dwp work and health programme · redcar and cleveland and stockton-on-tees . north east combined...
TRANSCRIPT
DWP Work and Health Programme Partner Event – 30 June 2016
Welcome and Introductions
DWP Work and Health Programme • Securing sustained job outcomes for participants will be the primary
objective • Referrals should be those most likely to need and benefit from extra help • Predominantly voluntary for the health and disability group • Work coaches have a key role to play in identifying the right people to go
on the programme • Want people to stay on the programme because they get value from it -
emphasis for providers to engage positively with all referred participants • Key elements of the provision to include:
• Greater integration with local services and health provision • Joint design/co-commissioning in areas with agreed devolution deals • Specialist providers have an important role to play in the programme.
Eligibility Any claimant with a health condition or disability: should be referred at the most appropriate time in their claim on a targeted basis, when: • The individual can be helped by the offer • JCP has already helped the individual with their core job search activity • The claimant needs more support than can be provided within the
standard JCP offer • The claimant has signed up to the goal of finding and/or increasing
their employment within a realistic time period Long term unemployed claimants: • Should be referred when they reach 24 months in the intensive work
search regime in Universal Credit • On a mandatory basis.
How will support be different to JCP? The provider is expected to: • Provide all participants, with more intensive, tailored support offer
than can be provided by JCP • Provide high quality support and experience, and utilise contacts
enabling providers to offer unique support to claimants • Have strong links to national and local employers to identify
employment needs, carve out roles and provide bespoke training to enable better skills matching to roles
• Bring a different and refreshed energy and approach, for LTU claimants who reach two years.
By 2017/18: Customer journey for JSA and UC (aged 22+) and Proposed Youth Obligations (Intensive work search regime)
Intensive JCP support available (similar to MIR)
Work and Health Programme Mandatory for those who have been in the full conditionality regime for 24 months (referrals start in April 2018, duration to be agreed)
Core Regime Weekly or fortnightly worksearch reviews; Weekly time bank of 4.2 minutes; Menu of additional support
+ Core Regime • New Joiner Work Focused Interview • Weekly worksearch reviews for first 3 months for all • After 3 months reviews weekly for 50% and fortnightly for 50% • Weekly time bank of 4.2 minutes • Menu of additional support including
Work Experience (expanded to all age groups) New Enterprise Allowance Apprenticeships Work Related Training (Traineeships in England) Basic Skills Training sector based work academies
+ weekly reviews
X+ months 24 month – x month 18-24 months
3 wks – 6months 0-3 wks 6 +
months
Intensive Activity Period (18-21 year olds)
Mandatory Work Placement for 18-21 year olds) if not on work based training or apprenticeship
Official Sensitive
Fit Note/ Self Certification
0-3 months
18 Mths Intensive Jobcentre Plus support for 6 Mths
24 Mths – Work & Health Programme
Illustrative Baseline Employment Offer 2017 Onwards – UC & ESA Legacy
22/12/15 00d
Menu of Support • Work & Health Programme • Flexible Support Fund • New Enterprise Allowance • Work Experience • Sector based work academies • English Language requirements • Non-DWP provision sourced on District
Provision tool
Better integration with health - Test and Learn e.g. piloting approaches to supporting claimants with mental health condition, Health and Work Innovation Fund.
Aspiration: Better
segmentation of claimants to help
tailor support
• JCP Work coach interventions Option to volunteer for Menu of Support
Tailored interventions with work coaches & mandatory work search reviews
• Option to volunteer for Menu of Support
Work Capability Assessment
IN WORK Access to Work UC in-work Support Fit for Work
3-18 months JCP Work Coach interventions (flexible time bank Option to volunteer for Menu of Support
Week 4 new joiners interview
How will Work Coaches make the right referral?
• Work coach support • Use of a decision tree to confirm eligibility
and suitability • Quality Assurance
Working with local areas
• Key elements of the provision provided through the programme include greater integration with local services and health provision
• Continued engagement with areas with devolved deals • Engagement with all other local authorities in England
and Wales to seek their views on national design.
