The Tánaiste and Minister for Education and Skills, Ms. Mary Coughlan, T.D., today (Thursday, 5 August 2010) announced her allocation of an additional €12 million to the Labour Market Activation Fund.
The additional funding will support education and training programmes for at least 5,000 additional unemployed people and will bring the total number of participant places supported by the Fund to over 11,000 this year.
The Labour Market Activation Fund, launched by the Tánaiste in March, is designed to assist in the creation of innovative training and education provision by private, not-for-profit and public sector providers.
It is targeted at specific priority groups among the unemployed, namely the low skilled, and those formerly employed in declining sectors - construction, retail and manufacturing sectors – with particular emphasis on the under 35s and the long-term unemployed.
Following an open tender competition in which 370 tenders were received, contracts were initially awarded to 26 organisations across the private, not-for-profit and public sectors to support specific training and education programmes for the priority groups.
The Tánaiste said, 'I now intend to offer funding to at least 33 additional projects from a range of private and public training and education providers.
'This will bring to almost 60 the number of projects throughout the country being supported by the Labour Market Activation Fund in 2010.
'Our commitment of additional €12 million to the Fund recognises the quality and diversity of the programmes tendered and will bring to 11,000 the number of persons benefiting from the additional education and training measures.'
Officials from the Department of Education and Skills are contacting the additional successful providers this week and the Department intends to publish detail of the additional programmes later this month.
The Tánaiste added that she was pleased with the capacity of the programmes to accommodate participants of varying experience and educational attainment.
'These programmes give special attention to those whose levels of education might act as barriers to full participation in the established, main-stream training and education programmes.'
The Tánaiste concluded saying, 'We put the Activation Fund in place to stimulate innovation in the provision of training and activation measures for jobseekers seeking to up-skill and get back into work.
'The response to the call for proposals for Fund support exceeded the most optimistic expectations and the feedback from the projects already under way is positive.
'We are delivering relevant participant-centred programmes for the unemployed designed to enhance their prospects of achieving real outcomes, leading them closer to the labour market or to qualifications that will enhance labour market opportunities for them.'
The 5,000 additional places provided under this scheme brings to more than 165,000, the number of places provided by this Government this year to train, and provide work experience for, those who find themselves unemployed.