation initiative

Host an annual Poverty Awareness Week in October Educating the Provincial and Municipal governments

on the realities of poverty Providing a forum for citizens to voice their concerns

and needs surrounding poverty Offering capacity building opportunities for

community members

Page 4: Off Welfare… What Now? Informing Policy with Qualitative Research Findings. Linda Bell The Saskatoon Anti-Poverty Coalition

The Saskatoon Anti-Poverty CoalitionResearch Projects

The Roots of Poverty Project Report Card on Child Poverty: Saskatoon,

2000/2001 Gender and Poverty Project “Off Welfare…Now What?”, Labour Force

Attachment Project

Page 5: Off Welfare… What Now? Informing Policy with Qualitative Research Findings. Linda Bell The Saskatoon Anti-Poverty Coalition

Our members include:

Not for profit local organizations Community members from core

neighbourhoods Other concerned citizens

Page 6: Off Welfare… What Now? Informing Policy with Qualitative Research Findings. Linda Bell The Saskatoon Anti-Poverty Coalition

Welfare Reform In Saskatchewan

The Building Independence program was launched in July 1998 as Saskatchewan’s version of a reformed and inventive welfare to work program. It includes these programs:

Jobs First -using a call centre as the first point of access for new applicants. -involves group meetings where participants are made

aware of local job opportunities. TEA (Transitional Employment Allowance)

-designed for SAP applicants deemed to be employable, a shorter time period and fewer benefits

Page 7: Off Welfare… What Now? Informing Policy with Qualitative Research Findings. Linda Bell The Saskatoon Anti-Poverty Coalition

Labour Force Attachment Programs In Saskatchewan

Family Health Benefits: provides a small amount of supplementary health benefits to low income working families

The Provincial Training Allowance: provides a monthly allowance to students enrolled in education or education-related courses

The Saskatchewan Employment Supplement: a monthly payment to supplement lower income families;

The Saskatchewan Child Benefit: a monthly allowance for low income families with children (clawed back from families receiving social assistance, tieing benefits for children to labour force attachment of their parents)

Page 8: Off Welfare… What Now? Informing Policy with Qualitative Research Findings. Linda Bell The Saskatoon Anti-Poverty Coalition

Genesis of the Project..

The Saskatchewan provincial government states that there have been significant reductions in the number of people receiving income assistance due to job training programs. Reductions in the number of citizens accessing social assistance is viewed as a success, however, quality of life for those leaving social assistance is less certain.

This qualitative research project examines the quality of life for recipients of job training programs.

Page 9: Off Welfare… What Now? Informing Policy with Qualitative Research Findings. Linda Bell The Saskatoon Anti-Poverty Coalition

How we approached this task…

a Steering Committee was created to ensure the project remained grass-roots driven

Project participants were recruited via word of mouth from coalition members and by staff at a local employment centre

Unique group-analysis of results

Page 10: Off Welfare… What Now? Informing Policy with Qualitative Research Findings. Linda Bell The Saskatoon Anti-Poverty Coalition

Off Welfare… Now What?Interview Process

Interviews were conducted with twenty-five participants over a one-month period.

Information collected through the interviews included demographic information, personal experiences with DCRE and the job training programs, barriers to finding work, specific experiences with the DCRE Call Centre,

Participants rated indicators of well-being based on the usefulness of the job training programs in which they participated.

Page 11: Off Welfare… What Now? Informing Policy with Qualitative Research Findings. Linda Bell The Saskatoon Anti-Poverty Coalition

Off Welfare… Now What?Demographics of the interviewees

25 interviews 18 women/ 7 men Aged 21-49, average age of 35 2 rural; many moving on and off reserve 17 aboriginal 12 were “hidden homeless” 17 single mothers 13 with post-secondary education

Page 12: Off Welfare… What Now? Informing Policy with Qualitative Research Findings. Linda Bell The Saskatoon Anti-Poverty Coalition

Group Analysis

A process that brought together 9 people from the community, including six Coalition members for a one-day event held in a community meeting room.

Each group analysis participant received interview transcripts of two or three of the research participants and was asked to ‘represent’ them during the analysis

Participants reviewed the interviews (data) beforehand to try to understand the life story of the research participants. This information was then used to create headings (themes) for the group session.

Page 13: Off Welfare… What Now? Informing Policy with Qualitative Research Findings. Linda Bell The Saskatoon Anti-Poverty Coalition

Themes

Racism disrespectful treatment housing/stability hidden homelessness mental health over-qualification no flexibility for different circumstances access to education transportation issues unsupportive job market child care punitive measures for those trying to get ahead need to manipulate the system to get ahead food insecurity disability barrier

Page 14: Off Welfare… What Now? Informing Policy with Qualitative Research Findings. Linda Bell The Saskatoon Anti-Poverty Coalition

Major Findings

Bureaucratic disentitlement Beaver dam Casualties of war

Page 15: Off Welfare… What Now? Informing Policy with Qualitative Research Findings. Linda Bell The Saskatoon Anti-Poverty Coalition

Bureaucratic Disentitlement

Barriers to accessing social assistance include excessive requests for information, long application processes and appeals, and confusing language.

Also called “Rituals of Degradation”

Page 16: Off Welfare… What Now? Informing Policy with Qualitative Research Findings. Linda Bell The Saskatoon Anti-Poverty Coalition

The Beaver Dam

a cyclical situation where events have such an impact on each other that there is no way to try to separate the barriers that some interview participants were facing.

Page 17: Off Welfare… What Now? Informing Policy with Qualitative Research Findings. Linda Bell The Saskatoon Anti-Poverty Coalition

Causalities of War

Those who are victimized by the Social Services system. They often move between low-wage employment and social assistance, regardless of the work or training program in which they are involved and remaining a part of the cycle.

Page 18: Off Welfare… What Now? Informing Policy with Qualitative Research Findings. Linda Bell The Saskatoon Anti-Poverty Coalition

Assumptions..

Group analysis participants raised the assumptions that people have around the issue of social welfare:

1) It is easy to find a job, especially because the job market is good in Saskatchewan.

2) Possessing an education guarantees one a job, or, similarly, people on assistance are not educated and do not value education.

3) Aboriginal people do not value work and education like “the rest of society.”

4) Social assistance and job training programs try to help people get ahead so that they can get off social assistance.

Page 19: Off Welfare… What Now? Informing Policy with Qualitative Research Findings. Linda Bell The Saskatoon Anti-Poverty Coalition

Realities…

1) The number of people out of work in Saskatchewan is 68,816

2) 13 of the 25 people interviewed had post-secondaryeducation and were still looking for work.

3) Seventeen of the people interviewed were Aboriginal, and all of them were looking for work.

4) The experiences of the interview participants demonstrate that job training programs have not allowed them to get ahead, and, as a result, most of them report being trapped in the “social assistance cycle.”

Page 20: Off Welfare… What Now? Informing Policy with Qualitative Research Findings. Linda Bell The Saskatoon Anti-Poverty Coalition

Conclusion

While labour force attachment programs teach participants necessary skills to look for work and provide access to education, they have not directly improved welfare recipients’ ability to find work in today’s challenging labour market. Furthermore, the social assistance system in Saskatchewan does not promote the health and well-being of its recipients through its work, and creates a cyclical system of despair that negatively affects the physical, mental, and emotional health of those whom it purports to serve.

Poverty, it seems, makes people sick.