Liverpool City Region – Halton, Knowsley, Liverpool City, Sefton, St Helens and Wirral
West Midlands Combined Authority – Birmingham City, City of Wolverhampton, Coventry, Dudley, Sandwell, Solihull and Walsall
Tees Valley – Darlington, Hartlepool, Middlesbrough, Redcar and Cleveland and Stockton-On-Tees
North East Combined Authority – Durham, Gateshead, Newcastle City, North Tyneside, Northumberland, South Tyneside and Sunderland
Sheffield City Region – Doncaster, Sheffield City and Rotherham
London – All London Boroughs
Greater Manchester – Bolton, Bury, Oldham, Rochdale, Salford, Stockport, Tameside, Trafford and Wigan
East Anglia- Cambridgeshire, East Cambridgeshire, Huntingdonshire, Broadland, Fenland, North Norfolk, Ipswich, Peterborough, Great Yarmouth, Norwich City, Forest Heath, Norfolk County, Breckland, Kings Lynn and West Norfolk, South Norfolk Babergh, Suffolk, Waveney, Suffolk Coastal, St Edmundsbury, Mid Suffolk and South Cambridgeshire
West of England – Bath and North East Somerset, Bristol, North Somerset and South Gloucestershire
Cardiff Capital Region – Blaenau Gwent, Bridgend, Caerphilly, Cardiff, Merthyr Tydfil, Monmouthshire, Newport, Vale of Glamorgan, Rhondda Cynon Taff and Torfaen
Local Integration with skills and health • Providers will be expected to demonstrate how they will
link up with health and social care services and other local services in order to support employment outcomes:
• Providers will be expected to take an holistic approach to tackling barriers to employment by supporting claimants on the WHP.
• DWP is developing an approach on: • expectations on providers to integrate • how to commission in the commercial process
Payment model
• Simplify the relationship between performance and payments • Clearly demonstrate how outcome measures incentivise
providers to strive for the best outcomes for claimants • Dis-incentivise the parking of claimants • Incentivise claimants to enter work, stay in work and decrease
their reliance on the welfare system • Keep within the cost envelope • Ensure on-going survival of the provider market • Reduce potential for fraud • Reduce administrative burdens for providers and DWP.
Commercial Strategy
• To create and maintain a competitive and sustainable market
• One national procurement divided across CPAs • How suppliers support localism and service integration
will be key • The process will allow a level of dialogue with all
shortlisted suppliers • There will be a strong Payment By Results (PBR) theme • The process will require suppliers to display the right
behaviours i.e. suppliers who can deliver a local service.
Break
Stage 1 Stage 4 Evaluation and Award
No.
of S
uppl
iers
Issue Detailed PIN/OJEU Issue Single PQQ and
draft Prospectus (end July) PQQs returned Shortlist
Issue High Level PIN (April) Suppliers express interest Test strategy Supplier accreditation (follows PIN) Open Virtual Data Room Manage Market Interest
Feb – June 2016 June to September 2016 October – January 2017
Issue ITT (Oct) Seek initial proposals on key
themes Focused period of dialogue
testing understanding and key areas of the bids. Due Diligence process including
performance certificates
Stage 3 Invitation to Tender and
conduct Dialogue
Pre-procurement market engagement
Suppliers submit Final Offers (Feb) Evaluation Approvals Notify suppliers Standstill period/s Commercial close & contract awards
(April)
February – April 2017
Stage 2 Pre-
Qualification
Key Milestone
Procurement Funnel
Commercial Timeline
Prior Information Notice (PIN) Published
April 2016
Work and Health Programme Market Engagement Events
26 and 27 May 2016
Market Engagement Q & A closes 10 June
PQQ Published July 2016
PQQ submitted August 2016
ITT Pack Published Early October 2016
Receipt Initial Proposals End of October 2016
ITT Proposal Presentation Early November 2016
Commercial Dialogue November 2016 – February 2017
Supplier Accreditation and Passporting (SAaP) • Streamline the procurement process • Make it simpler for providers to do business with DWP • Avoid requirement to make the same declarations and
submissions multiple times • Making the process more administratively attractive • Enable providers to gain a greater understanding of the
Department’s capability, security and offshoring requirements and preferences
• Minimise the instances where bids include proposals that are highly unlikely to be approved.
Supplier Accreditation and Passporting (SAaP)
Supplier Accreditation and Passporting (SAaP) • Financial Information
• Audited Accounts • Turnover: Profit/Loss Account and Cashflow • Statement of Cashflow Forecast for next 12 months • Alternative Means
• Statement of Current Borrowings and Proposed Working Capital
• Contract and Tender Portfolio
Supplier Accreditation and Passporting (SAaP) • Register on Bravo Portal • Complete Work and Health Programme Questionnaire • DWP complete the review • Accreditation Response provided through Bravo Portal, including
feedback • PQQ prepopulates with responses • Virtual Data Room (VDR) Held on Bravo
• Guidance • Draft Tender Documentation • Policy Documentation • Q&A Logs • Slides
What we don’t know
• Size of the CPAs • Volumes • Budget • One or two providers in each CPA
Questions?
Table Discussions What would the ideal Work and Health Programme look like in the North East? What questions do we have for DWP?