Wednesday 18 September 2013

Gingerbread: Make it Work for Single Parents.

A while back I wrote a post called The Benefits Trap, with the idea of showing people how difficult it can be to get off benefits and back into work. It seemed to be well received; people seemed to appreciate what I was saying. And then someone commented on another post I'd written that showed an example of someone trying to get off benefits. They seemed angry with me, accusing me of promoting being on benefits, and telling me "everything you own has been paid for by me..."

Single Mother Ahoy Gingerbread Make it Work


Leaving aside the fact this person was incorrect in most of what they were saying (they were clearly unaware, for example, that until my breakdown I was in a reasonably well-paid job, and that I do in fact have a job now as well), what was said bothered me because it seems that these things are what a lot of people think. 

They see me: single mother, lives in a council flat, walking around with a buggy in the middle of the day (I only work 3 days a week), and they think: benefits scrounger. Lives the high life with a flatscreen telly while I work my fingers to the bone to pay for it.

The fact of the matter is: yes, I do claim benefits. My childcare bill swallows my monthly income whole, and if I want any chance of surviving, I need to accept help from the state. That doesn't mean I'm happy about it, or that I'm not doing what I can to get myself into a position where I don't need to do it for the rest of my life.

There is also an issue here that's not often discussed when the media bangs on about feckless single parents living off the government. How easy do you think it is for a single parent to find a job? How easily did you find your job? I was very lucky in that when I returned to work, my boss allowed me to tell him which days and hours I would work. How many employers do you think are like that? 

If you don't have a child, and you want a job, you can look in the local paper, send your CV out, whatever. You can arrange an interview for whenever is convenient, and wander off on your merry way to impress them with your mad skillz in whatever it is you are interviewing for.

Imagine being a single parent looking for work. You need to find a part-time job that pays more than minimum wage. It needs to be (for argument's sake) only from 9-3 on Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays because you've already spoken to the nursery, and those are the only days they have available. You can't work weekends, because nurseries don't open on weekends and you don't have family locally with whom you could leave your child every single weekend for a whole day while you go to work. When you've found this Holy Grail of jobs that fits in with your childcare arrangements, you have to think about what you'll do when your child is ill. It's a well-known fact that when a child starts nursery, whatever age they are, they will catch every bug and cold and ear infection under the sun. In my first month back at work, I spent more time at home with a poorly S than I did at my desk. How do you think a new employer will view that situation? Do you think you will last out your probation period if you're never at work because your child has caught yet another bug?

And does any of this mean you are stupid, incapable of work? Does it mean your degree, your professional qualifications, your on-job training, your years of knowledge and experience are somehow null and void? Does being a single parent automatically mean you are only capable of menial, low-paid jobs? No. Does it mean that's all that's on offer to you? Usually, yes.

Gingerbread currently have a campaign running called Make it Work for Single Parents. Their goal is to get 250,000 more single parents into work before 2020, and they have been campaigning for changes that will allow that to happen.

Contrary to the picture the media portrays, and to what a lot of people seem to think, the majority of single parents are not sitting at home in their grubby dressing gowns, smoking fags and watching Jeremy Kyle. 

The majority of single parents are scouring the jobs pages of the local paper, looking for that mythical job that will help them get back into working life again. 

The majority of single parents hate to be seen as spongers living off other people's taxes. 

The majority of single parents want to claim benefits as a hand up, not a hand out. 

5 comments:

  1. Totally agree. It is hard enough for any mum of a young child to get a job, let alone being on your own. I think you should stand for parliament. I'd vote for you!

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    1. lol thanks Kez! I think I'd get in trouble for shouting down all the posh boys if I were in parliament though!

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  2. Hi, heard you on LBC this morning. Its good to hear people standing up for single mums - they have no idea how hard it can be! I've been a single mum since leaving my husband ten years ago. My son does see his dad regularly though. I come from a poor background, got married at 29 and had my son at 33. We had managed to buy our own home, have 2 cars and nice holidays. I walked out because my husband was an abusive control freak who punched me in front of our son. We then lived in a Womens Refuge for 18 months on benefits. That is when I realised what people really think of single mums and it was a shock, as I was brought up in a single parent household too. We got a council flat near my family. And I got a job as a dinner lady, which is hard work and doesn't pay much, so I have to rely on tax credits, but at least its a job. My son has grown up to be a lovely, well adjusted teenager, who got himself into a good private school with sheer hard work (the school provides a full bursary). I've had some terrible problems with my job, who have threatened me with disciplinary because I took a week and a half off to look after my son when he got a really bad bout of Norovirus. To those people who think we're just a bunch of scroungers who have kids just to get benefits and council flats, I say 'everyone has their individual story, and most women don't set out to be single parents. Its a hard but rewarding job, and I'd like you to come and live my life for one month, and tell me if you then think we're a bunch of lazy scroungers who are raking it in at the taxpayers cost!'

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    1. Thank you for your comment Trudi, I'm glad you liked what you heard! I was raised in a single parent family too, and I'm a single mother now because I escaped an abusive relationship.
      The media doesn't ask *Why* we're single parents, whether our children are happier and safer with us on our own; they just vilify us for not having a partner!

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  3. Hi found you through love all blogs.

    Thanks for this information. I recently became a single mother and I'm really struggling to find a job. I was dismissed from a temporary position for being a single mother and there's nothing I can do about it. I'll have to get in touch with gingerbread. I'm thinking of starting my own accounting practice from home...

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