BBC: Changes to flagship disability scheme don't go far enough, campaigners say

John Mac

Senior Member (Voting Rights)
Changes to a flagship scheme that encourages firms to employ more disabled people don't go far enough, campaigners say.

Disability Confident, a voluntary employer scheme, was launched in 2016 to get more businesses to recruit and retain disabled people.

It had faced criticism, including from the current disability minister, that it allowed employers to be accredited without them needing to actually employ disabled people.

The government today outlined plans it said would make sure that firms who sign up were encouraged to make "progress".

But charities have told BBC News employers will still be able to certify themselves without employing "a single disabled person".
Disability Confident is one of the UK government's flagship schemes aimed at getting more disabled people into work and giving them a better experience in the workplace.

It is the only scheme focused entirely on employers, whether they are a one-person business or a global company.

It is voluntary to join and works like a badge system, accrediting employers based on how supportive they are of workers with disabilities.

Employers sign up at Level 1 ("committed") by pledging to be inclusive, then move to Level 2 ("employer"), by completing a form confirming they have put certain policies in place.

At Level 3 ("leader"), they submit evidence of their inclusiveness for peer review, and are audited by another Level 3 employer.

Critics of the scheme say that with no strict audit, and only self-certification until Level 3, there is no guarantee employers have implemented the practices they claim to have done, or actually employed anyone disabled.
Under today's reforms, the government says organisations will no longer be able to sit at Level 1 – "committed" – indefinitely.

 
Companies that do have employees with significant access needs tend not to apply for it. It's entirely performative.

It's like those trade associations—Accredited Garden Fencers, Drive Asphalters, or Pond Designers—which supposedly give consumers an assurance that they're dealing with reputable contractors. But when some cowboy wrecks both your fence and your neighbour's, leaves a sticky mess all over your drive that will cost thousands to remove, or spends two hours digging a hole that undermines your garden shed then disappears with the 60% of the cost they demanded upfront, it turns out that there's no assurance on offer whatsoever. It's just a logo.
 
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