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Budget Must Fund Youth Training and Mentoring


28 April 2016 at 9:32 am
Lina Caneva
Community service organisation Mission Australia has called on the federal government to support the long-term aspirations of young Australians in next week’s budget.

Lina Caneva | 28 April 2016 at 9:32 am


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Budget Must Fund Youth Training and Mentoring
28 April 2016 at 9:32 am

Community service organisation Mission Australia has called on the federal government to support the long-term aspirations of young Australians in next week’s budget.

Catherine Yeomans, Mission Australia’s CEO, said a generation of young people risked being permanently left behind if extra funding to support further training and mentoring wasn’t included in next week’s budget.

The call came as Mission Australia released its latest report, Achieving Independence: Insights and concerns from young clients accessing Mission Australia services, which explored the results of a survey of young people who are accessing the organisation’s employment, education, homelessness and drug and alcohol services.

“Pleasingly the report shows that our young clients who’ve often had challenging starts in life share many of the same aspirations as their more advantaged peers. In fact, despite what some politicians would have us believe, they actually place a greater emphasis on getting a job than other young people surveyed,” Yeomans said.

“But with youth unemployment remaining at alarmingly high rates, we know young people are struggling to make a successful transition from school to training and work.

“Sadly we have seen funding slashed and some very successful programs defunded entirely. The implications of such short-sighted measures is catastrophic – not just for our clients but for society as a whole due to the wasted potential.”

Mission Australia called for Treasurer Scott Morrison to support the most disadvantaged young job seekers in this year’s budget and help them get a foothold in the job market through training, mentoring and workplace opportunities.

Yeomans said this included extending or supplementing the new Transition to Work program as a starting point.

“There needs to be a holistic support program to cater for job seekers with the most severe barriers to employment,” she said.

“These challenges are not insurmountable and it is the role of government as well as the social sector and businesses to support them on their journey to independence.

“By investing early we can support young people’s aspirations while at the same time diverting young people away from long term welfare dependency.”

She said successful mentoring programs such as Indigenous Youth and Careers Pathway Program should be re-funded and used as a model to mentor other groups of young people requiring support and advice to navigate post school pathways.

“Expanded training and apprenticeship opportunities are required to ensure that young people can navigate an appropriate post-school pathway that is relevant to their career aspirations. Vocational training options also need to reflect growth industries and sectors in demand, such as aged care and early childhood education, and not be limited to traditional roles,” Yeomans said.

“We know these programs can help vulnerable young people straddle the additional hurdles they face in an already difficult job market.

“We can change their paths but slashing budgets and cutting programs that work is not smart. We need a budget that is fair and not at the expense of vulnerable young Australians.”

(Find out more about what the leaders of the Australian Not for Profit sector want from this year’s Federal Budget in our latest Podcast: Federal Budget – The Not for Profit Wishlist)


Lina Caneva  |  Editor  |  @ProBonoNews

Lina Caneva has been a journalist for more than 35 years. She was the editor of Pro Bono Australia News from when it was founded in 2000 until 2018.


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